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Distributive Justice and Crime
Authors:Ken Pease
Institution:(1) 19 Withypool Drive, Stockport, SK2 6DT, UK
Abstract:The heavy concentration of crime on a few areas, and the concentration on the chronically victimised within those areas, together illustrate the gross inequality of the risk of crime victimisation. This inequality also characterises other hazards of life. Criminology has too often reduced the problem of crime to the problem of the offender. Recognising crime hazard as an issue of distributive justice requires a different mind set. The Crime and Disorder Act 1998 recognises the drivers of crime as lying outside criminal justice, but does not put in place a pandashhazard analysis of the kind required, community safety being presented as a type of crime prevention. Movement towards pandashhazard thinking may well be somewhat facilitated by the workingdashthrough of the incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights, actions flowing from section 17 of the Crime and Disorder Act, and a reconsideration of how emergency services might work.
Keywords:community safety  distributive justice  hazard management  victimisation
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