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OverviewThe Welsh criminal justice system is unique. While the country has its own devolved government and parliament, there is no Welsh equivalent of the Scottish or Northern Irish justice systems. Rather, the writ of England and Wales criminal justice institutions continues to run. Yet the extensive responsibilities of Wales's devolved institutions ensure that they necessarily play a significant role in criminal justice. As a result, the Welsh criminal justice system operates across a 'jagged edge' of devolved and reserved powers and responsibilities. This book provides the first academic account of this system. It demonstrates not only that Wales has some of the worst criminal justice outcomes in western Europe, but that even if the will existed to try to address these problems, the current constitutional underpinnings of the Welsh criminal justice system would make it nigh-on impossible. Based on official data and in-depth interviews, this is an urgent and challenging book, required reading for anyone interested in Welsh politics and society. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Robert Jones , Richard Wyn JonesPublisher: University of Wales Press Imprint: University of Wales Press ISBN: 9781786839435ISBN 10: 1786839431 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 15 October 2022 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsList of Figures List of Tables List of Maps Acknowledgements Chapter 1 Introduction: A Welsh criminal justice system? Chapter 2 Outcomes in the Welsh criminal justice system Chapter 3 Whitehall and the Welsh criminal justice system: What power reveals Chapter 4 The Welsh Government and criminal justice: Responsibility without power Chapter 5 On policy making and policy taking: Two case studies Chapter 6 Scrutiny and accountability across the jagged edge Chapter 7 The future of the Welsh criminal justice system Appendix BibliographyReviewsThis book is a powerful and eminently readable analysis of the Welsh criminal justice system. It examines the basic issues of costs, the ability to deliver joined-up policy, labyrinthine complexity, accountability and outcomes. With its in-depth research, it shows why the system is failing Wales, and reinforces the compelling need for fundamental change. --Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd, former Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales This book is both an indictment and a call to action. It is impossible to read without being convinced by the data that the under-performing Welsh criminal justice system is dysfunctional, poorly-scrutinized and inhumane, trapped in a constitutional limbo of conflicting powers and responsibilities between Westminster and Cardiff. Devolution of justice is overdue: here is the critical evidence. --Liz Saville Roberts, MP for Dwyfor Meirionnydd This book is key reading for anyone seriously interested in the condition of Wales and where the country should or might be heading. Concerned with the human face of state power in a strange constitutional situation, the authors show how the wider Welsh criminal justice system is distinct even as part of an ostensibly single England and Wales arrangement. Via principled argument and empirical evidence of poor outcomes, they investigate problems of waste, policy fragmentation and lack of accountability previously identified by the landmark Commission on Justice in Wales. The book powerfully portrays progressive politics without the justice function as like Hamlet without the Prince. --Richard Rawlings, University College London The experiences and needs of Welsh communities have been long neglected in the corridors of Whitehall. The Welsh Criminal Justice System provides a vital corrective, exploring criminal justice in Wales in fine detail, and setting out a clear path to creating the kind of society Wales deserves. Anyone who has a stake in twenty-first-century Wales must read this book. --Ellie Mae O'Hagan, Director of the Centre for Labour and Social Studies Author InformationAs the first comprehensive academic account of policing and criminal justice in the distinctive constitutional and policy context of post-devolution Wales, this pathbreaking work will be of interest to all students, researchers, practitioners and policy-makers interested in or operating within the justice system in Wales. This group crosses various academic disciplinary boundaries to include criminology, social policy, politics and law. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |