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January 3, 2005: UK Policing Claimed To Be Amongst World's Worst It attempts to compare the policing methods of Britain, France, Germany and the USA and suggests that all four countries witnessed steep rises in crime and anti-social behaviour following the cultural revolution of the 1960s, which according to the authors broke down shared norms of acceptable behaviour. The report argues that the USA, France and Germany have all made a more effective job of combating rising crime than Britain. According to Civitas:
Civitas argues that in 1964 in England and Wales there were
72,000 domestic burglaries; in 2003/04 there were 402,000. It and points out
there are now five domestic burglaries for every one domestic burglary in 1964,
in spite of a great intensification of security measures being taken by private
householders to protect their own homes. In 1955 fewer than 500,000 crimes were
recorded by the police in England and Wales. By the end of the 1960s there were
over 1.5 million. By the end of the 1970s there were 2.7 million. Dennis and Erdos argue that a fundamental problem with offending is the loss of internalised moral principles that prevent people from committing crimes in the first place. They claim that the rise in lawlessness reflects a decline in shared values, and attribute this to the cultural revolution of the 1960s, which they argue subverted many institutions through which moral capital was generated - in particular, the family based on marriage. Adopting a viewpoint which is strongly contested, they suggest that young people who grow up in troubled and dysfunctional households in which moral values are not inculcated, who live in communities in which the influence of religious faith is negligible, will – they suggest - naturally be drawn towards the self-gratification and situational ethics that predominate in contemporary culture:
Many criminologists would take issue with this perspective. It does not appear to properly consider either changes in police methods of recording crime or changes in how crime is reported by the public. It also fails to draw upon the authoritative British Crime Survey (BCS) for its conclusions. |
April 26, 2008: Probation Service "At Breaking Point", Says New Research April 25, 2008: Some Crime Is Falling: It's Official April 25, 2008: Prison Population Breaks Record April 14, 2008: Prison Self Injury Rate Growing - Howard League April 4, 2008: New Corporate Manslaughter Law April 2, 2008: More Specialist Domestic Violence Court Systems April 1, 2008: Academics Challenge Crime Research Governance March 17, 2008: 16, 2007: More Cash For Prison Drug Treatment March 17, 2008: Sentencing Crisis, Says Napo March 6, 2008: ID Cards: On The Way February 28, 2008: Community Sentences Reduce Reoffending, Says Straw February 8, 2008: Straw Supports Community Sentences February 1, 2008: First New Public Prison In A Decade January 31, 2008: Penal Policy Reform January 1, 2008: Prison Suicides Rise December 29, 2007: Prison Recalls Out Of Control, Says Napo December 28, 2007: Offenders Do 6m Hours Of Work December 20, 2007: Howard League Welcomes Inquiry December 19, 2007: The Public & Tackling Offenders December 12, 2007: Reviewing The Law On Murder December 6, 2007: Napo On The Carter Report December 6, 2007: Carter Report And New 'Titan' Prisons |
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