1.
Innes, M. Understanding social control: deviance, crime and social order. (Open University Press, 2003).
2.
Hughes, G. Understanding crime prevention: social control, risk, and late modernity. vol. Crime and justice (Open University Press, 1998).
3.
Young, J. The exclusive society: social exclusion, crime and difference in late modernity. (SAGE, 1999).
4.
Garland, D. The culture of control: crime and social order in contemporary society. (University of Chicago Press, 2002).
5.
Newburn, T. Policing: key readings. (Willan Pub, 2005).
6.
Hudson, B. Understanding justice: an introduction to ideas, perspectives and controversies in modern penal theory. vol. Crime and justice (Open University Press, 2003).
7.
Hechter, M. & Horne, C. Theories of social order: a reader. (Stanford University Press, 2009).
8.
Martin Innes. Chapter 4: Everyday Order. in Understanding Social Control : Deviance, Crime and Social Order (McGraw-Hill Education, 2003).
9.
Jacobs, J. The Uses of Sidewalks: Safety. in The death and life of great American cities 37–71 (Modern Library, 2011).
10.
Martin Innes. Chapter 5: Policing. in Understanding Social Control : Deviance, Crime and Social Order (McGraw-Hill Education, 2003).
11.
Innes, M. Why ‘soft’ policing is hard: on the curious development of reassurance policing, how it became neighbourhood policing and what this signifies about the politics of police reform. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology 15, 156–169 (2005).
12.
Welsh, B. C. & Pfeffer, R. D. Reclaiming crime prevention in an age of punishment: An American history. Punishment & Society 15, 534–553 (2013).
13.
Hechter, M. & Horne, C. The Problem of Social Order. in Theories of social order: a reader 1–5 (Stanford University Press, 2009).
14.
Martin Innes. Chapter 4: Everyday Order. in Understanding Social Control : Deviance, Crime and Social Order (McGraw-Hill Education, 2003).
15.
Jacobs, J. The Uses of Sidewalks: Safety. in The death and life of great American cities 37–71 (Modern Library, 2011).
16.
Martin Innes. Chapter 1: The Argument. in Understanding Social Control : Deviance, Crime and Social Order (McGraw-Hill Education, 2003).
17.
Newburn, T. Late modernity, governmentaility and risk. in Criminology (Routledge, 2017).
18.
Black, D. The behaviour of law. (Academic Press, 1980).
19.
Messinger, S. L., Blomberg, T. G. & Cohen, S. Punishment and social control: essays in honor of Sheldon L. Messinger. (Aldine de Gruyter, 1995).
20.
Garland, D. The Culture of High Crime Societies. British Journal of Criminology 40, 347–375 (2000).
21.
Goffman, E. The Interaction Order: American Sociological Association, 1982 Presidential Address. American Sociological Review 48, (1983).
22.
Hudson, B. Punishment and social control. in The Oxford handbook of criminology (eds. Liebling, A., Shadd, M. & McAra, L.) (Oxford University Press, 2017).
23.
Hughes, G. Understanding crime prevention: social control, risk and late modernity. (Open University Press, 1998).
24.
White, R. & Perrone, S. Crime and social control: an introduction. (Oxford University Press, 1997).
25.
Young, J. Crime and discord in an age of late modernity. in The exclusive society: social exclusion, crime and difference in late modernity 30–55 (SAGE, 1999).
26.
Young, J. From Inclusive to Exclusive Society: Nightmares in the European Dream. in The new European criminology: crime and social order in Europe 64–91 (Routledge, 1998).
27.
YOUNG, J. Cannibalism and bulimia: patterns of social control in late modernity. Theoretical Criminology 3, 387–407 (1999).
28.
Ignatieff, M. Police and people: the birth of Mr Peel’s blue locusts. in Key readings in criminology 31–34 (Willan, 2009).
29.
Emsley, C. Chapter 4 The birth and development of the police. in Handbook of policing 72–89 (Willan Pub, 2008).
30.
Emsley, C. Policing befor the police. in Handbook of policing 47–71 (Willan Pub, 2008).
31.
Brogden, M. The emergence of the police – the colonial dimension. in Policing: key readings (Willan Pub, 2005).
32.
Styles, J. The emergence of the police – explaining police reform in eighteenth and nineteenth century England. in Policing: key readings (Willan Pub, 2005).
33.
Lentz, S. A. & Chaires, R. H. The invention of Peel’s principles: A study of policing ‘textbook’ history. Journal of Criminal Justice 35, 69–79 (2007).
34.
Bayley, D. What do the police do? in Key readings in criminology 574–579 (Willan, 2009).
35.
Martin Innes. Chapter 6: Policing. in Understanding Social Control : Deviance, Crime and Social Order (McGraw-Hill Education, 2003).
36.
Manning, P. The police: mandate, strategies and appearances. in Policing: key readings (Willan Pub, 2005).
37.
Bittner, E. Florence Nightengale in Pursuit of Willie Sutton: a theory of the police. in Policing: key readings (Willan Pub, 2005).
38.
Skolnick, J. A Sketch of the policeman’s working personality. in Key readings in criminology 580–585 (Willan, 2009).
39.
Newburn, T. Police Culture. in Criminology (Routledge, 2017).
40.
Reiner, R. Chapter 4 Cop Cultures. in Politics of the police (Oxford University Press, 2010).
41.
Loftus, B. Dominant Culture Interrupted: Recognition, Resentment and the Politics of Change in an English Police Force. British Journal of Criminology 48, 756–777 (2008).
42.
Loftus, B. Police occupational culture: classic themes, altered times. Policing and Society 20, 1–20 (2010).
43.
Shearing, C. & Ericson, R. Culture as figurative action. in Policing: key readings (Willan Pub, 2005).
44.
Waddington, P. Police (canteen) sub-culture. An appreciation. British Journal of Criminology 39, 287–309 (1999).
45.
Fielding, N. G. Concepts and Theory in Community Policing. The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice 44, 460–472 (2005).
46.
Banton, M. The police as peace officers. in Policing: key readings (Willan Pub, 2005).
47.
Klockars, K. The rhetoric of community policing. in Policing: key readings (Willan Pub, 2005).
48.
Manning, P. K. Community Policing. American Journal of Police (1984).
49.
Tom R. Tyler. Enhancing Police Legitimacy. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 593, (2004).
50.
Innes, M. ‘An Iron Fist in an Iron Glove’ The Zero Tolerance Policing Debate. The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice 38, 397–410 (1999).
51.
Waddington, P., stenson, K. & Don, D. In proportion: race and police stop and search. in Key readings in criminology (Willan, 2009).
52.
Thacher, D. Conflicting Values in Community Policing. Law & Society Review 35, (2001).
53.
Herbert, S. The Trapdoor of Community. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 95, 850–865 (2005).
54.
Innes, M. Situational Control. in Understanding social control: deviance, crime and social order 105–107 (Open University Press, 2003).
55.
Ronald V. Clarke. Situational Crime Prevention: Its Theoretical Basis and Practical Scope. Crime and Justice 4, (1983).
56.
Ronald V. Clarke. Seven Misconceptions of Situational Crime Prevention’ in Tilly, N. Handbook of Crime Prevention and Community Safety. in Handbook of Crime Prevention and Community Safety (ed. Tilly, N.) doi:10.4324/9781843926146.ch3.
57.
Tilley, N. Chapter 5: Situational measures and mechanisms. in Crime prevention 103–137 (Willan Pub, 2009).
58.
Welsh, B. C. & Pfeffer, R. D. Reclaiming crime prevention in an age of punishment: An American history. Punishment & Society 15, 534–553 (2013).
59.
Innes, M. The limits of situational control. in Understanding social control: deviance, crime and social order 107–109 (Open University Press, 2003).
60.
O’Malley, P. Risk, power and crime prevention. in Criminological perspectives (eds. McLaughlin, E. & Muncie, J.) 524–530 (SAGE, 2013).
61.
Crawford, A. & Evans, K. Crime Prevention and Community Safety. in The Oxford handbook of criminology (eds. Liebling, A., Shadd, M. & McAra, L.) 780–781 (Oxford University Press, 2017).
62.
Poyser, S. Shopping Centre Design, Decline and Crime. International Journal of Police Science & Management 7, 123–136 (2005).
63.
GUERETTE, R. T. & BOWERS, K. J. ASSESSING THE EXTENT OF CRIME DISPLACEMENT AND DIFFUSION OF BENEFITS: A REVIEW OF SITUATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION EVALUATIONS*. Criminology 47, 1331–1368 (2009).
64.
O’Malley, P. & Hutchinson, S. Reinventing Prevention: Why Did ‘Crime Prevention’ Develop So Late? British Journal of Criminology 47, 373–389 (2006).
65.
Evans, K. Crime and community: from communitarianism to the management of crime. in Crime prevention: a critical introduction (SAGE, 2011).
66.
Crawford, A. Chapter 4 Social and Communal Strategies. in Crime prevention and community safety: politics, policies and practices (Longman, 1998).
67.
Welsh, B. C., Farrington, D. P. & Taheri, S. A. Effectiveness and Social Costs of Public Area Surveillance for Crime Prevention. Annual Review of Law and Social Science 11, 111–130 (2015).
68.
College of Policing. The Effects of CCTV on Crime: What Works? (2013).
69.
Norris, C. & McCahill, M. CCTV: Beyond Penal Modernism? The British Journal of Criminology 46, 97–118 (2006).
70.
Poyser, S. Does the Effectiveness of CCTV as a Crime Prevention Strategy Outweigh the Threat to Civil Liberties? The Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles 77, 120–134 (2004).
71.
CCTV and Crime Prevention - Brottsförebyggande rådet. https://www.bra.se/bra-in-english/home/publications/archive/publications/2018-06-12-cctv-and-crime-prevention.html (2018).
72.
Evans, K. Crime prevention: a critical introduction. (SAGE, 2011).
73.
Walsh, B. C. & Farrington, D. P. Chapter 25: The Science and Politics of Crime Prevention: toward a New Crime Policy. in The Oxford handbook of crime prevention 508–520 (Oxford University Press, 2012).
74.
Atlas, R. I. 21st century security and CPTED: designing for critical infrastructure protection and crime prevention. (CRC Press, 2013).
75.
Delbert ElliottAbigail Fagan. Chater 12: the Future of Crime Prevention. in The Prevention of Crime 360–378 (Wiley-Blackwell; 1 edition).
76.
Grabosky, P. N. Crime Control in the 21st Century. Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 34, 221–234 (2001).
77.
Hughes, G. Chapter 7: The Future of crime control in late modernity. in Understanding crime prevention: social control, risk and late modernity 130–153 (Open University Press, 1998).
78.
Crime prevention in the 21st century: insightful approaches for crime prevention initiatives. (Springer Nature, 2016).
79.
United Nations. World Wildlife Crime Report: Trafficking in Protected Species.
80.
Wellsmith, M. The applicability of crime prevention to problems of environmental harm: a consideration of illicit trade in endangered species. in Global environmental harm: criminological perspectives 132–149 (Willan Pub, 2010).
81.
Martin Roberts. The International Wildlife Trade and Organised Crime: a review of the evidence and the role of the UK.
82.
Haken, J. Transnational Crime in the Developing World. Washington: Global Financial Integrity.
83.
Beirne, P. & South, N. Issues in green criminology: confronting harms against environments, humanity and other animals. (Willan Pub, 2007).
84.
Ferraro, P. Corruption and conservation: the need for empirical analyses. A response to Smith & Walpole. Oryx 39, (2005).
85.
Nurse, A. Policing wildlife: perspectives on the enforcement of wildlife legislation. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).
86.
Wellsmith, M. Wildlife Crime: The Problems of Enforcement. European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research 17, 125–148 (2011).
87.
Jacoby, K. Crimes against nature: squatters, poachers, thieves, and the hidden history of American conservation. (University of California Press, 2014).
88.
Zimmerman, M. E. The Black Market for Wildlife: Combating Transnational Organized Crime in the Illegal Wildlife Trade. Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law (2003).