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SUGGEST TONY'S FAREWELL GIFT

Joined-up criminal justice - Can it work?
The entire text of this New Statesman special supplement can be read for free here [PDF].

Joined-up criminal justice: can it work?
Supplement leader. By Edward Russell-Walling
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Fighting fear of crime
Joined-up justice is aimed at rebuilding public confidence in government and the rule of law. By Kathy Sutton
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NS Interview - Lord Falconer
Once parodied as Lord Dome, a crony who owed his status to Blair, he emerged as an audacious reformer. And he isn't done yet. Lord Falconer interviewed by Mary Riddell
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Lessons from abroad
Countries with high violence rates like ours have high levels of income inequality, writes Richard Garside
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Making the right connections
A roundtable discussion on joined-up criminal justice in Britain: what the problems are, what needs to be done, if there are any initiatives in the pipeline . . . and whether Asbos are working. Edited by Edward Russell-Walling
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Is it Aldous Huxley or George Orwell?
Once we had justice or injustice. Now the government speaks of "faster, more effective justice". What will the digital age do for us? By William Davies
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Confronting the perpetrators
Restorative justice puts criminals face to face with their victims, but does it work, ask Heather Strang, Charlotte Gill and Lawrence Sherman
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Falling foul of the techno-trap
When it comes to fighting crime, technology can hinder more than it helps, insists Nick Cohen
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