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This two-volume set provides insights not only into issues of criminology, but also criminal justice issues that are generally not at the forefront of Caribbean scholarship, for example, remand detention and the Caribbean Court of Justice. This volume focusses on crime, crime trends and criminal justice reform whereas volume II focusses on intersectionality, justice, and vulnerable populations. Using a diverse approach, and tackling topics including, food fraud, human trafficking, gender-based and domestic violence, climate change, and agro-terrorism, these books fill an existing lacuna in the context of specific issues plaguing Caribbean criminological and justice landscapes in the region.
Table des matières
.- PART I: Opening Stanza.- Chapter 1: Fuelling the Development of a Caribbean Criminology: A 21st Century Imperative.- Part II: Invited scholarship.- Chapter 2: Criminal Justice Reform in Trinidad and Tobago: A Hydra-headed Judicial Phenomenon.- Chapter 3: Timothy Affonso - The Privy Council as the final appellate court in the Caribbean?.- PART III: Open scholarship.- Chapter 4: Addressing Crime in Trinidad and Tobago: Insights from Private Security Companies.- Chapter 5: Casandra Harry, April Holder, and Alana Wheeler - An Analysis of the Detection Rate of Human Trafficking in Trinidad and Tobago.- Chapter 6 Unmasking Deception: A Criminological Dive into Food Fraud.- Chapter 7: The A.S.I.A Model for Robbery Management in Trinidad and Tobago.- Chapter 8: Kadesha Swearing - Financial Crimes in the Caribbean: Challenges, Impacts and Strategic Responses.- Chapter 9: Policing child victims: An exploration of officers experiences of policing vulnerability in Trinidad and Tobago.- Chapter 10: Tarik Weekes and Olivene Burke - Community violence and engagement between University and community as a device for change.- Chapter 11: Pre-trial Detention: Whittling Away the Rule of Law, Emasculation of the Presumption of Innocence, or a Human Rights Abuse in Trinidad and Tobago?.- Chapter 12: Conclusion Continuity and Development: What s Next for a Caribbean Criminology?.
A propos de l'auteur
Wendell C. Wallace is Senior Lecturer in Criminology and Criminal Justice in the Department of Behavioural Sciences, The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago.
Résumé
This two-volume set provides insights not only into issues of criminology, but also criminal justice issues that are generally not at the forefront of Caribbean scholarship, for example, remand detention and the Caribbean Court of Justice. This volume focusses on crime, crime trends and criminal justice reform whereas volume II focusses on intersectionality, justice, and vulnerable populations. Using a diverse approach, and tackling topics including, food fraud, human trafficking, gender-based and domestic violence, climate change, and agro-terrorism, these books fill an existing lacuna in the context of specific issues plaguing Caribbean criminological and justice landscapes in the region.