Kerry Clamp

Kerry Clamp
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Kerry verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
Verified
Kerry verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
  • PhD
  • Professor (Associate) at University of Nottingham

About

25
Publications
32,865
Reads
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228
Citations
Introduction
Kerry Clamp currently works at the School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Nottingham. Her most recent publication is 'Restorative policing: Concepts, theory and practice.'
Current institution
University of Nottingham
Current position
  • Professor (Associate)
Additional affiliations
August 2017 - present
University of Nottingham
Position
  • Professor (Assistant)
January 2013 - August 2015
The University of Sydney
Position
  • Lecturer in Criminology

Publications

Publications (25)
Article
Full-text available
Our policing institutions are in a state of crisis. This article argues that meaningful reform will require cultural transformation that places community and relationships at the core of frontline policing. The integration of restorative practice—restorative principles and techniques—is presented as a better approach to reform than other solutions...
Article
Full-text available
Criminal justice reform plays a pivotal role in helping to foster reconciliation and peace-building in postconflict societies. In the wake of their respective political transitions, both Northern Ireland and South Africa have formulated proposals for reform of their youth justice systems based upon restorative principles. This article analyses the...
Technical Report
Full-text available
This report presents an overview of restorative justice provision within Constabularies across England and Wales in 2018 and builds on a previous survey conducted in 2009. The research reveals that restorative interventions have a long history in some Constabularies, that they are widely used across most forces and that there has been an increased...
Chapter
Full-text available
This chapter proposes ways to actively shape future cross-cultural police leadership and collaboration within and across police cultures. The ideas presented are intended to create dialogue across modern police organizations and those who lead them. All four authors are connected with police work either as police officers, police researchers, or cr...
Chapter
Full-text available
International and Transnational Crime and Justice - edited by Mangai Natarajan June 2019
Chapter
Full-text available
Restorative policing has experienced somewhat of a tumultuous journey within the international criminal justice landscape. The practice first emerged in Wagga Wagga, Australia in the early 1990s where its architects drew inspiration from both the New Zealand conferencing system and John Braithwaite’s theory of reintegrative shaming. This chapter ar...
Book
Full-text available
In the UK and elsewhere, restorative justice and policing are core components of a range of university programmes; however, currently no such text exists on the intersection of these two areas of study. This book draws together these diverse theoretical perspectives to provide an innovative, knowledge-rich text that is essential reading for all tho...
Article
Full-text available
A new policing paradigm is called for as an integral part of policing, and not just an interjection of restorative justice processes into current policing practice . Restorative practices should underpin all policing and be guided by restorative justice values of respect, dialogue and relationships, and not focused on crime, but broadly on harmful...
Article
Full-text available
Applied criminology may be thought of as being concerned with the application of the discipline of criminology to ‘real world’ problems of crime and criminal justice. It is both critical and engaged and seeks to find solutions to particular issues of crime and justice, as well as to problematize suggested approaches. The article sets out to review...
Article
Full-text available
This chapter proposes ways to actively shape future cross-cultural police leadership and collaboration within and across police cultures. The ideas presented are intended to create dialogue across modern police organizations and those who lead them. All four authors are connected with police work either as police officers, police researchers, or cr...
Article
Full-text available
Community justice panels have had a long and varied history and are now established at one level or another in most advanced neoliberal states. They involve local members of the community as volunteers in responding to crime and have been lauded for their potential to reduce offending behaviour and provide a more localised, culturally sensitive app...
Article
Full-text available
This chapter explores the role of leadership in restorative policing in England and Wales and the impact of the external criminal justice policy environment on attempts to embed restorative approaches into police practice. It is clear that certain aspects of restorative justice chime with long-standing values in police culture, not least the emphas...
Article
Full-text available
This book explores how restorative justice is used and what its potential benefits are in situations where the state has been either explicitly or implicitly involved in human rights abuses. Restorative justice is increasingly becoming a popular mechanism to respond to crime in democratic settings and while there is a burgeoning literature on these...
Article
Full-text available
This article explores the potential benefits of developing partnerships with victims in managing threats to their personal safety via smart police use of electronic monitoring technologies. The central premise for this position is that traditional surveillance responses that seek to manage offending behaviour have limited effectiveness and do not c...
Article
Full-text available
The evolution of the policing role over the last decade has led to 33 police forces in England and Wales integrating restorative justice practices, in one form or another, into their responses to minor crime committed for the first time by both youths and adults. Most recently, this reform dynamic has been used in response to more serious offences...
Article
Full-text available
This article considers the applicability of restorative justice literature in the transitional justice arena. The authors argue that while restorative justice is applied to a wide range of conflicts, the established literature is often of limited value within a transitional context. Insufficient attention is often paid to the inherent difficulties...
Article
Full-text available
Criminal justice reform plays a pivotal role in helping to foster reconciliation and peace-building in post-conflict societies. In the wake of their respective political transitions, both Northern Ireland and South Africa have formulated proposals for reform of their youth justice systems based upon restorative principles. This article analyses the...
Article
Full-text available
The coalition government have pledged a commitment to a shift from 'Big Government' that presumes to know best, to the 'Big Society' that trusts in people for ideas and innovation to mend Britain's 'broken society'. While the policy implications of this shift remain opaque at this stage, further work has been undertaken to articulate what this stra...
Article
Full-text available
The coalition government have pledged a commitment to a shift from 'Big Government' that presumes to know best, to the 'Big Society' that trusts in people for ideas and innovation to mend Britain's 'broken society'. While the policy implications of this shift remain opaque at this stage, further work has been undertaken to articulate what this stra...

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