Transfer of Policies and Practices to Other Countries

dc.cclicenceN/Aen
dc.contributor.authorCanton, Roberten
dc.date.accessioned2016-06-10T10:42:18Z
dc.date.available2016-06-10T10:42:18Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.descriptionThis is a book-chapter-length contribution to a prestigious and authoritative international encyclopaedia.en
dc.description.abstractThere is a long history of the international exchange of ideas, research findings, policies and practices in criminal justice. In recent years, there has been a marked increase in more deliberate and strategic activity to ‘learn lessons’ from the achievements (and sometimes the failures) of other nations and to ‘import’ policies and practices. This has become known as policy transfer, which has been defined as ‘the process by which knowledge of ideas, institutions, policies and programmes in one setting is fed into the policy-making arena in the development and change of policies and programmes in another setting’ (Dolowitz et al. 2000: 9). Transfer can take different forms, including copying, emulation or inspiration. A nexus of factors – economic, political, social, cultural and organisational - will influence the character and outcome of transfer attempts and the complexity of these interactions makes the consequences of transfer inherently unpredictable. Different people may have different and changing motivations to transfer and, since neither the intended nor the actual consequences are always easy to identify, evaluation is far from straightforward. Consideration of policy transfer foregrounds the importance of agency and choice in penal policy, redressing theoretical tendencies to explain penal development solely in structural terms. Experiences of policy transfer often expose taken-for-granted features of criminal justice systems and illuminate influences that shape their character and development.en
dc.explorer.multimediaNoen
dc.funderN/Aen
dc.identifier.citationCanton, R. (2014) Transfer of Policies and Practices to Other Countries. In: Bruinsma, Gerben, and David Weisburd, (eds.) Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Springer, pp. 2623 – 2632en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2086/12155
dc.language.isoen_USen
dc.peerreviewedYesen
dc.projectidN/Aen
dc.publisherSpringeren
dc.researchgroupCommunity & Criminal Justice Researchen
dc.researchinstituteInstitute for Research in Criminology, Community, Education and Social Justiceen
dc.subjectPolicy transferen
dc.subjectcriminal justiceen
dc.subjectprobationen
dc.titleTransfer of Policies and Practices to Other Countriesen
dc.typeBook chapteren

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