an article by Gwen Robinson (University of Sheffield, UK) published in Criminology and Criminal Justice Volume 19 Issue 5 (November 2019)
Abstract
Despite playing a pivotal role in thousands of defendants’ experiences of criminal justice every year, the role of probation workers in the English and Welsh Magistrates’ courts has been neglected by researchers for several decades.
This article presents the findings of an ethnographic study of the work of probation staff in two such courts.
The study suggests that probation work in this context is being squeezed into an operating model which bears all the hallmarks of a process described by Ritzer as ‘McDonaldization’. It is argued that the proximate causes of McDonaldization in this sub-field of probation work lie at the intersection of parallel Government-led reform programmes – Transforming Rehabilitation and Transforming Justice – which have respectively focused on creating a market for probation services and enhancing the administrative efficiency of criminal proceedings.
Until now, almost no attention has been paid, either by researchers or policy-makers, to the intersection of these programmes of reform in the probation suites at the Magistrates’ courts.
Tuesday, 3 December 2019
Delivering McJustice? The probation factory at the Magistrates’ court
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