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43 Aust. & N.Z. J. Criminology iii (2010)

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EDITORIAL



Approaches to Criminology
Agile. For sometime I have considered what may succinctly and (albeit too) gener-
ally summarise criminological work emanating from the Antipodes, and specifically
that which is published in this journal. Agile it is.
   Agility, as Pakes argues in this volume, is required to adapt comparative crimi-
nology to conditions of globalisation and developing new conceptual and organisa-
tion approaches. The mixture of explanatory and interpretative strategies needed to
re-interpret the local in relation to the global, and indeed vice versa, requires lithe
intellectual work, moving between the general and the particular in understanding
crime and social controL. It also requires breadth of understanding of the local in
distinctly foreign contexts, and a capacity to draw on the production of knowledge
not only from the metropole but also those located on the intellectual and indeed
geographical periphery (Connell, 2007).
   The  43rd volume  of the Australian and New  Zealand Journal of Criminology
demonstrates the agility of criminological approach and thought. The Chief Justice
of Western Australia, the Honourable Wayne  Martin, in a controversial address to
the 2009 Australian and New  Zealand Society of Criminology Conference consid-
ers popular punitivism  and the role of the judiciary. Why  it is that Western
Australia so out performs other Australian jurisdictions in the over representation
of indigenous prisoners, and the recent escalation in this over representation? The
answers are still to be found. Social capital is the focus of Brown and Ross as they
explore women  in the post release environment. The post release mortality rates of
women   makes such work urgent and compelling. Cross and Newbold  consider the
'hands off' use of presumptive arrest in the everyday work lives of police in New
Zealand  when  government  policy and  legislation has insisted on a 'hands-on'
approach. The  articles by Powell and Hutton consider the interaction between
young people  and emerging and more  established cultures of communication and
social space while Prichard, Ogilvie and Stewart, and Listwan, Piquero and Van
Voorhis  offer compelling empirical studies evaluating significant theoretical
paradigms around  restorative justice, rational choice and self-efficacy and white
collar crime respectively. At the very least, readers of this journal need to be agile of
thought, and open minded in their consideration of the pages that follow.
   The  review section of the ANZJC returns a robust account of recently published
books in the field. The importance of engaging with new  works in a timely and
energised way does a great service to advancing criminological debate. I encourage
you all to consider contributing reviews. My thanks to Dr Mike Grewcock for his
work on the review section.

                                               Associate Professor Sharon Pickering


References
Connell, R. (2007). Southern Theory: the global dynamics of knowledge in the social sciences. Sydney,
   Australia: Allen and Unwin.


THEAUSTRALIAN  AND NEW  ZEALAND  JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY
VOLUME 43 NUMBER I 20 10 P iii


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