Abstract
This paper starts from the proposition that approaches to crime and penal policy in contemporary Britain are of a piece with approaches to social policy across a number of fronts. “The New Social Policy” is examined in terms of “the stakeholder idea”, its implications for how people are meant to behave, and the distance between this and socio‐economic realities. The paper then explores various sectors of stakeholder social policy in their new order of importance—employment and training, education, health care, social care, housing, social security—before commenting on policies in respect of crime and crime prevention, in the light of the foregoing observations and with particular reference to the “lock‐’em‐up” tendency. The paper concludes that stakeholdership is no recipe for crime prevention.
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