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28Oct
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14Oct
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20Jul
The series will cover four themes of critical relevance, but typically neglected in forensic psychological dialogue: punishment; discourse; economy and empire.
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14Jul
This annual conference on Evidenced Based Policing is co-sponsored by the Police Executive Programme, Institute of Criminology, Cambridge University; the Society of Evidence-Based Policing; and the Cambridge Centre for Evidence-Based Policing Ltd.
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13Jul
The series will cover four themes of critical relevance, but typically neglected in forensic psychological dialogue: punishment; discourse; economy and empire.
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13Jul
This annual conference on Evidenced Based Policing is co-sponsored by the Police Executive Programme, Institute of Criminology, Cambridge University; the Society of Evidence-Based Policing; and the Cambridge Centre for Evidence-Based Policing Ltd.
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12Jul
This annual conference on Evidenced Based Policing is co-sponsored by the Police Executive Programme, Institute of Criminology, Cambridge University; the Society of Evidence-Based Policing; and the Cambridge Centre for Evidence-Based Policing Ltd.
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08Jul
Bill McWilliams, who died in 1997, had a prestigious career as a probation practitioner, researcher and writer. His quartet of articles on the probation service’s development up to the point at which the “punishment in the community” debate began, is now widely regarded as its definitive history of ideas. He was a staunch advocate of the need for rigorous evaluation of probation practice – but an equally staunch critic of the excesses of the management ideal.
To keep his spirit alive, a group of Bill’s relatives, colleagues and friends established The Bill McWilliams Memorial Lecture. It is intended to honour the contribution he made to the probation service over a 30-year period and keep his perspectives at the forefront of probation thinking.
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06Jul
The series will cover four themes of critical relevance, but typically neglected in forensic psychological dialogue: punishment; discourse; economy and empire.
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22Jun
The series will cover four themes of critical relevance, but typically neglected in forensic psychological dialogue: punishment; discourse; economy and empire.