Reflections on Irish Criminology 2020
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-60593-3_1
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Criminology in Ireland, the Rise of a Discipline

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Cited by 2 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…This might appear as a rather banal and obvious point, but it has special salience in Irish criminology at this current juncture. As the nascent field of Irish criminology has begun to mushroom (for a comprehensive overview see Hamilton & Healy, 2016;Lynch et al, 2020) and there is growing interest in Irish penal history, it seems a timely and important moment to have a discussion about the problems of exceptionalism -and its attendant ideas of absences and inertia -along with the aspirations and potential for Irish criminological knowledge production it implies.…”
Section: Southernising Punishment and Societymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This might appear as a rather banal and obvious point, but it has special salience in Irish criminology at this current juncture. As the nascent field of Irish criminology has begun to mushroom (for a comprehensive overview see Hamilton & Healy, 2016;Lynch et al, 2020) and there is growing interest in Irish penal history, it seems a timely and important moment to have a discussion about the problems of exceptionalism -and its attendant ideas of absences and inertia -along with the aspirations and potential for Irish criminological knowledge production it implies.…”
Section: Southernising Punishment and Societymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The opening up of these positions in recent years marks an important milestone for a field whose graduates very often had to leave the island to pursue careers in criminology in various UK institutions (and indeed many still do). To a significant degree the increased number of faculty has been led by the high demand for the subject among students, with Lynch et al (2020) counting 54 honours degree programmes with a criminological component, and between 900 and 1000 students enrolling each year on these programmes. That said, large student numbers can also act as a pull on the time available for research and there remains a need to balance the needs of an ever increasing student population with opportunities for research (O’Donnell, 2020b).…”
Section: Criminology In Irelandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research tenders have also been issued by other, recently established, accountability or oversight bodies such as the Policing Authority and the Sentencing Guidelines Information Committee, joining more established funding streams from the Irish Research Council and European funding bodies. Such developments are likely to be welcomed by Irish criminologists, who, despite leanings towards social and critical theory, appear to share a consensus about the importance of criminology having a policy impact (Griffin, 2020; Lynch et al, 2020: 5; Rogan, 2020).…”
Section: Criminology In Irelandmentioning
confidence: 99%
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