2016
DOI: 10.4324/9781315641423
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The Penal Voluntary Sector

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Cited by 41 publications
(78 citation statements)
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“…The penal landscape has changed considerably in recent decades with increasing numbers of voluntary sector organisations delivering interventions and services alongside public and private sector organisations (Gojkovic, Mills and Meek ; Wyld and Noble ). Dubbed the penal voluntary sector in the UK (Carey and Walker ; Corcoran ; Tomczak , , ), volunteers and philanthropists have had an established presence in modern penal systems. The creation of a mixed economy of criminal justice in England and Wales over the course of the last three decades has significantly boosted the involvement of the penal voluntary sector (see Maguire , pp.484–5).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The penal landscape has changed considerably in recent decades with increasing numbers of voluntary sector organisations delivering interventions and services alongside public and private sector organisations (Gojkovic, Mills and Meek ; Wyld and Noble ). Dubbed the penal voluntary sector in the UK (Carey and Walker ; Corcoran ; Tomczak , , ), volunteers and philanthropists have had an established presence in modern penal systems. The creation of a mixed economy of criminal justice in England and Wales over the course of the last three decades has significantly boosted the involvement of the penal voluntary sector (see Maguire , pp.484–5).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Much of the literature on this changing landscape focuses on structural organisation and strategic goals, with some exceptions (see Salole ; Tomczak ). There is a scarcity of data which articulate the complexities of the grass‐roots operations of a sector which comprises several thousand diverse organisations: varied in size, scope, roles, functions, ambitions, service users, and relationships to the commissioning processes and supply chains of the penal market (Tomczak , pp.473–4, 479–80, , pp.76–80, 172, 175; Wyld and Noble ). Research is needed to increase understanding of the motivations, practices of frontline workers, and ‘below the radar activities’ (Soteri‐Proctor and Alcock ) which are poorly understood (Tomczak and Albertson ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…; Maguire ; Mills, Meek and Gojkovic ). Others have argued that a large number of organisations working in the penal voluntary sector remain unaffected by the recent pressures of ‘marketisation’ (Tomczak , ), which, broadly defined, refers to the introduction of markets, market forces and market(‐like) principles and practices in the delivery and management of public goods and services (Birch and Siemiatycki ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, our knowledge of the penal voluntary sector is still partial and theoretically underdeveloped (Tomczak ). One explanation for this may be that previous research has been dominated by Anglophone scholars, mainly from the UK and North America (for example, Corcoran , ; Corcoran et al .…”
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confidence: 99%
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