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First published online June 9, 2014

Populism and criminal justice policy: An Australian case study of non-punitive responses to alcohol-related violence

Abstract

Populism is widely regarded in the literature as a negative and inherently punitive influence on criminal justice policy. This article challenges this view and highlights the ways in which populism can produce forms of citizen engagement in the criminal justice context that are new and progressive. These possibilities are illustrated through a close analysis of the responses to a single instance of ‘random’ fatal violence: the killing of Thomas Kelly in King’s Cross, Sydney, in 2012. This case study shows how a populist campaign powerfully realigned political allegiances to call for, and achieve, real and enduring action from the New South Wales Government in addressing alcohol-related violence.

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Legal materials

R v Loveridge (2013) NSWSC 1638.
The Queen v Bayley (2013) VSCA 295.
Director-General Department of Trade & Investment, Regional Infrastructure and Services v Lewis (2012) NSWCA 436.

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Article first published online: June 9, 2014
Issue published: March 2015

Keywords

  1. Alcohol
  2. crime
  3. populism
  4. reform
  5. violence

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University of Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia

Notes

Julia Quilter, School of Law, University of Wollongong, Northfields Ave, Wollongong, New South Wales 2522, Australia. Email: [email protected]

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