Title
‘Oceanic Criminology’ and Rural Access to Justice Across the Pacific
Author(s)
Date Issued
2025-01-30
Permanent link to this record
Research Output Type
Book Chapter
HERDC Category
Abstract
Rural criminology scholarship as an area of concentrated study across Oceania is scattered. For work theorising and with an empirical research focus, literature from Australia dominates, although has been somewhat ad hoc with an emphasis on localised case studies as opposed to broader bodies of research. Scholarship pertaining to rurality and crime in New Zealand is yet to emerge, although there has been some work on rural policing specifically. Focused research aimed at developing understandings about rurality and crime in the South Pacific context are not yet visible in existing literature. Adopting a hybridised theoretical approach, this chapter charts the notion of ‘access to justice’ and addresses seven specific access issues throughout Oceania, assessing how access can be conceived, measured and responded to in regional, rural and remote areas. Whilst reflecting on the existing canon of relevant works, the chapter will also look to the future ‘state of the art’, nominating areas for new scholarship pertaining to access to justice across the region.
Source
Rural Criminology in Global Perspective: State of the Art on the World's Continents, p. 130-152
Publisher
Bristol University Press
Place of Publication
Bristol, United Kingdom
Edition
1
Editor(s)
Editor(s): Matt Bowden and Gorazd Meško
Fields of Research (FoR) 2020
Socio-Economic Objectives (SEO) 2020
ISBN
9781529234039
9781529234046
Series Name
Research in Rural Crime
Publisher/Associated Link
Owning collection
Mapped collections