Alison Liebling, Shadd Maruna, and Lesley McAra: Introduction: the new vision
Part 1: Constructions of crime and justice
1: Paul Rock: The foundations of sociological theories of crime
2: Nicola Lacey and Lucia Zedner: Criminalization: historical, legal and criminological perspectives
3: David Garland: Punishment and welfare: social problems and social structures
4: Ian Loader and Richard Sparks: Penal populism and epistemic crime control
5: Robert Reiner: Political economy, crime, and criminal justice
6: Rod Morgan and David J. Smith: Delivering more with less: austerity and the politics of law and order
7: Mike Maguire and Susan McVie: Crime data and criminal statistics: a critical reflection
8: Coretta Phillips and Ben Bowling: Ethnicities, racism, crime, and criminal justice
9: Michele Burman and Loraine Gelsthorpe: Feminist criminology: inequalities, powerlessness, and justice
10: Mike Hough and Julian V. Roberts: Public opinion, crime, and criminal justice
11: Chris Greer and Eugene McLaughlin: News power, crime, and media justice
12: Paddy Hillyard and Steve Tombs: Social harm and zemiology
13: Keith Hayward and Oliver Smith: Crime and consumer culture
14: Avi Brisman and Nigel South: Green criminology
Part 2: Borders, boundaries, and beliefs
15: Katja Franko: Criminology, punishment and the state in a globalized society
16: Mary Bosworth: Border criminology and the changing nature of penal power
17: Kieran McEvoy, Ron Dudai and Cheryl Lawther: Criminology and transitional justice
18: David Nelken: Rethinking comparative criminal justice
19: Penny Green and Tony Ward: Understanding state crime
20: Martin Innes and Michael Levi: Making and managing terrorism and counter-terrorism: the view from criminology
21: Simon Cottee: Religion, crime, and violence
22: Per-Olof H. Wikström: Character, circumstances, and the causes of crime: towards an analytical criminology
23: Jon Bannister and John Flint: Crime and city: urban encounters, civility, and tolerance
24: Yvonne Jewkes and Dominique Moran: Prison architecture and design: perspectives from criminology and carceral geography
Part 3: Dynamics of crime and violence
25: Manuel Eisner: Interpersonal violence on the British Isles, 1200 - 2016
26: Alistair Fraser and Dick Hobbs: Urban criminal collaborations
27: Lesley McAra and Susan McVie: Developmental and life-course criminology: innovations, impacts, and applications
28: Jill Peay: Mental health, mental disabilities, and crime
29: David Gadd: Domestic violence
30: Jo Phoenix: Prostitution and sex work
31: Toby Seddon: Drugs: consumption, addiction, and treatment
32: Michael Levi and Nicholas Lord: White-collar and corporate crime
33: Joanna Shapland and Anthony Bottoms: Desistance from crime and implications for offender rehabilitation
Part 4: Responses to crime
34: Trevor Jones, Tim Newburn and Robert Reiner: Policing and the police
35: Adam Crawford and Karen Evans: Crime prevention and community safety
36: Alex Stevens: Principles, pragmatism, and prohibition: explaining continuity and change in British drug policy
37: Andrew Ashworth and Julian V. Roberts: Sentencing
38: Gwen Robinson and Fergus McNeill: Punishment in the community: evolution, expansion, and moderation
39: Ben Crewe and Alison Liebling: Reconfiguring penal power
40: Amy Ludlow: Marketizing criminal justice
41: Lesley McAra: Youth justice
42: Meredith Rossner: Restorative justice in the 21st century: making emotions mainstream
43: Alison Liebling, Fergus McNeill and Bethany E. Schmidt: Criminological engagements