LSE creators

Number of items: 20.
Law School
  • Downes, David, Rock, Paul, Chinkin, Christine, Gearty, Conor (Eds.) (2007). Crime, social control and human rights: from moral panics to states of denial. Willan Publishing.
  • Social Policy
  • Downes, David, Rock, Paul, Chinkin, Christine, Gearty, Conor (Eds.) (2007). Crime, social control and human rights: from moral panics to states of denial. Willan Publishing.
  • Newburn, Tim, Rock, Paul (2006). David Downes: an introduction. In Newburn, Tim, Rock, Paul (Eds.), The Politics of Crime Control: Essays in Honour of David Downes (pp. 1-6). Oxford University Press.
  • Newburn, Tim, Rock, Paul (Eds.) (2006). The politics of crime control: essays in honour of David Downes. Oxford University Press.
  • Downes, David, Rock, Paul (2003). Understanding Deviance. Oxford University Press.
  • Sociology
  • Rock, Paul (2023). The role of victim advocacy in criminal justice reform in England and Wales. Annual Review of Criminology, 6(1), 499-527. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-criminol-030521-102428
  • Rock, Paul Elliot (2020). The role of the Church of England in the liberalising of criminal legislation of the 1960s. Contemporary British History, 34(3), 389-408. https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2020.1745639
  • Rock, Paul (2017). 'The dreadful flood of documents': the 1958 Public Record Act and its aftermath: part 2: after-effects. Archives: the journal of the British Records Association, 52(134).
  • Rock, Paul (2016). ‘The dreadful flood of documents’: the 1958 Public Record Act and its aftermath. Part 1: the genesis of the act. Archives: the journal of the British Records Association, 51(132/3), 48-69.
  • Rock, Paul (2014). The public faces of public criminology. Criminology and Criminal Justice, 14(4), 412-433. https://doi.org/10.1177/1748895813509638
  • Rock, Paul (2010). Victims, policy-making and criminological theory - selected essays. Ashgate Dartmouth.
  • Downes, David, Rock, Paul, Chinkin, Christine, Gearty, Conor (Eds.) (2007). Crime, social control and human rights: from moral panics to states of denial. Willan Publishing.
  • Rock, Paul (2006). Some aspects of the social construction of crime victims in Australia. Victims and Offenders, 1(3), 289-321. https://doi.org/10.1080/15564880600767397
  • Rock, Paul (2005). Chronocentrism and British criminology. British Journal of Sociology, 56(3), 473-791. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-4446.2005.00078.x
  • Rock, Paul (2005). Victims' policies as contingent accomplishments. In Vetere, E., Pedro, D. (Eds.), Victims of Crime and Abuse of Power: Festschrift in Honour of Irene Melup . United Nations.
  • Rock, Paul (2004). Victims, prosecutors and the state in nineteenth century England and Wales. Criminology and Criminal Justice, 4(4), 331-354. https://doi.org/10.1177/1466802504048653
  • Rock, Paul (2004). Constructing victims' rights: the Home Office, New Labour and victims. Oxford University Press.
  • Rock, Paul (2004). John Stanley Gittins. In The New Dictionary of National Biography . Oxford University Press.
  • Rock, Paul (2002). Sociological theories of crime. In Maguire, Mike, Morgan, Rod, Reiner, Robert (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Criminology (pp. p. 3). Oxford University Press.
  • Rock, Paul (2002). On becoming a victim. In Hoyle, Carolyn, Wilson, Richard (Eds.), New Visions of Crime Victims (pp. 1-22). Hart Publishing.
  • Howarth, Glennys, Rock, Paul (2000). Aftermath and the construction of victimisation: 'the other victims of crime'. Howard Journal of Criminal Justice, 39(1), 58-77. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2311.00153
  • Rock, Paul (2000). Homicide, voluntary organizations and the state in England and Wales. Homicide Studies, 4(1), 37-62. https://doi.org/10.1177/1088767900004001003