"'What Russell Hogg and Kerry Carrington manage, in this painstakingly researched and well-documented study of crime in rural Australia, is to force us to revise all our inchoate images, stereotypes and understandings - of Australia, of crime and of the rural. The strength of their study is that they manage to do this by showing, not telling', an injunction drummed into all aspiring novelists. This 'showing', by an impressive combination of quantitative and qualitative analyses of statistical, ethnographic and secondary data, persuades us that their findings are robust and their critical theoretical starting point is necessary: crime is both a response to changing socio-political and economic realities (the 'rural crisis' of the book's title) and a product of the 'law and order' reaction to crisis (the 'policing' of the title).' Tony Jefferson, Professor of Criminology, Keele University"
AcknowledgementsPrefaceList of FiguresList of TablesList of Acronyms Departures from criminological and sociological urbanism: An introduction The Making of Rural Australia Crime in Rural Communities Talking About Rural Communities Talking About Crime Rurality's Visible Other: Crime and Indigenous Communities Rurality's Invisible Other: Violence and Whiteness Violence, Masculinities and the Rural Gender Order Policing the Rural Crisis Appendix - Researching Crime in Rural Communities BibliographyIndex