Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 February 2009
The history of crime, penal policy and policing is currently enjoying a vogue — and not least fashionable among the topics under discussion has been the question of the nineteenth-century English ‘criminal class’, the origins of the term and its social significance. Critics are divided more or less equally into quantifiers and phenomenologists, optimists and pessimists about real trends. Few are the questions about the known facts but no agreement appears in sight on the subject of their interpretation. The principal reason for disagreement, as it appears to the present writer, is the central dominance of predicative, mono-thematic perspectives and explanations — any of which will fit the facts quite well but all of which seem insusceptible to conclusive proof. First let us consider the range of dispute among the phenomenologists — each of whom may also be characterized as a univer-salist, in the sense that they seem to believe the possible range of criminal events illimitable and the figures on crime merely a reflection of external social reactions rather than evidence of any upward or downward trend in measurable events.
The statistical series on which this article is based may be found in the annual Reports of H. M. Inspector of Constabulary, Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis, Poor Law Commissioners and Local Government Board, Judicial Statistics (Criminal); also The Fourth Report from the Select Committee of the House of Lords on Intemperance, PP 1878 (338), XIV, 580–90; the Report of the Commissioners appointed to inquire into the working of the Penal Servitude Acts, PP 1878–9 (C.236–II), XXXVIII, 1154–5; Census. England and Wales. General Report, 121–2, in PP 1863 (3221), LIII, 146–7. Column B in the appended tables indicates the towns and counties on the graphs. I would like to thank the Twenty-Seven Foundation for a grant of travel expenses incurred in the preparation of this essay.
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