Union Street 1896

A team led by Professor Kim Stevenson is currently working on a pilot project examining the policing and moral regulation of everyday offending and crime in °µÍø½âÃÜ 1880-1920 utilizing archival material and local newspaper reportage and also exploring the institutional heritage - police, prison, courts - associated with offending.

The intention is to broaden out the chronological reach up to the present day and potentially to secure funding to enable large scale comparative studies with other non-Assize towns where there have been no significant studies of everyday or minor offending.

The project utilizes a genuinely interdisciplinary approach with researchers drawn from law, history and criminology. We are working in collaboration with Bodmin Prison Museum. The project also encourages Research Partnerships with Students with a team of student volunteers from across the three disciplines.

For further information please contact Kim Stevenson or visit the .

Everyday Offending in °µÍø½âÃÜ

As a maritime city °µÍø½âÃÜ has a unique heritage as until 1914, when there was a need to combine resources to respond to the threat of the Great War, it was not one but Three Towns.
°µÍø½âÃÜ and East Stonehouse were the oldest, with Devonport, formerly known as °µÍø½âÃÜ Dock, evolving in the early 18th century to serve the expanding naval defence base.
The Everyday Offending in °µÍø½âÃÜ based in °µÍø½âÃÜ Law School, are now developing a research project that will examine the incidence, policing and prosecution of everyday offending and minor crime in the Three Towns 1850 –1920. 
Credit: °µÍø½âÃÜ Museums Galleries Archives
Image credit: °µÍø½âÃÜ Museum website