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Book reviews for "Griffiths,_John_Charles" sorted by average review score:

Classics of Children's Literature
Published in Paperback by MacMillan Coll Div (1992)
Authors: John W. Griffith and Charles H. Frey
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Classics of Children's Lilterature
This is an amazing collection of stories. All the classics are in one book. Well put together.


Zero Tolerance: Policing a Free Society (Choice in Welfare)
Published in Paperback by Civitas: Institute for the Study of Civil Society (1997)
Authors: Ray Mallon, William Bratton, Charles Pollard, John Orr, William Griffiths, and Norman Dennis
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Zero Tolerance: Social Arrangements in a Free Society
This book is ostensibly about crime. Specifically the amelioration of crime by a policy of zero tolerance of minor and petty crimes which became famous for the dramatic fall in crime in New York City.

This book has a slightly different focus. Rather than concentrating on what Zero Tolerance is and does, it seeks to place the crime figures and approaches to crime reduction in a broader context of community. The concept of community developed both in these pages and within a wider research agenda supposedly concerned with the development of a civil society in which the state plays a smaller and smaller role has a particular slant to it.

Zero Tolerance is the latest in a line of books from the Institute of Economic Affairs Health and Welfare Unit, now a free standing institute of it's own, CIVITAS, which postulate a decline in morals and behavious which result from a growing tendency in our society to becoming more individualsitic. The model of decency and good behaviour upon which this view is based is a rather idyllic view of the English working class family as portrayed by Norman Dennis in some of the earlier books of this series. Here it's scope is widened to incorporate views on how to tackle crime which involve the wider civil society. Policing in this view is both external and internal and the police forces themselves are seen as a legitimate part of the community, reinforcing the internal rules and moralities forged in the furnace of home and family. Headed preferably, of course, by working father, stay at home mother etc.

You will not find in this book any arguments about drugs save for the superior tone about how the use of drugs has grown in our society and is therefore bad. This cannot go unchallenged. In a passage devoted to the emphasis on education and development of working men's clubs and institutes the book praises them for their contribution to improving the moral fibre of those who participated. These clubs were segregated against women drinking in the public bar and fought hard to retain that position against equality laws and became more well known for the strong and cheap beers that they sold than for moral improvement. Their innate conservatism was a major contributor to why their customers deserted them and caused the closure of many in the North East of England. While the consumption of this legal drug is condoned, other recreational drugs are the cause of much petty crime. The book ignores the setting of the laws and blithley makes assertions about theft while ignoring the basic point that laws against drugs make them more attractive to the purchasers, more profitable to the suppliers and lead many who consume them to do things out of character in order to get their drugs. I could go on but this would be a book of it's own.

Zero Tolerance is a one sided book. It excludes any consideration of the diminishing role of the church in society as one of a number of relevant institutions, and it excludes any treatment of what changing structures in our society mean for those individuals who have previously been imprisoned by those structures, in particular, for women. The supposed golden age of the working class family is a modern myth, a sociological urban legend, which did not exist for many.

Ultimately, this is yet another attack on growing individualism in our society which begrudges any positive changes and which harkens back to an age which never really existed. The causes of crime run deeper than one parent families and tower blocks. The harsh reality today is that women are valued more by society than they were which is the real reason why female wage rates are increasing while male wages rates decline overall.

Perhaps we should be looking forward and not backward to see how a healthy individualist society might develop.


Early American Dance and Music: John Griffiths, Eighteenth-Century Itinerant Dancing Master
Published in Paperback by Hendrickson Group (1989)
Authors: Kate Van Winkle Keller, Kate Van Winkle Keller, and Charles C. Hendrickson
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Instructors Manual
Published in Paperback by Pearson Professional Education (04 September, 2002)
Authors: John Griffith and Charles Frey
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The Literary Heritage of Childhood : An Appraisal of Children's Classics in the Western Tradition
Published in Hardcover by Greenwood Publishing Group (1987)
Authors: Charles Frey and John Griffith
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Modern Iceland
Published in Unknown Binding by Pall Mall P. ()
Author: John Charles Griffiths
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Post-Avant-Garde Painting in the Eighties (Art and Design Profile, No 4)
Published in Paperback by St. Martin's Press (1988)
Authors: Andreas C. Papadakis, Charles Jencks, David Hockney, and John Griffiths
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The third man : the life and times of William Murdoch, 1754-1839, the inventor of gas lighting
Published in Unknown Binding by A. Deutsch ()
Author: John Charles Griffiths
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Three tomorrows : American, British, and Soviet science fiction
Published in Unknown Binding by Macmillan ()
Author: John Charles Griffiths
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Two Dancers in the Desert: The Life of Charles de Foucauld
Published in Hardcover by Orbis Books (1983)
Authors: Charles Lepetit and John Griffiths
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