Criminal justice system: aims and processes
Pp. 329-349 in Ben Livings, Katherine McLachlan, Nerida Chazal, and Rick Sarre (eds.) Crime and Justice: A Guide to Criminology (7th edition). Sydney: Lawbook Company.
Criminal justice system: aims and processes
Pp. 383-403 in Derek Dalton, Willem deLint, and Darren Palmer (eds.) Crime and Justice: A Guide to Criminology (6th edition). Sydney: Lawbook Company.
Case study research in criminology
Doing Criminological Research, 3rd edition. London: SAGE publications (contact Professor Daly for published chapter)
Redress for historical institutional abuse of children
Australian and New Zealand handbook of Criminology, Crime, and Justice (2017). London: Palgrave Macmillan
Sibling sexual violence and victims’ justice interests: a comparison of youth conferencing and judicial sentencing
Pp. 144-78 in Estelle Zinsstag and Marie Keenan (eds.) Sexual Violence and Restorative Justice: Legal, Social and Therapeutic Dimensions. Abingdon: Routledge.
Criminal justice system: aims and processes
Pp. 358-76 in Darren Palmer, Willem de Lint, and Derek Dalton (eds.) Crime and Justice: A Guide to Criminology (5th edition). Sydney: Lawbook Company.
Sexual violence and victims’ justice interests
Pp. 108-39 in Estelle Zinsstag and Marie Keenan (eds.) Sexual Violence and Restorative Justice: Legal, Social and Therapeutic Dimensions. Abingdon: Routledge.
Money for justice: ex gratia redress for historical institutional abuse
The Sexual Abuse of Children: Recognition and Redress (2016). Melbourne: Monash University Publishing
Gender and adolescent-to-parent violence: a systematic analysis of typical and atypical cases
Pp. 148-68 in Amanda Holt (ed.) Interventions for Working with Adolescent Violence and Abuse toward Parents. London: Routledge.
Sexual violence and justice: how and why context matters for justice
Pp. 36-52 in Anastasia Powell, Nicola Henry, and Asher Flynn (eds.) Rape Justice: Beyond the Realm of Law. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Donor dollars and ministerial mindsets: constraints on NGO responses to rape in Cambodia
.” Pp. 158-72 in Alissa Ackerman and Rich Furman (eds.) Sexual Crimes: Transnational Problems and Global Perspectives. New York: Columbia University Press.
Sibling sexual violence: offending patterns and dynamics in youth justice conferences
Pp. 185-95 in Anne Hayden, Loraine Gelsthorpe, Venezia Kingi, and Allison Morris (eds.) A Restorative Approach to Family Violence: Changing Tack. Surrey: Ashgate Publishing.
Reconceptualizing sexual victimization and justice
Pp. 380-95 in Inge Van Fraechem, Antony Pemberton, and Felix Ndahinda (eds.) Justice for Victims: Perspectives on Rights, Transition and Reconciliation. London: Routledge.
The punishment debate in restorative justice
Pp. 356-74 in Jonathan Simon and Richard Sparks (eds.) The SAGE Handbook of Punishment and Society. London: SAGE.
Innovative justice processes: restorative justice, Indigenous justice, and therapeutic jurisprudence
Pp. 455-81 in Marinella Marmo et al. (eds.) Crime and Justice: A Guide to Criminology (4th edition). Sydney: Lawbook Company.
Aims of the criminal justice system
Pp. 389-406 in Marinella Marmo et al. (eds.) Crime and Justice: A Guide to Criminology (4th edition). Sydney: Lawbook Company.
Conferences and gendered violence: practices, politics, evidence
Pp. 117-35 in Estelle Zinsstag and Inge Vanfraechem (eds.) Conferencing and Restorative Justice: International Practices and Perspectives. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Reparation and restoration
Pp. 207-53 in Michael Tonry (ed.) The Oxford Handbook of Crime and Criminal Justice. New York: Oxford University Press.
Shake it up baby: practicing rock ‘n’ roll criminology
Pp. 111-24 in Mary Bosworth and Caroline Hoyle (eds.) What is Criminology? Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Rape and attrition in the legal process: a comparative analysis of five countries
Crime and Justice: An Annual Review of Research, Vol. 39, 565-650. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.