To view this issue of cjm online please visit the Taylor & Francis Online website here. Online access to the back catalogue is available free to all Centre for Crime and Justice Studies' members. To find out more about membership click here. In this edition EditorialBy Rob Allen20 July 2016 'Togetherness'? Tackling anti-social behaviour through community engagementBy Kathryn Farrow and David Prior20 July 2016 Communities and social justiceBy Sean Roberts20 July 2016 Community rights and rebalancing the systemBy David Blunkett20 July 2016 Communities of fear: justice or therapy?By Dolan Cummings20 July 2016 A call for action: engaging all communitiesBy Lee Jasper20 July 2016 Public(s), Politicians and PunishmentBy Mick Ryan20 July 2016 On the edge of objectivityBy Rohan Collier20 July 2016 Restorative youth conferencing: involving victims in criminal justiceBy Roisin Devlin and David O'Mahony20 July 2016 Open societyBy Eric Cadora20 July 2016 Public engagement in criminal justiceBy Ben Rogers20 July 2016 Working with communities to tackle low level disorder and anti-social behaviourBy Nicola Bacon and Saffron James20 July 2016 Community, the police and public confidence: an interview with Ian BlairBy Enver Solomon and Ben Bowling20 July 2016 What the police are for: the beginnings of a national debateBy Various Authors20 July 2016 Crime and Business: a culture of (declining) controlBy Various Authors20 July 2016 Community prisonsBy Andrew Coyle20 July 2016 Communities engaging with community service: the 'Making Good' initiativeBy Debbie Clarke20 July 2016 Too little, too late?By Aaron Pycroft20 July 2016 Whose community is it anyway?By Finola Farrant20 July 2016 Crime prevention in the community: the case of Neighbourhood WatchBy Sharon Bolton20 July 2016 Partnership working for victims of crimeBy Various Authors20 July 2016 cjm updateBy Chris Eades20 July 2016 4 September 2006