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 Allen19 July 2016 Populism and Punitive Penal PolicyBy Mike Hough19 July 2016 What Does the Public Think about Prison?By Rob Allen19 July 2016 Media and the Shaping of Public AttitudesBy Marie Gillespie and Eugene McLaughlin19 July 2016 Creating Public Awareness CampaignsBy Marion Janner19 July 2016 A Sense of PerspectiveBy Neil Chakraborti and Jon Garland19 July 2016 Independent Advisory GroupsBy Rosemary Drewery19 July 2016 Much Ado About NothingBy Steve Taylor19 July 2016 Public Involvement in the Criminal Justice SystemBy Laura Edwards19 July 2016 Between Reconciliation and Rejection: contemporary penal dilemnas through the eyes childrenBy Various Authors19 July 2016 Reducing Prison Numbers: does marketing hold the key?By Various Authors19 July 2016 Inspecting the CPSBy Andrew Billington19 July 2016 A Light on the Lay MagistracyBy Trevor Grove19 July 2016 Is Anyone There?By Lou Lockhart-Mummery19 July 2016 Referral Orders - more than the sum of their participantsBy Rod Earle19 July 2016 Victim Participation In Criminal JusticeBy Andrew Sanders19 July 2016 So How Helpful Was I?By Lesley Simmonds19 July 2016 Public Perceptions of ProbationBy Michael Teague19 July 2016 Independents and the Parole BoardBy Jo Dobry19 July 2016 Isolated but not excluded: can prisoners be participants?By Finola Farrant and Joe Levenson19 July 2016 Working in PrisonsBy Baroness Vivien Stern19 July 2016 Suicide and Self-harm Prevention: following release from prisonBy Claire McCarthy19 July 2016 cjm updateBy Una Padel19 July 2016 Book reviewBy Andrew Sanders19 July 2016 6 September 2002