Victor Bailey | |
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![]() Bailey in 2015 | |
Born | Keighley, England | 14 August 1948
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | Historian, academic, author, editor |
Years active | 1973-present |
Title | Charles W. Battey Distinguished Professor |
Board member of | The Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes (2006-2011) [1] |
Spouse | Ann Kathryn Bailey |
Awards | National Endowment for the Humanities University Fellowship (1990) |
Academic background | |
Education |
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Alma mater | University of Warwick |
Thesis | The Dangerous Classes in Late Victorian England: Reflections on the Social Foundations of Disturbance and Order (1975) |
Doctoral advisor | E. P. Thompson, Royden Harrison |
Academic work | |
Discipline | History |
Sub-discipline | Modern British history |
Institutions | University of Kansas |
Main interests | Prisons,punishment,police,crime,social history,juvenile delinquency,Margaret Thatcher on British politics [2] |
Notable works | Nineteenth-Century Crime and Punishment (2021) |
Website | www |
Victor Bailey (born 14 August 1948) is a British social and legal historian,author,editor and academic. Bailey is the Charles W. Battey Distinguished Professor of Modern British History at the University of Kansas' Department of History since 2007,and the director of its Joyce &Elizabeth Hall Center for the Humanities for seventeen years from 2000 to 2017. [3] [4] He is credited with editing and authoring some of the best volumes in nineteenth century British history,criminal law,policing,and punishment. His work "Nineteenth-Century Crime and Punishment" is divided into four volumes. Edited by Bailey with separate extensive explanatory notes,and published by Routledge in 2021,the four volumes are more than 1500 pages long in which Bailey covers almost everything about crime and punishment from 1776 to 1914. In his review of the four volumes,Simon Devereaux [a] described Bailey as "a scholar who,with Martin Wiener,stands preeminent amongst historians of crime,society,and punishment in modern England." [5] Bailey was awarded the Walter D. Love Prize of the North American Conference on British Studies [b] (1998), [6] the W. T. Kemper Fellowship for Teaching Excellence (1999) [7] and the Marquis Who's Who's Lifetime Achievement Award. [8]
Bailey is a native of Yorkshire. [6] He was born in Keighley in 1948 where he later attended the Keighley Boys’Grammar School. He earned a BA in European History from the University of Warwick in 1969,and a Diploma in Criminology from the University of Cambridge's Institute of Criminology in 1970. Bailey studied at the Centre for the Study of Social History (CSSH) at the University of Warwick where he earned a Ph.D. in history in 1975. He worked on his doctoral thesis titled "The Dangerous Classes in Late Victorian England:Reflections on the Social Foundations of Disturbance and Order" under the supervision of the founder of CSSH E. P. Thompson.
Bailey had held various positions at several institutions [c] before joining the University of Kansas (KU) in 1988. He worked at KU for thirty years,from 1988 to 2018.
Bailey was a visiting research professor at The Open University from 1999 to 2002,and a visiting research fellow at the Institute of Historical Research at the University of London from 1999 to 2000.
In 2025,Routledge published his book Judges and Convicts:The Principles and Patterns of Criminal Sentencing in Victorian England. Bailey studies the transformation of criminal sentencing structures in nineteenth-century England. He traces the evolution of sentencing practices from the dismantling of the "Bloody Code" in the 1830s,through the mid-century shift from convict transportation to domestic penal servitude,to the unprecedented mitigation of sentencing severity in the final decades of the Victorian era. Based on sentencing decisions from professional judges at the county Assizes,the Old Bailey (Central Criminal Court),and the Middlesex Sessions,Bailey reveals discrete stages in the development of sentencing policy and analyzes the struggle for supremacy in sentencing between politicians,civil servants,and judges. The study provides a survey of nineteenth-century sentencing trends and explains how the remarkable reduction in sentencing severity ultimately established what Bailey identifies as the modern sentencing tariff—a new equation between crime and punishment that emerged by the century's end. [9]