‘This is an interesting case study of how one part of the legal system (that focused on the repression of habitual offenders) operated in the Victorian era. The theme of repeat offenders can speak to larger questions related to Victorian understandings of crime and criminality, the nature of the state, and the limits of governmentality. It will provide an in-depth look at how the system of policing and surveillance functioned in the Victorian era, and will be able to point out its inherent contradictions and failings.’