This volume gathers together leading scholars in the field of environmental criminology to honour the work of Patricia and Paul Brantingham with new work on the geometry of crime, patterns in crime and crime generators and attractors.
This volume gathers together leading scholars in the field of environmental criminology to honour the work of Patricia and Paul Brantingham with new w...
Surveillance, Capital and Resistance is a major contribution to current debates on the subjective experience of surveillance. Based on a large research project undertaken in a Northern City in the UK and focusing mainly on the use of surveillance in the context of policing and security, the book explores how a diverse range of social groups ( school children, political protesters, offenders, unemployed people, migrants, and police officers ) experience and respond to being monitored by new surveillance technologies such as CCTV surveillance cameras and computers.
The book interweaves...
Surveillance, Capital and Resistance is a major contribution to current debates on the subjective experience of surveillance. Based on a large rese...
Within criminology 'the state' is often ignored as an active participant, or represented as a neutral force. While state crime studies have proliferated, criminologists have not paid attention to the history and impact of resistance to state crime. This book recognises that crimes of the state are far more serious and harmful than crimes committed by individuals, and considers how such crimes may be contested, prevented, challenged or stopped. Gathering together key scholars from the UK, USA, Asia, Australia and New Zealand, this book offers a deepened understanding of state crime through...
Within criminology 'the state' is often ignored as an active participant, or represented as a neutral force. While state crime studies have proliferat...
Sex work has always attracted policy, public and prurient interest. Currently, legal frameworks in developed countries range from prohibition, through partial legalisation to active regulation. Globalisation has increased women's mobility between developing and developed countries at the same time as women's employment opportunities in the developed world are shifting. Family and intimate relationships are being transformed by changing demographics, shifting social mores and new intersections between intimate lives and global markets. Sex work is located at the nexus of new intimacies,...
Sex work has always attracted policy, public and prurient interest. Currently, legal frameworks in developed countries range from prohibition, thro...
The words we use to talk about justice have an enormous impact on our everyday lives. As the first in-depth, ethnographic study of language, Talking Criminal Justice examines the speech of moral entrepreneurs to illustrate how our justice language encourages social control and punishment.
This book highlights how public discourse leaders (from both conservative and liberal sides) guide us toward justice solutions that do not align with our collectively professed value of "equal justice for all" through their language habits. This contextualized study of our justice...
The words we use to talk about justice have an enormous impact on our everyday lives. As the first in-depth, ethnographic study of language, Tal...
This study examines the ways in which the moral community is 'talked into being' in relation to crime, and the objects of concern that typically occupy its attention. It maps the imagined moral universe of the virtuous and the criminal and charts the relations between these two groups in the 'history of the present'.
This study examines the ways in which the moral community is 'talked into being' in relation to crime, and the objects of concern that typically occup...
Women's incarceration is on the rise globally and this has significant intergenerational, economic and humanitarian costs for communities across the world. While there have been efforts to implement reform, particularly in countries such as Canada, UK, US and Australia, the growing evidence suggests women's prisons and the support structures surrounding them are in crisis.
This collection of critical essays presents groundbreaking research on women's post-imprisonment policy, practice and experiences. It is the first collection to offer international perspectives on gender,...
Women's incarceration is on the rise globally and this has significant intergenerational, economic and humanitarian costs for communities across th...
In this book David Mansley argues that the frequency with which violence intrudes on to the streets is related to both how society is governed and how it is policed. With the help of an innovative methodology, he quantifies and tests three variables collective violence, democracy and protest policing using protests in Great Britain in 1999 2011, for his sampling frame. The result is the design of new tools of measurement and a harvest of new data, including previously unpublished details of banning orders and riot damages, that enable us to reflect, with the benefit of broad sociological...
In this book David Mansley argues that the frequency with which violence intrudes on to the streets is related to both how society is governed and ...
Political leaders and the popular press tell us that society is in the grip of a moral crisis. Where have our values gone? our newspapers scream at us. Benefit scroungers, greedy bankers, intrusive journalists, have-a-go rioters, political scandals and criminals of all shapes and sizes are continually cited as evidence that we live in a modern-day Gomorrah. Criminologists have studied this in several ways, including: media representations of crime, mass incarceration, hooliganism and the exercise of power and control through communities.
What criminologists have not studied is the place...
Political leaders and the popular press tell us that society is in the grip of a moral crisis. Where have our values gone? our newspapers scream at...