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Criminology and Criminal Justice New Titles and Key Backlist 2010-2011
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Welcome to Routledge
Criminology and Criminal Justice New Titles and Key Backlist 2010-2011
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contents Introduction to Criminology Textbooks .............................................................2 General Criminology..........................................................................................4 Methods And Data..........................................................................................11 Race, Class Gender and Crime.........................................................................14 Crime and Society............................................................................................16 Social Policy.....................................................................................................21 Policing and Crime Control..............................................................................22 Criminal Justice................................................................................................24 Cultural Criminology........................................................................................30 Forms of Crime................................................................................................33 Forensic Criminology.......................................................................................39 Historical Criminology......................................................................................40 Youth and Crime.............................................................................................42 Index...............................................................................................................45 Order Form............................................................................. Back of Catalogue
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I n tro d u ct ion to Cr imin olog y T e x tbook s
Dear Criminologists, Criminal Justice Educators and Professionals,
2nd Edition
These are difficult and turbulent times for publishing and Higher Education, yet Routledge flourishes and grows, because we continue to innovate and adapt to the new environment. We have just acquired Willan Publishing, an award-winning criminology publisher, which will give you a wider range of materials and we are now the largest supplier of e-book versions to Amazon and other electronic distributors. Our new web site Routledge.com/criminology offers students and other readers better than bookstore prices and free shipping for orders $35/£20 and above.
A Sociological Introduction
We are proud to have published John Irwin’s last book Lifers: Seeking Redemption In Prison. We are also proud to have published a revolutionary new graduate text in social statistics Regression Analysis in the Social Sciences by Rachel Gordon, accompanied by an extensive web site. We are equally pleased to announce new titles in White Collar Crime by Hank Brightman and also by Mike Benson and Sally Simpson, as well as Mathieu Deflem’s The Policing of Terrorism, Shaun Gabbidon’s Criminological Perspectives on Race and Crime, Second Edition, and The New Criminal Justice, edited by John Klofas, Natalie Hipple, and Ed McGarrell. We shall be publishing Feminist Criminology by Claire Renzetti, Contemporary Critical Criminology by Walter de Keseredy and the much awaited Public Criminology Iain Loader and Richard Sparks. We are happy to announce the ground breaking Handbooks of Intenational Criminology (Cindy Smith et al), Human Rights (Thomas Cushman) and Deviant Behaviour (by Clifton Bryant). Equally we are proud to publish the second edition of Todd Clear’s and Hamiltons Community Justice, 50 Key Thinkers in Criminal Justice by Keith Hayward and the Dictionary of Criminal Justice by Peter Joyce. Another very successful innovation we have recently launched is The Social Issues Collection, a web based custom library for teaching with our partner University Readers in San Diego, California. Working with a team of very talented academic editors across the social sciences, we created a collection of more than 250 teachable excerpts from Routledge and other publishers – aimed at undergraduate courses throughout the sociology curriculum. Go to routledge.customgateway.com to learn more. As we continue our efforts, we hope you will contact us or our Series Advisors Chet Britt, Northeastern University, Shaun Gabbidon, Penn State – Harrisburg, Nancy Rodriguez, Arizona State, and Tim Newburn London School of Economics if you have a new book idea, or if you have other ideas and suggestions for how we can publish better.
Criminology Eamonn Carrabine, Maggy Lee, Nigel South, Pam Cox and Ken Plummer, all at University of Essex, UK
This fully revised textbook, ground in original research, is a clear and insightful introduction to the key topics studied in undergraduate criminology courses. Accessible and user-friendly, it is essential reading for all criminology students.
Selected Contents: Part 1: The Criminological Imagination 1. Introduction 2. Histories of Crime 3. Researching Crime Part 2: Thinking About Crime 4. Enlightenment and Early Traditions 5. Early Sociologies of Crime 6. Radicalizing Traditions: Marxism, feminism and Foucault 7. Crime, Social Theory and Social Change 8. Crime, Place and Space Part 3: Doing Crime 9. Victims and Victimization 10. Crime and Property 11. Crime, Sexuality and Gender 12. Crime, Emotion and Social Psychology 13. Organizational and Professional Forms of Crime Part 4: Controlling Crime 14. Drugs, Alcohol, Health and Crime 15. Thinking About Punishment 16. The Criminal Justice Process 17. Police and Policing 18. Prisons and Imprisonment Part 5: Globalizing Crime 19. Green Criminology 20. Crime and Media 21. Terrorism, State Crime and Human Rights 22. Futures of Crime, Control and Criminology 2008: 246 x 189: 560pp Hb: 978-0-415-46450-5: £100.00 Pb: 978-0-415-46451-2: £25.99 eBook: 978-0-203-88494-2 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415464512
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Int roduction to Crimin olog y T e x tbook s
Fifty Key Thinkers in Criminology
Criminology
Edited by Keith Hayward, University of Kent, UK, Shadd Maruna, Queen’s University Belfast, UK and Jayne Mooney, University of Kent, UK
Martin O’Brien, University of Chester, UK and Majid Yar, University of Kent, UK
Featured profiles include:
Selected Contents: Biological Criminology. Phrenology. Subcultural Criminology. Status Frustration. Environmental Criminology. Speciesism. State Crime. Genocide. Sex Crimes. Procurement.
Fifty Key Thinkers in Criminology brings the history of criminological thought alive through a collection of fascinating life stories. The book covers a range of historical and contemporary thinkers from around the world, offering a stimulating combination of biographical fact with historical and cultural context. A rich mix of life-and-times detail and theoretical reflection is designed to generate further discussion on some of the key contributions that have shaped the field of criminology. • Cesare Beccaria • Nils Christie • Albert Cohen • Carol Smart • W. E. B. DuBois
The Key Concepts
Series: Routledge Key Guides Fully cross-referenced, with extensive suggestions for further reading and more in-depth study of the topics discussed, this is an essential reference guide for students of Criminology at all levels. Topics covered range across sociological concepts, the justice system and the different varieties of criminal and deviant behaviour in an easy to use A to Z format.
2008: 216 x 138: 240pp Hb: 978-0-415-42793-7: £65.00 Pb: 978-0-415-42794-4: £14.99 eBook: 978-0-203-89518-4 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415427944
• John Braithwaite Fifty Key Thinkers in Criminology is an accessible and informative guide that includes helpful cross-referencing and suggestions for further reading. It is of value to all students of criminology and of interest to those in related disciplines, such as sociology and criminal justice. 2009: 216 x 138: 352pp Hb: 978-0-415-42910-8: £65.00 Pb: 978-0-415-42911-5: £16.99 eBook: 978-0-203-86503-3 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415429115
Criminology The Basics Sandra Walklate Series: The Basics 2005: 198 x 129: 232pp Hb: 978-0-415-33553-9: £60.00 Pb: 978-0-415-33554-6: £11.99 eBook: 978-0-203-44821-2 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415335546
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International Criminology
Key Ideas in Criminology
A Critical Introduction Rob Watts and Judith Bessant, both at Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Australia and Richard Hil, Southern Cross University, Australia
This book is the first comprehensive introduction to international criminology. It provides a genuinely international view of the discipline, drawing on important schools of thought, examples and analysis from the UK, EU, USA, Canada and Australia.
Selected Contents: Introduction: Theoretical Traditions and Historical Perspectives 1. What is Crime?: How Criminologists Think about Crime 2. The Origins of Modern Criminology 3. The Consolidation of Modern Criminology 4. Dissenting Criminology: Issues in Contemporary Criminology 5. A Guide to Reading and Thinking about Criminology 6. Explaining Crime: Unemployment and Crime 7. Explaining Crime: Crime and the Family 8. Criminology and the Lure of Crime Prevention 9. Criminal Justice: Victimology and the Victim 10. Criminology and Corporate Crime 11. Criminology and State Crime. Conclusion: Towards a Reflexive Criminology 2008: 246 x 174: 280pp Hb: 978-0-415-43178-1: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-43179-8: £23.99 eBook: 978-0-203-93430-2
NEW
Contemporary Critical Criminology Walter S. DeKeseredy, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Canada
The concept of critical criminology – that crime and the present day processes of criminalization are rooted in the core structures of society – is of more relevance today than it has been at any other time.
Written by an internationally renowned scholar, Contemporary Critical Criminology introduces the most up-to-date empirical, theoretical, and political contributions made by critical criminologists around the world. In its exploration of this material, the book also challenges the erroneous but widely held notion that the critical criminological project is restricted to mechanically applying theories to substantive topics, or to simple calling for radical political, economic, cultural, and social transformations. This book is an essential source of reference for both undergraduate and postgraduate students of Criminology, Criminal Theory, Social Policy, Research Methodology, and Penology.
For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415431798
Selected Contents: Preface Acknowledgements 1. Critical Criminology: Definition and Brief History 2. Contemporary Critical Criminological Schools of Thought 3. Contemporary Critical Criminological Research 4. Confronting Crime: Critical Criminological Policies. References August 2010: 198 x 129: 216pp Hb: 978-0-415-55667-5: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-55666-8: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-86923-9 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415556668
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Ge n e r al C r i mi n olog y
Genocidal Crimes
New
Alex Alvarez, Northern Arizona University, USA
Public Criminology?
Ian Loader, University of Oxford, UK and Richard Sparks, University of Edinburgh, UK
Genocide has emerged as one of the leading problems of the twentieth century. No corner of the world seems immune from this form of collective violence. While many individuals are familiar with the term, few people have a clear understanding of what genocide is and how it is carried out. This book clearly discusses the concept of genocide and dispels the widely held misconceptions about how these crimes occur and the mechanisms necessary for its perpetration. Genocidal Crimes differs from much of the writing on the subject in that it explicitly relies upon the criminological literature to explain the nature and functioning of genocide. Criminology, with its focus on various types of criminality and violence, has much to offer in terms of explaining the origins, dynamics, and facilitators of this particular form of collective violence. Through application of a number of criminological theories to various elements of genocide Alex Alvarez presents a comprehensive analysis of this particular crime. These criminological perspectives are underpinned by a variety of psychological, sociological, and political science based insights in order to present a more complete discussion of the nature and functioning of genocide.
Selected Contents: 1. Defining a Crime 2. States and Genocide I: State Crime & War 3. States and Genocide II: Legitimacy and Ideology 4. Perpetrators I: The Organizational Context 5. Perpetrators II: The Individual Context 6. An End To Genocide? 2009: 198 x 129: 216pp Hb: 978-0-415-46675-2: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-46678-3: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-92665-9 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415466783
What is the role and value of criminology in a democratic society? How do, and how should, its practitioners engage with politics and public policy? How can criminology find a voice in an agitated, insecure and intensely mediated world in which crime and punishment loom large in government agendas and public discourse? What collective good do we want criminological enquiry to promote?
In addressing these questions, Ian Loader and Richard Sparks offer a sociological account of how criminologists understand their craft and position themselves in relation to social and political controversies about crime, whether as scientific experts, policy advisors, governmental players, social movement theorists, or lonely prophets. They examine the conditions under which these diverse commitments and affiliations arose, and gained or lost credibility and influence. This forms the basis for a timely articulation of the idea that criminology’s overarching public purpose is to contribute to a better politics of crime and its regulation. Public Criminology? offers an original and provocative account of the condition of, and prospects for, criminology which will be of interest not only to those who work in the fields of crime, security and punishment, but to anyone interested in the vexed relationship between social science, public policy and politics. Selected Contents: Introduction: Why Public Criminology? 1. The Condition of Contemporary Criminology 2. The Public Social Science Debate 3. Criminology in a Hot Climate 4. Cooling Devices 5. Criminology as a Democratic UnderLabourer. July 2010: 198 x 129: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-44549-8: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-44550-4: £22.99 eBook: 978-0-203-84604-9 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415445504
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Forthcoming
Forthcoming in 2011
Policing
The Corporate Criminal
Conceptualisations and Practices of Security
Steve Tombs, Liverpool John Moores University, UK and David Whyte, University of Liverpool, UK
Michael Kempa, University of Ottawa and Clifford D. Shearing, University of Cape Town, South Africa Policing draws upon a review of recent literature and ongoing research pertaining to innovations in policing, particularly in North America, the United Kingdom, Southern Africa, South America and Australia. It explores conceptions, institutions and technologies for policing in the AngloAmerican world since the early twentieth century. Policing is a social invention that is undergoing enormous challenges and changes. The authors trace these changes and the challenges that have prompted them, especially those that have taken place since the mid-twentieth century. They also address the theoretical and practical governance debates within a global context and will attract a readership beyond those with a particular interest in ’policing’. Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. History of AngloAmerican Policing 3. Public Policing 4. The Quiet Revolution 5. Policing Exports 6. Policing a Global World November 2010: 198 x 129: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-40841-7: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-40842-4: £16.99
Treating the corporation as if it were a human person is ubiquitous in contemporary political, cultural and legal constructions of the corporation – from the creation of ’brands’ and the representation of the corporation in fiction, to statutory and common law rules of corporate liability. It dominates both academic approaches and popular representations of the corporation, from discussions of corporate citizenship, corporate social responsibility and ’corporate greed’. This book interrogates the concept of corporate ’personhood’ to understand the nature of corporate criminality and the prospects for more effective corporate control. Linking debates in criminology to broader claims around corporate social responsibility, it provides an understanding of the key ideas that explain the role of the corporation in the global economy. Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. The Moral Corporation 3. The Corporate Citizen 4. The Victimised Corporation 5. Corporate Criminal Personality 6. Conclusion: Crime, Harm, Accountability March 2011: 198 x 129 Hb: 978-0-415-55636-1: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-55637-8: £20.99 eBook: 978-0-203-86940-6
For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415408424
For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415556378
Complimentary Exam Copies Titles marked with this icon are available as complimentary exam copies for lecturers or faculty considering them for course adoption. Visit the URL to obtain your print or electronic copy.
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Ge n e r al C r i mi n olog y
Forthcoming in 2011
Security
Feminist Criminology
Lucia Zedner, University of Oxford, UK
Claire M. Renzetti, University of Dayton, USA
This important volume traces the development of feminist criminology and assesses its impact on the discipline. Examining the development of feminist theoretical perspectives and empirical research in criminology, this key book investigates their impact on research methods and topics, pedagogy and curriculum and employment in academic and criminal justice professions.
Claire M. Renzetti considers the potential for feminist criminology to transform the discipline, making it more progressive by including, as a central principle the need to analyze intersecting inequalities, especially those of gender, race and class, in order to fully understand both crime and justice. She skilfully gives a balanced view of the subject, incorporating both the successes and failures of feminist criminology and provides an extensive, up-to-date bibliography which allows criminology students to access, for their own research purposes, the large body of feminist criminological literature. Selected Contents: 1. The Emergence of Feminist Criminology 2. Feminist Criminology at the Close of the Twentieth Century 3. Feminist Criminology in the Twenty-First Century 4. Assessing the Impact of Feminist Criminology in Academe 5. Assessing the Impact of Feminist Criminology in Criminal Justice Practice 6. The Future of Feminist Criminology and the Future of Criminology: Separate but Equal? February 2011: 198 x 129: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-38143-7: £65.00 Pb: 978-0-415-38142-0: £16.99 eBook: 978-0-203-93031-1 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415381420
This book provides a brief, authoritative introduction to the history of security from Hobbes to the present day and a timely guide to contemporary security politics and dilemmas. It argues that the pursuit of security poses a significant challenge for criminal justice practices and values. It defends security as public good and suggests a framework of principles by which it might better be governed. Engaging with major academic debates in criminology, law, international relations, politics, and sociology, this book stands at the vanguard of interdisciplinary writing on security.
Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Semantics of Security 2. A Brief History of Security 3. New Distributions of Security 4. Security, Crime, and Criminal Justice 5. Security as Industry 6. Security and Counter-terrorism 7. Governing Security 2009: 198 x 129: 216pp Hb: 978-0-415-39175-7: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-39176-4: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-87113-3 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415391764
Rehabilitation Tony Ward and Shadd Maruna This comprehensive book reviews the main theories of rehabilitation models and advocates that rehabilitation should focus both on promoting human goods (i.e., providing the offender with the essential ingredients for a ’good’ life) as well as reducing/avoiding risk. 2007: 198 x 129: 216pp Hb: 978-0-415-38642-5: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-38643-2: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-96217-6 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415386432
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Biosocial Criminology
Forthcoming in 2011
New Directions in Theory and Research
Crime and the Lifecourse
Edited by Anthony Walsh, Boise State University, USA and Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University, USA Series: Criminology and Justice Studies
Michael Benson, University of Cincinnatti, USA and Alexis Russell Piquero, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY Graduate Center, USA
This book is designed to bring criminology into the twenty-first century by showing how leading criminologists have integrated aspects of the biological sciences into their discipline. These authors cover behavior and molecular genetics, epigenetics, evolutionary biology, and neuroscience, and apply them to various correlates of crime such as age, race, and gender. There are also chapters on substance abuse, psychopathy, career criminals, testosterone and treatment. While not trashing traditional ideas about these topics, the authors of these chapters show how biosocial concepts add to, complement, and strengthen those ideas. The book is uniquely valuable in that it brings together many of the leading figures in biosocial criminology to illustrate how the major issues and concerns of criminologists cannot be adequately addressed without understanding their genetic, hormonal, neurological, and evolutionary bases.
Series: Criminology and Justice Studies
2008: 235 x 156: 304pp Hb: 978-0-415-98943-5: £100.00 Pb: 978-0-415-98944-2: £30.99 eBook: 978-0-203-92991-9
• presents an application of the life-course approach to white-collar crime
Crime and the Life Course provides a comprehensive overview of contemporary research and theory on the life-course approach to crime. The book emphasizes a conceptual understanding of this approach. A special feature is the integration of qualitative and quantitative research on criminal life histories. This book: • provides an overview of the life course approach and describes the major concepts and issues in life-course theory as it applies to criminology • reviews evidence on biological and genetic influences on crime • reviews research on the role of the family in crime and juvenile delinquency • provides a detailed discussion of the criminological life-course theories of Moffitt, Hagan, Sampson and Laub, and others • discusses the connections between youthful crime and adult outcomes in education, occupation, and marriage
• discusses how macro sociological and historical developments have influenced the shape of the life course in American society as it relates to patterns in crime.
For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415989442
Selected Contents: 1. An Overview of Life Course Theory and Research 2. Biology and the Family: Initial Trajectories 3. Adolescence and Crime: Continuity, Change, and Cumulating Disadvantages 4. Adulthood and Aging Criminals 5. White-Collar Crime and the Life Course 6. Historical and Structural Contexts January 2011: 235 x 156: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-99492-7: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-99493-4: £20.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88989-3 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415994934
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Ge n e r al C r i mi n olog y
Today’s White Collar Crime
White Collar Crime
Legal, Investigative, and Theoretical Perspectives
An Opportunity Perspective
Hank J. Brightman, United States Naval War College, USA
Michael Benson, University of Cincinnati, USA and Sally Simpson, University of Maryland, USA
Series: Criminology and Justice Studies
Series: Criminology and Justice Studies
Written as a text for undergraduate courses, this book appeals to instructors interested in teaching the field of white-collar crime, both from a matter-of-fact investigative perspective as well as a decidedly academic endeavor. Accordingly, it goes beyond discussing the basic theories and typologies of commonlyencountered offenses such as fraud, forgery, embezzlement, and currency counterfeiting, to include the legalistic aspects of white-collar crime. It also explores the investigative tools and analytical techniques needed if students wish to pursue careers in this field. Because of the inextricable links between abuse-of-trust crimes such as misuse of government office, nepotism, and bribery and the realm of corporate corruption, these issues are also included. Adapted readings at the end of each chapter provide readable cases of white collar crime in action to illustrate the principles / theories presented. Activities, exercises, and photographs are also included in each of the ten chapters and a Companion Web Site provides additional test items and other instructor support material.
2009: 235 x 156: 448pp Hb: 978-0-415-99610-5: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-99611-2: £32.50 eBook: 978-0-203-88177-4 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415996112
’The authors have drawn on an extensive body of research in the field and further the arguement of their predecessors that white-collar crime is misunderstood and underexamined - Highly Recommended.’ – Choice, September 2009
As an instructor teaching white collar crime, are you frustrated by texts which leave your students feeling outraged but helpless about the subject? Assigning this new text by Mike Benson and Sally Simpson can successfully address that problem, because it explains to students why white-collar crime is so prevalent and so difficult to control. Using this text, instructors can show students how these crimes are carried out in ways that make them difficult to discover. Instructors can also show how opportunities for white-collar crimes could be reduced if we were to approach the problem from the perspective of situational crime prevention. The authors address the difficulty of controlling white-collar crime in detail, and speculate on the future of white-collar crime in the rapidly globalizing world of trans-national corporations. Selected Contents: Part 1: White-Collar Crime and White-Collar Criminals 1. The First Problem: What is White-Collar Crime? 2. Who is the White-Collar Offender? 3. Traditional Explanations of White-Collar Crime Part 2: Opportunity and White-Collar Crime 4. Criminal Opportunities 5. Applying the Opportunity Perspective to White-Collar Crime 6. Industries, Organizations and Opportunity 7. The Symbolic Construction of Opportunities 8. The Distribution of Opportunity: Race, Gender and Class Part 3: Responding to White-Collar Crime 9. Legal Remedies 10. Extra-Legal Remedies 11. Conclusions 2009: 229 x 152: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-95663-5: £75.00 Pb: 978-0-415-95664-2: £21.99 eBook: 978-0-203-88043-2 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415956642
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Forthcoming
Forthcoming
Routledge Handbook of International Criminology
Foucault and Criminology
Edited by Cindy J. Smith, University of Baltimore, USA, Sheldon X. Zhang, San Diego State University, USA and Rosemary Barberet, New York University, USA
Veronique Voruz, University of Leicester, UK
This handbook represents the latest thinking and findings from a group of senior and promising young scholars around the world who came together in an effort to broaden our perspectives in understanding crime and social control across borders and nationalities. This collaborative project articulates a new way of thinking about criminology and to strive for an over arching framework that is truly international. To reduce the complexity of this effort into manageable portions, three distinct, albeit often overlapping, types of crime are presented: international crime (e.g. crimes against humanity); transnational crime (e.g. human trafficking); and national crime (e.g. description of one nations system and its related crimes). Each of these perspectives are articulated through chapters on the traditional components (e.g. theory and methods), the international components (e.g. comparative methods, transferability), and a series of case studies of nations. At the end of each chapter is a list of prompting questions suitable for students to pursue as their senior and masters theses. Many of these questions are also intended for young scholars to move the field forward. October 2010: 246 x 174: 600pp Hb: 978-0-415-77909-8: £110.00 eBook: 978-0-203-86470-8 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415779098
An Introduction Foucault and Criminology: An Introduction provides an introduction to Michel Foucault, written from the perspective of criminology’s engagement with his work. Foucault’s writing has become a central reference in theoretical and sociological criminology generally and, more specifically, in what Jock Young has called ‘control theory’. The main purpose of this book is to offer a better, clearer and deeper understanding of ongoing criminological debates to both undergraduate and research students in criminology by outlining the theoretical framework which criminologists have taken from Foucault. Its second purpose is to trace the evolution of Foucault’s political project and to counterpose the thrust of his elaborations to the more pedestrian applications of his critical analyses of the present in the field of criminology. In these respects, Foucault and Criminology offers a ’map’ to guide students and practitioners of criminology: both through Foucault’s own writings and those of contemporary criminologists whose work may be characterised as Foucauldian. In so doing, it also pursues the argument that Foucault’s historical and theoretical analyses of discipline, power and governance must be understood in the context of his overall project if criminologists are to avoid reducing Foucault’s radicality, and to reclaim the critical, and resistive, potential of his work. Selected Contents: 1. Mapping ‘Foucauldian’ Criminology 2. ’Questions of Method’ 3. Rationalities of Power and Strategies of Government 4. Dangerousness, Risk, Security 5. A Critical Engagement with Foucauldian Criminology 6. Foucauldian Criminology as Political Project? November 2010: 234 x 156: 208pp Hb: 978-0-415-46040-8: £75.00 Pb: 978-0-415-46041-5: £22.99 eBook: 978-0-203-09005-3 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415460415
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Me t h o d s a n d Data A n alys i s New
New
International Handbook of Criminology
Regression Analysis for the Social Sciences
Edited by Shlomo Giora Shoham, Tel Aviv University, Israel, Paul Knepper, University of Sheffield, UK and Martin Kett, Independent Researcher, Bat-Yam, Israel
Rachel A. Gordon, University of Illinois, USA
A substantive guide to state of the art research and theory, the International Handbook of Criminology completes an esteemed trilogy of comparative analyses and insight from worldwide experts. Exploring a phenomenon that penetrates cultures of all racial, ethnic, and social classes, this volume continues in the tradition of its predecessors in the series by updating research on longstanding issues and offering perspectives into new problems and trends.
The book provides graduate students in the social sciences with the basic skills that they need to estimate, interpret, present, and publish basic regression models using contemporary standards.
Topics in this volume include: • the etiology of crime • historical antecedents of contemporary responses to crime • life course criminology • the basis for comparative research in criminal justice • sources and strategies for knowledge acquisition in criminology • specific forms of crime and criminal behavior, including environmental, sex-related, and financial • responses to crime, including technological, societal, and policy-related • crime issues related to social divisions. Those wishing to continue their studies should consult the International Handbook of Victimology and the International Handbook of Penology and Criminal Justice, which complete the trilogy.
Key features of the book include: • interweaving the teaching of statistical concepts with examples developed for the course from publicly-available social science data or drawn from the literature • thorough integration of teaching statistical theory with teaching data processing and analysis • teaching of both SAS and Stata ’side-by-side’ and use of chapter exercises in which students practice programming and interpretation on the same data set and course exercises in which students can choose their own research questions and data set. Selected Contents: 1. Examples of Social Science Research Using Regression Analysis 2. Planning a Quantitative Research Project With Existing Data 3. Basic Features of Statistical Packages and Data Documentation 4. Basics of Writing Batch Programs with Statistical Packages 5. Basic Concepts of Bivariate Regression 6. Basic Concepts of Multiple Regression 7. Dummy Variables 8. Interactions 9. Nonlinear Relationships 10. Indirect Effects and Omitted Variable Bias 11. Outliers, Heteroskedasticity, and Multicollinearity 12. Putting It All Together and Thinking About Where to Go Next February 2010: 235 x 187: 632pp Hb: 978-0-415-99154-4: £90.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415991544
February 2010: 235 x 156: 726pp Hb: 978-1-4200-8551-8: £89.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781420085518
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M et ho d s a nd Data An alysis
12
NEW
Forthcoming in 2011
A Guide to Surviving a Career in Academia
Structual Equations Modeling for Criminology and Criminal Justice Research
Navigating the Rites of Passage Edited by Emily Lenning, Fayetteville State University, USA, Sara Brightman and Susan Caringella, both at Western Michigan University, USA
A Guide to Surviving a Career in Academia is written from a feminist perspective, and draws on the information offered in workshops conducted at national meetings like the American Society of Criminology and the Society for the Study of Social Problems. Through the course of the book, an expert team of authors guide you through the obstacle course of finding effective mentors during graduate school, finding a job, negotiating a salary, teaching, collaborating with practitioners, successfully publishing, earning tenure and redressing denial and, finally, retirement. This collection is a must read for all academics, but especially women just beginning their careers, who face unique challenges when navigating through these age-old rites of passage.
Selected Contents: Introduction: The Journey 1. Surviving Graduate School 2. Strategies for Success on the Job Market 3. Money Matters: The Art of Negotiating for Women Faculty 4. Being a New Faculty 5. Teaching with Intention: Technique, Innovation and Change in Criminal Justice Education 6. A Brief Guide to Academic Publishing 7. Collaborating with Practitioners 8. Getting Tenure and Redressing Denial 9. Retirement: Another Frontier. Conclusion: And the Journey Continues
George E. Higgins, University of Louisville, USA Series: Criminology and Justice Studies This is the only text now available that provides scholars and students in criminology and criminal justice with book that uses criminological theories to demonstrate SEM, path analysis, multi-level modeling, and especially latent change models. Selected Contents: 1. Basics of Criminological Theory and Criminal Justice Organizational Theory 2. Basic Principles of Structural Equation Modeling 3. Computer Programs and Structural Equation Models 4. Introduction to Path Analysis 5. Introduction to Confirmatory Factor Analysis 6. Introduction to Structural Models 7. Introduction to Latent Change Models 8. Introduction to Genetic Models 9. Introduction to Multilevel Models 10. Conclusion and Future Directions November 2011: 375pp Hb: 978-0-415-80314-4: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-80315-1: £32.50 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415803151
Evaluation Practice How To Do Good Evaluation Research In Work Settings Elizabeth DePoy and Stephen French Gilson 2007: 229 x 152: 256pp Hb: 978-0-8058-6299-7: £95.00 Pb: 978-0-8058-6300-0: £21.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780805863000
August 2010: 234 x 156: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-78021-6: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-78022-3: £24.99 eBook: 978-0-203-85590-4 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415780223
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Me thods an d Data A n alys i s
New
Forthcoming
Ethnography in Social Science Practice
Social Statistics
Edited by Julie Scott-Jones, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK and Sal Watt, Liverpool Hope University, UK
Thomas J. Linneman, College of William & Mary, USA
With just the right level of detail, and a graphically innovative approach, this book carefully guides students through the statistical techniques they will encounter in the real world. It covers the basics, plus multiple regression, interaction effects, logistic regression, non-linear effects, all covered in a non-intimidating way for your students.
Ethnography in Social Science Practice explores ethnography’s increasing use across the social sciences, beyond its traditional bases in social anthropology and sociology. It explores the disciplinary roots of ethnographic research within social anthropology, and contextualizes it within both field and disciplinary settings.
The book is of two parts. Part one places ethnography as a methodology in its historical, ethical and disciplinary context, and also discusses the increasing popularity of ethnography across the social sciences. Part two explores the stages of ethnographic research via a selection of multidisciplinary case studies. A number of key questions are explored: • What exactly is ethnographic research and what makes it different from other qualitative approaches? • Why did ethnography emerge within one social science discipline and not others? • Why did its adoption across the social sciences prove problematic? • What are the methodological advantages and disadvantages of doing ethnographic research? • Why are ethnographers so concerned by issues of ethics, politics, representation and power? • What does ethnography look like within different social science disciplines? The book is aimed at social science students at both undergraduate and postgraduate level and each chapter has pedagogic features, including reflective activities and suggested further readings for students.
The Basics and Beyond Series: Contemporary Sociological Perspectives
The book uses three datasets throughout: General Social Survey, American National Election Studies, World Values Survey, and includes SPSS demonstrations at the end of each chapter. Most of your students will likely take only one stats course and use only one stats book in their college careers. This one innovatively equips them for their worlds ahead, regardless of the career paths they follow. Selected Contents: Part 1: The Basics 1. Data: What They Are and What We Do With Them 2. Telling Visual Stories: Tables and Graphs 3. The Center and What Surrounds It: Measures of Central Tendency and Variation 4: Speaking Beyond the Sample with Crosstabs: The Chi-Square Test 5. Speaking Beyond the Sample with a Mean or Proportion: Confidence Intervals 6. Speaking Beyond the Sample with More Than One Mean: T-Tests and ANOVA 7. Ratio-Level Relationships: Bivariate Correlation and Regression 8. Speaking Beyond the Sample with Slopes: Inference and Regression Part 2: Beyond the Basics 9. Dichotomies as Independent Variables: Reference Grouping 10. The Logic and Power of Controlling: Nested Regression Models 11. Comparing and Contrasting Regression Slopes: Beta Coefficients 12. Catching Up or Falling Behind: Interaction Effects 13. Predicting Probabilities Instead of Values: Logistic Regression 14. Telling Visual Stories with Regression: Path Analysis 15. Questioning the Greatness of Straightness: Nonlinear Relationships December 2010: 235 x 187: 464pp Hb: 978-0-415-80501-8: £110.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415805018
March 2010: 234 x 156: 232pp Hb: 978-0-415-54347-7: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-54349-1: £23.99 eBook: 978-0-203-87630-5 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415543491
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M ethods in data ana ly s is
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race , cl a s s , g e n de r an d c r i me
GIS and Spatial Analysis for the Social Sciences
New
Coding, Mapping, and Modeling
Criminological Perspectives on Race and Crime
Robert Nash Parker and Emily K. Asencio, both at University of California, USA Series: Contemporary Sociological Perspectives
This is the first book to provide sociologists, criminologists, political scientists, and other social scientists with the methodological logic and techniques for doing spatial analysis in their chosen fields of inquiry. The book contains a wealth of examples as to why these techniques are worth doing, over and above conventional statistical techniques using SPSS or other statistical packages.
2008: 279 x 216: 272pp Hb: 978-0-415-98961-9: £100.00 Pb: 978-0-415-98962-6: £39.99 eBook: 978-0-203-92934-6 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415989626
Handbook of Violence Risk Assessment Edited by Randy K. Otto, Florida Mental Health Institute, USA and Kevin S. Douglas, Simon Fraser University, Canada Series: International Perspectives on Forensic Mental Health ’An eminently useful compendium of information about the major violence risk assessment tools. Just the sort of book that every mental health professional should have readily at hand.’ – Paul S. Appelbaum, MD, Columbia University This comprehensive Handbook of original chapters serves as a resource for clinicians and researchers alike. Two introductory chapters cover general issues in violence risk assessment, while the remainder of the book offers a comprehensive discussion of specific risk assessment measures.
2nd Edition
Shaun L. Gabbidon, Pennsylvania State Capital College, USA Series: Criminology and Justice Studies
Ideal for use in either crime theory or race and crime courses, this is the only text to look at the array of explanations for crime as they relate to racial and ethnic groups. Each chapter begins with a historical review of each theoretical perspective and how its original formulation and more recent derivatives account for racial/ethnic differences. The theoretical perspectives include those based on religion, biology, social disorganization/strain, subculture, labeling, conflict, social control, colonial, and feminism. This new second edition includes discussions of ’Deadly Symbiosis’, critical race theory/ criminology, comparative conflict theory, maximization, and abortion, race, and crime. In the closing chapter, the author considers which perspectives have shown the most promise in the area of race/ethnicity and crime.
Selected Contents: 1. A Brief Introduction to Race, Crime, and Theory 2. Biological Perspectives on Race and Crime 3. Social Disorganization and Strain Perspectives on Race and Crime 4. Subcultural Perspectives on Race and Crime 5. Labeling Perspectives on Race and Crime 6. Conflict Perspectives on Race and Crime 7. Social Control Perspectives on Race and Crime 8. Colonial Perspectives on Race and Crime 9. Feminist Perspectives on Race and Crime 10. Conclusion February 2010: 229 x 152: 296pp Hb: 978-0-415-87421-2: £95.00 Pb: 978-0-415-87424-3: £29.99 eBook: 978-0-203-85791-5 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415874243
2009: 254 x 178: 326pp Hb: 978-0-415-96214-8: £50.00 eBook: 978-0-203-84366-6 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415962148
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Race , Class, G e n de r an d C r i me
2nd Edition
Sex For Sale Prostitution, Pornography, and the Sex Industry Edited by Ronald Weitzer, George Washington University, USA
A groundbreaking collection of essays on the sex industry, Sex for Sale contains original studies on sex work, its risks and benefits, and its political implications. The book covers areas not commonly researched, including gay and lesbian pornography, telephone sex workers, customers of prostitutes, male and female escorts who work independently, street prostitution, sex tourism, legal prostitution, and strip clubs that cater to women. The book also tracks various trends during the past decade, including the ’mainstreaming’ and growing acceptance of some types of sexual commerce and the growing criminalization of other types, such as sex trafficking. Sex for Sale offers a window into the lived experiences of sex workers as well as an analysis of the larger gender arrangements and political structures that shape the experiences of workers and their clients. The book greatly contributes to a growing research literature that documents the rich variation, nuances, and complexities in the exchange of sexual services, performances, and products. This book will change the way we understand sex work.
Selected Contents: 1. Sex Work 2. Motivations for Pursuing a Career in Pornography 3. Gay Male Pornography Since Stonewall 4. Women-Made Pornography 5. Gender and Space in Strip Clubs 6. Commercial Telephone Sex 7. The Ecology of Street Prostitution 8. Call girls and Street Prostitutes 9. Male and Female Escorts 10. Prostitutes’ Customers 11. Nevada’s Legal Brothels 12. Remaking the Sex Industry 13. Sex Tourism and Sex Workers Aspirations 14. Sex Trafficking 2009: 229 x 152: 384pp Hb: 978-0-415-99604-4: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-99605-1: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-87280-2 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415996051
Beyond Bad Girls Gender, Violence and Hype Meda Chesney-Lind and Katherine Irwin In this important new work, two respected criminologists challenge the characterization of the new ’bad girl’ arguing that it is only a new attempt to punish girls who are not the stereotypical depiction of good. Through interviews with young women, educators and people in the criminal justice system, Beyond Bad Girls exposes the formal and informal systems of socio-cultural control imposed on girls. 2007: 229 x 152: 248pp Hb: 978-0-415-94827-2: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-94828-9: £23.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415948289
New
Social Class and Crime A Biosocial Approach Anthony Walsh, Boise State University, USA Series: Routledge Advances in Criminology This book suggests that the same factors that help to determine a person’s class level also help to determine that person’s risk for committing criminal acts. Social class is a modern outcome of primordial status-striving and requires explanation using the modern tools of genetics, neurobiology, and evolutionary biology, and this is what this book does. Many aspects of criminal behavior can be understood by examining the shared factors that lead to the success or failure in the workplace and to pro- or antisocial activities. A biosocial approach requires reducing sociology’s “master variable” to a lower level analysis to examine its constituent parts, which is resisted by many criminologists as highly controversial. However, this book makes plain that the more we know about the nature side of behavior the more important we find the nurture side to be. Selected Contents: 1. The Biosocial Approach 2. Genes, Environments, and Behavior 3. Evolutionary Psychology, Crime and Status 4. The Neurosciences, Conscience and the Softwired Brain 5. Social Class and Criminal Behavior: Myth or Reality? 6. The Class-Crime Relationship in Criminological Theories 7. Social Class and Socialization 8. Poverty, Crime and Developmental Neurobiology 9. Social Stratification, the Genome, and Social Structure 10. The Nature and Nurture of Intelligence 11. Class Mobility: Ascription or Achievement? July 2010: 229 x 152: 184pp Hb: 978-0-415-88347-4: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-84424-3 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415883474
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R ace, Class, Ge n de r a nd Crim e
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Race, Law, and American Society
New
Honour, Violence, Women and Islam
1607-Present Gloria J. Browne-Marshall Series: Criminology and Justice Studies 2007: 229 x 152: 416pp Hb: 978-0-415-95293-4: £95.00 Pb: 978-0-415-95294-1: £26.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415952941
Violence Against Women Vulnerable Populations Douglas A. Brownridge, University of Manitoba, USA Series: Contemporary Sociological Perspectives
Violence Against Women: Vulnerable Populations investigates underresearched and underserved groups of women who are particularly vulnerable to violent victimization from an intimate male partner. In the past, there has been an understandable reluctance to address this issue to avoid stereotyping vulnerable groups of women. However, developments in the field suggest that the time has come to make the study of violence in vulnerable populations a new sub-field in the area. As the first book of its kind, Violence Against Women: Vulnerable Populations identifies where violence on vulnerable populations fits within the field, develops a method for studying vulnerable populations, and brings vital new knowledge to the field through the analysis of original data (from three large-scale representative surveys) on eight populations of women who are particularly vulnerable to violence.
Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Situating Research on Vulnerable Populations within the Family Violence Field 3. Materials and Methods 4. Violence Against Cohabiting Women 5. Differing Dynamics 6. Violence in ‘The Future Traditional Family’ 7. Exploring the Link Between Homeownership Status and Violence Against Women 8. Violence Against Women in Rural and Urban Settings 9. Violence Against Aboriginal Women 10. Violence Against Immigrant Women 11. Violence Against Women with Disabilities 12. Conclusion: Assembling Pieces of an Intersectional Puzzle
Edited by Mohammad Mazher Idriss, University of Coventry, UK and Tahir Abbas, University of Birmingham, UK Why are honour killings and honour-related violence (HRV) so important to understand? What do such crimes represent? And how does HRV fit in with Western views and perceptions of Islam? This distinctively comparative collection examines the concept of HRV against women in general and Muslim women in particular. The issue of HRV has become a sensitive subject in many South Asian and Middle Eastern countries and it has received the growing attention of the media, human rights groups and academics around the globe. However, the issue has yet to receive detailed academic study in the United Kingdom, particularly in terms of both legal and sociological research. This collection sets out the theoretical and ethical parameters of the study of HRV in order to address this intellectual vacuum in a socio-legal context. The key objectives of this book are: to construct, and to develop further, a theory of HRV; to rationalize and characterize the different forms of HRV; to investigate the role of religion, race and class in society within this context, in particular, the role of Islam; to scrutinize the role of the civil/criminal law/justice systems in preventing these crimes; and to inform public policy makers of the potential policies that may be employed in combating HRV. Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Honour-related Violence Towards South Asian Muslim Women 3. The Silencing of Women from the Pakistani Muslim Mirpuri Community in Violent Relationships 4. There is Nothing ’Honourable’ About Honour Killings: Gender, Violence and the Limits of Multiculturalism 5. Collective Crimes, Collective Victims: A Case Study Into the Murder of Banaz Mahmod 6. Honour and Shame in Domestic Homicide: A Critical Analysis of the Provocation Defence 7. Does the Qur’an Condone Domestic Violence 8. The Construction of ‘Honour’ in Indian Criminal Law: An Indian Lawyer’s Perspective 9. Men’s Violence and Women’s Responsibility: Mothers’ Stories about Honour Violence 10. Lack of Due Diligence: Judgments of Crimes of Honour in Turkey 11. A Comparative Study of the Reform Work Conducted in Asia and Europe to Combat Violence and So-Called Honour Murders 12. Ending Honour Crimes in Sub Saharan Africa: Looking at a Long Hard Death 13. Conversations Across Borders: Men and Honour Related Violence in the UK and Sweden 14. Tackling ‘Crimes of Honour:’ Evaluating the Social and Legal Responses to Combating Forced Marriages in the United Kingdom 15. Reconfiguring ‘Honour’-Based Violence as a Form of Gendered Violence July 2010: 234 x 156: 248pp Hb: 978-0-415-56542-4: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-84698-8
2009: 235 x 156: 320pp Hb: 978-0-415-99607-5: £95.00 Pb: 978-0-415-99608-2: £26.99 eBook: 978-0-203-87743-2
For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415565424
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Forthcoming
A History of Drugs
2nd Edition
Drugs and Freedom in the Liberal Age
Illicit Drugs
Toby Seddon, University of Manchester, UK
Misuse and Control
Adrian Barton The second edition of Illicit Drugs provides a completely up-dated and re-written volume that includes three new chapters which look at illicit drug use: class, gender and race; the geo-politics of illicit drug production and distribution and; Britain in a global context. These have been included to alert the reader to the increasingly global nature of the drug trade and the uneven manner in which drug use takes place and is portrayed by the media. The format and layout of the book has changed and it is now more ’user-friendly’ seeing the inclusion of text boxes, questions for reflection and suggested further reading lists at the end of each chapter. The new edition still offers the same broad-brush approach and is written in the same accessible style but endeavours to bring to the reader the latest developments in the use and control of illicit drugs. Selected Contents: Part 1: British Society and Illicit Drug Use Part 2: Measuring the ‘Problem’: Drug Use in Contemporary Britain Part 3: Legal and Medical Responses to Illicit Drug Misuse Part 4: Illicit Drug Use: Class, Gender and Race Part 5: Illicit Drugs: Growth and Production Part 6: The Geo-politics of Illicit Drug Production and Distribution Part 7: Illicit Drugs: Markets and Market Forces Part 8: Illicit Drugs: Paying for the Goods and Assessing the Costs Part 9: Policing the Problem: Current Trends in Drug Policy Part 10: Britain in a Global Context February 2011: 234 x 156: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-49233-1: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-49237-9: £23.99 eBook: 978-0-203-87991-7 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415492379
Why are some psychoactive substances regarded as ‘dangerous drugs’, to be controlled by the criminal law within a global prohibition regime, whilst others – from alcohol and tobacco, through to those we call ‘medicines’ – are seen and regulated very differently? A History of Drugs traces a genealogy of the construction and governance of the ‘drug problem’ over the past 200 years, calling into question some of the most fundamental ideas in this field: from ‘addiction’ to the very concept of ‘drugs’. At the heart of the book is the claim that it was with the emergence in the late eighteenth century of modern liberal capitalism, with its distinctive emphasis on freedom, that our concerns about the consumption of some of these substances began to grow. And, indeed, notions of freedom, free will and responsibility remain central to the drug question today. Pursuing an innovative interdisciplinary approach, A History of Drugs provides an informed and insightful account of the origins of contemporary drug policy. It will be essential reading for students and academics working in law, criminology, sociology, social policy, history and political science.
Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: Drugs, Freedom and Liberalism 2. A Conceptual Map: Freedom, the ‘Will’ and Addiction 3. Opium, Regulation and Classical Liberalism: The Pharmacy Act 1868 4. Drugs, Prohibition and Welfarism: The Dangerous Drugs Act 1920 5. Drugs, Risk and Neo-liberalism: The Drugs Act 2005 6. Drugs as a Regulation and Governance Problem 7. Conclusions: Drugs and Freedom in the Liberal Age 2009: 234 x 156: 200pp Hb: 978-0-415-48027-7: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-58960-4: £27.99 eBook: 978-0-203-88083-8 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415589604
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Crim e and s ociety
18
Drugs
NEW
America’s Holy War
Surveillance and Control in Israel/Palestine
Arthur Benavie, University of North Carolina, USA
Using the best scientific evidence, Drugs: America’s Holy War explores the impact and cost of America’s ’War on Drugs’ – both in tax spending and in human terms and argues that ending the war on drugs would yield enormous benefits for the public well-being.
2008: 229 x 152: 192pp Hb: 978-0-7890-3840-1: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-7890-3841-8: £24.99 eBook: 978-0-203-88659-5 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780789038418
Forthcoming
Drugs, Crime and Public Health The Political Economy of Drug Policy Alex Stevens, University of Kent, UK Drugs, Crime and Public Health provides an accessible but critical discussion of recent policy on illicit drugs. Using a comparative approach – centred on the UK, but with insights and complementary data gathered from the USA and other countries – it discusses theoretical perspectives and provides new empirical evidence which challenges prevalent ways of thinking about illicit drugs. It argues that problematic drug use can only be understood in the social context in which it takes place, a context which it shares with other problems of crime and public health. The book demonstrates the social and spatial overlap of these problems, examining the focus of contemporary drug policy on crime reduction. This focus, contends Alex Stevens, has made it less, rather than more, likely that long-term solutions will be produced for drugs, crime and health inequalities. Stevens concludes, through examining competing visions for the future of drug policy, with an argument for social solutions to these social problems.
Population, Territory and Power Edited by Elia Zureik, David Lyon, both at Queen’s University, Canada and Yasmeen Abu-Laban, University of Alberta, Canada Series: Routledge Studies in Middle Eastern Politics Surveillance is always a means to an end, whether that end is influence, management or entitlement. This book examines the several layers of surveillance that control the Palestinian population in Israel and the occupied territories, showing how they operate, how well they work, how they are augmented, and how in the end their chief purpose is population control. Showing how, what might be regarded as exceptional elsewhere is here regarded as the norm, the book looks not only at the political economy of surveillance and its technological and military dimensions, but also at the ordinary ways that Palestinians in Israel and the occupied territories are affected in their everyday lives. Written in a clear and accessible style by experts in the field, this book will have large appeal for academic faculty as well as graduate and senior undergraduate students in sociology, political science, international relations, surveillance studies and Middle East studies. Selected Contents: Part 1: Introduction Part 2: Theories of Surveillance in Conflict Zones Part 3: Civilian Surveillance Part 4: Political Economy and Globalization of Surveillance Part 5: Citizenship Criteria and State Construction Part 6: Surveillance, Racialization, and Uncertainty Part 7: Territory and Population Management in Conflict Zones Part 8: Social Ordering, Biopolitics and Profiling September 2010: 234 x 156: 288pp Hb: 978-0-415-58861-4: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-84596-7 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415588614
September 2010: 234 x 156: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-49104-4: £75.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415491044
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Forthcoming
Descriptions of Deviance Stephen Hester, University of Wales, UK
Contemporary Perspectives on Life After Punishment
Series: Routledge Advances in Criminology
Escape Routes
Descriptions of Deviance critically engages with the two hitherto dominant perspectives in the sociology of deviance and criminology, and thereby clarifies the key differences between these theoretical points of view and the ethnomethodological approach to deviance. Hester offers an original and exemplary contribution to ethnomethodology and conversation analysis that not only illuminates the production of descriptions of deviance in the context of referral consultations, but also explores the relations between different ‘layers’ of organization – sequential, categorical and factual – that are operative and discoverable within talk-in-interaction. By connecting the analysis of these materials to previous ethnomethodological work on crime and deviance, Descriptions of Deviance articulates and publicizes, what is now, a very substantial submerged corpus of ethnomethodological studies that are directly relevant to the sociology of deviance and criminology, but which have hardly received any attention from mainstream sociologists and criminologists.
Edited by Stephen Farrall, University of Keele, UK, Richard Sparks, University of Edinburgh, UK, Shadd Maruna, Queen’s University Belfast, UK and Mike Hough, Kings College London, UK
Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Ethnomethodology, Sociology and Deviance 2. Assessment Sequences 3. Extended Descriptions 4. The Categorical Organization of Descriptions of Deviance 5. Recognizing References to Deviance 6. Accountably Deviant 7. Mundane Reason and the Description of Deviance 8. From Description to Intervention: The Social Organization of Educational Psychological Reaction 9. Ethnomethodology, Deviance and the Organization of Description October 2010: 229 x 152: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-95570-6: £65.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415955706
Contemporary Perspectives on Life After Punishment addresses the reasons why people stop offending, and the processes by which they are rehabilitated or resettled back into the community; engaging with, and building upon, renewed criminological interest in this area, it nevertheless broadens and enlivens the current debate. Selected Contents: Part 1: Thinking About Life After Punishment Part 2: New Theorising on the Processes of Desistance Part 3: The Experiences of Specific Groups of ’The Punished’ November 2010: 234 x 156: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-55034-5: £70.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415550345
New
Policing Serious Crime in China From ’Strike Hard’ to ’Kill Fewer’ Susan Trevaskes, Griffith University, Australia Series: Routledge Studies on China in Transition In this book the author skilfully explores the politics, practice, procedures, and public perceptions of policing serious crime in China, focusing on one particular criminal justice practice – anti-crime campaigns – in the period of transition from planned to market economy from the 1980s to the first years of the twenty-first century. Susan Trevaskes analyzes the elements that led to the Hard Strike becoming the preferred method of attacking the growing problem of serious crime in China before going on to examine the factors surrounding the failure of the Hard Strike as a way of addressing the main problems of serious crime in China today, that is drug trafficking and organized crime . Selected Contents: 1. The Rise of Campaign Justice 2. The Campaign Template 3. Striking Hard in the New Millennium 4. Cracks in the Campaign Armour 5. The People’s War on Drugs 6. Fighting the Collective: The Rise of Organized Crime 7. The End of Campaign Justice? July 2010: 234 x 156: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-56447-2: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-84893-7 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415564472
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Crim e and s ociety
Forthcoming
New
Mental Health and Crime
4th Edition
Jill Peay, London School of Economics, UK
Offenders, Deviants or Patients?
Series: Contemporary Issues in Public Policy
Explorations in Clinical Criminology
Mental Health and Crime examines the nature of the relationship between mental disorder and crime. It concludes that the broad definition of what is an all too common human condition – mental disorder – and the widespread occurrence of an equally all too common human behaviour – that of offending – would make unlikely any definitive or easy answer to such questions.
Herschel Prins, Leicester and Loughborough University, UK
For those who offend in the context of mental disorder many aspects of the criminal justice process, and of the disposals that follow, are adapted to take account of a relationship between mental disorder and crime. But if the very relationship is questionable, is the way in which we deal with such offenders discriminatory? Or is it perhaps to their benefit to be thought of as less responsible for their offending than fully culpable offenders? The book thus explores not only the nature of the relationship, but also the human rights and legal issues arising. It also looks at some of the permutations in the therapeutic process that can ensue when those with mental health problems are treated in the context of their offending behaviour. Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Mental Health and Crime 2. Crime 3. Mental Disorder 4. Are Mental Disorder and Crime Related? 5. Types of Crime 6. Mental Disorder and Violence 7. Symptoms and Causality 8. Causal Mechanisms, Criminology and Mental Disorder 9. Human Rights and Mentally Disordered Offenders 10. Deprivation of Liberty 11. Mental Disorder and Detention: A Perspective from Prison 12. The Intersection between Penality and Therapeutic Detention: Indeterminate Sentences for Public Protection 13. Medical Treatment: Offenders, Patients and Their Capacity 14. Individual and Personal Consequences: The Case of Smoking 15. Impossible Paradoxes 16. Treatment, Mental Disorder, Crime, Responsibility and Punishment 17. Fitness to Plead 18. Dangerous and Severe Personality Disorder 19. Culpability and Treatment: Chasing Dragons? 20. Conclusions October 2010: 234 x 156: 224pp Hb: 978-1-904385-60-8: £75.00
Offenders, Deviants or Patients? provides a practical approach to understanding both the social context and treatment of mentally disordered offenders. Taking into account the current public concern, often heightened by media sensationalism, it addresses issues such as sex offending, homicide and other acts of serious bodily harm.
This fourth edition comes after extensive new research by academics and professionals in the field and reflects recent changes in law, policy and practice, including: • new sex offending legislation • proposals to amend homicide legislation • a new mental health act. Using new case examples, Herschel Prins examines the relationship between mental disorders and crime and looks at the ways in which it should be dealt with by the mental health care and criminal justice systems. Selected Contents: Preface. Some Autobiographical Reminiscences. Non Responsibility/Responsibility and Partial Responsibility. By Diverse Routes. ‘Thick Coming Fancies’. A Failure to Register. Grievous and Other Bodily Harms. Thou Shall Not Commit Murder. Sex – Lawful and Unlawful. No Smoke Without Fire. ‘The Malady of Not Marking’. June 2010: 234 x 156: 368pp Hb: 978-0-415-46428-4: £65.00 Pb: 978-0-415-46429-1: £22.99 eBook: 978-0-203-85487-7 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415464291
For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781904385608
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S oc i al Pol i cy
New
New
2nd Edition
Ethical Issues in Youth Work
Immigration, Social Integration and Crime
Edited by Sarah Banks, University of Durham, UK
A Cross-National Approach
Luigi M. Solivetti, University of Rome, Italy
This fully updated new edition of Ethical Issues in Youth Work presents a comprehensive overview and discussion of a range of ethical challenges facing youth workers in their everyday practice.
The first part offers a clear outline of the nature of professional ethics, relevant ethical theories and an overview of the policy and organizational context of youth work. The second part is grounded firmly in practice, with experts in the field exploring specific issues that raise ethical difficulties for youth workers, such as: • when to breach confidentiality • information sharing in inter-professional contexts • the ethics of youth participation and active citizenship • how to balance the roles of control, empowerment and education • negotiating personal and professional values, interests and commitments in youth work • dilemmas for faith-based and black and minority ethnic workers • issues for practitioner researchers. Ethical Issues in Youth Work offers a timely and unique insight into both the dilemmas of youth work practice and some of the more recent challenges faced by youth workers and all those working with young people in the light of current public attitudes and government policies towards young people. June 2010: 246 x 174: 232pp Hb: 978-0-415-49970-5: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-49971-2: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-84936-1 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415499712
Series: Contemporary Issues in Public Policy
The problem of social control has constituted the acid test for the entire issue of immigration and integration. But whilst recent studies show that the crime rate for non-nationals is three, four or more, times higher than that of the country’s ’own’ citizens, academic interest in these statistics has been inhibited by the political difficulties they raise. Immigration, Social Integration and Crime addresses this issue directly. Providing a thorough analysis of immigration and crime rates in all of the main European countries, as well as examining the situation in the US, Luigi M. Solivetti concludes that the widespread notion that a large non-national population produces high crime rates must be rejected. In particular, Solivetti concludes, it is ’social capital’ in the host societies – comprized of features such as education, transparency, and openness – that plays a key role in non-nationals’ integration chances, and so in their likelihood to commit crime. Supported by extensive empirical data and statistical analysis, Immigration, Social Integration and Crime provides an invaluable contribution to one of the most pressing social and political debates – in Europe, and elsewhere.
Selected Contents: Section 1: The Debate on Immigration and Criminality: Past and Present Section 2: The Research Project Section 3: National and Non-national Population in Western Europe Section 4: Criminality in the Countries of Western Europe Section 5: Non-nationals in Prison, Non-nationals Charged Section 6: Indicators of Socio-economic Condition, Integration and Origin May 2010: 234 x 156: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-49072-6: £70.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88078-4 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415490726
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21
22
P o licing a nd Cr ime Con trol
Forthcoming in 2011
The Policing of Terrorism
Risk Assessment and Governance in Criminology and Criminal Justice
Organizational and Global Perspectives
Applications in Crime Control and Counter-terrorism Edited by Leslie Kennedy, Rutgers University, USA and Edmund McGarrell, Michigan State University, USA Risk Assessment and Governance in Criminology and Criminal Justice is a collection of original essays and articles that presents a broad overview of the issues related to the assessment and management of risk in the new security age. These original articles show how researchers, experts and the public are beginning to think about crime and terrorism issues in terms of a new risk paradigm that emphasizes establishing a balance between threat and resources in developing prevention and response strategies. Selected Contents: 1. Overview of Risk Assessment and Management 2. Examining the Social Construction or Risk 3. Risk Assessment in Prevention and Response 4. Risk Management 5. Developing Risk Metrics 6. Risk Tolerance and Acceptability 7. Case Studies January 2011: 254 x 178: 300pp Hb: 978-0-415-99181-0: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-99182-7: £35.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415991827
Mathieu Deflem, University of South Carolina, USA Series: Criminology and Justice Studies
This book offers an analysis of the policing of terrorism in a variety of national and international contexts. Centered on developments since the events of September 11, 2001, the study devotes its empirical attention to important police aspects of counter-terrorism in the United States and additionally extends its range comparatively to other nations, including Israel and Iraq, and to the global level of international police organizations such as Interpol and Europol. Situated in the criminology of terrorism and counter-terrorism, this book offers a fascinating look into the contemporary organization of law enforcement against terrorism, which will significantly influence the conditions of global security in the foreseeable future.
Selected Contents: Part 1: Perspective of the Book 1. The Criminology of Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism 2. A Theory of Counter-Terrorism Policing Part 2: The United States 3. Counter-Terrorism Policy and Law 4. Homeland Security: The Role of Federal Law Enforcement 5. Terrorism and the City: The Role of Local Law Enforcement Part 3: International Dimensions 6. The Globalization of Counter-Terrorism Policing 7. Policing World Terrorism: The Role of Interpol 8. Policing Terrorism in Europe: The Role of Europol Part 4: Comparative Cases 9. Undercover Counter-Terrorism in Israel 10. Terrorism and War: Policing Iraq and Afghanistan 2009: 229 x 152: 248pp Hb: 978-0-415-87539-4: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-87540-0: £28.99 eBook: 978-0-203-86038-0 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415875400
Community Policing in America Jeremy M. Wilson Series: Criminology and Justice Studies 2006: 229 x 152: 184pp Hb: 978-0-415-95350-4: £95.00 Pb: 978-0-415-95351-1: £26.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415953511
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Policin g and C r i me C on trol
New
Forthcoming
Surveillance and Democracy
The Psychology of Counter-Terrorism
Edited by Kevin D. Haggerty, University of Alberta, Canada and Minas Samatas, University of Crete, Greece
This collection represents the first sustained attempt to grapple with the complex and often paradoxical relationships between surveillance and democracy. Is surveillance a barrier to democratic processes, or might it be a necessary component of democracy? How has the legacy of post 9/11 surveillance developments shaped democratic processes? As surveillance measures are increasingly justified in terms of national security, is there the prospect that a shadow ’security state’ will emerge? How might new surveillance measures alter the conceptions of citizens and citizenship which are at the heart of democracy? How might new communication and surveillance systems extend (or limit) the prospects for meaningful public activism? Surveillance has become central to human organizational and epistemological endeavours and is a cornerstone of governmental practices in assorted institutional realms. This social transformation towards expanded, intensified and integrated surveillance has produced many consequences. It has also given rise to an increased anxiety about the implications of surveillance for democratic processes; thus raising a series of questions – about what surveillance means, and might mean, for civil liberties, political processes, public discourse, state coercion and public consent – that the leading surveillance scholars gathered here address.
Selected Contents: Section 1: Theorizing Surveillance and Democracy Section 2: Surveillance Policies and Practices of Democratic Governance Section 3: Case Studies in the Dynamics of Surveillance and Democracy May 2010: 234 x 156: 240pp Hb: 978-0-415-47239-5: £95.00 Pb: 978-0-415-47240-1: £28.99 eBook: 978-0-203-85215-6 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415472401
Edited by Andrew Silke, University of East London, UK Series: Cass Series on Political Violence The volume comprizes contributions from psychologists and writers who have direct experience of researching terrorism. Some have met actual terrorists; others have worked to assist those tasked with the serious responsibility of combating terrorism. In many cases, authors combine academic credentials and understanding with substantial policy or practitioner experience. This combination of perspectives ensures a holistic and richly informed view of the subject and issues. Selected Contents: 1. The Psychology of Counterterrorism: Critical issues and Challenges 2. Understanding Terrorist Psychology 3. The Psychology of Violent Radicalisation 4. Why People Support Terrorism 5. The Evolutionary Logic of Terrorism 6. The Internet and Terrorism 7. The Impact of the Media on Terrorism and Counterterrorism 8. Disengaging from Terrorism 9. Terrorists and Extremists in Prison: Psychological Issues in Management and Reform 10. Interrogation Tactics and Terrorist Suspects 11. Terrorist Tactics and Counter-terrorism 12. Deterring Terrorism: Target-hardening, Surveillance and the Prevention of Terrorism 13. Countering the Psychological Impact of Terrorism: Challenges for Homeland Security October 2010: 234 x 156: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-55839-6: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-55840-2: £23.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415558402
Deterrence and Crime Prevention Reconsidering the Prospect of Sanction David M. Kennedy, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, USA Series: Routledge Studies in Crime and Economics Written by an author based at the Center for Crime Prevention and Control at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City, this excellent volume addressing the topical issue of deterrence is a hugely important aspect of criminology in a critical style. 2008: 234 x 156: 240pp Hb: 978-0-415-77415-4: £75.00 Pb: 978-0-415-58867-6: £22.50 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415588676
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23
CRIMINAL JUSTI CE
24
New
New
The New Criminal Justice
A Dictionary of Criminal Justice
American Communities and the Changing World of Crime Control
Edited by Peter Joyce and Neil Wain
A Dictionary of Criminal Justice is the only dictionary that deals with criminal justice from a UK perspective, and in doing so provides a comprehensive guide to all aspects of the British criminal justice system, including its historical context and contemporary operations.
Edited by John Klofas, Rochester Institute of Technology, USA, Natalie Kroovand Hipple and Edmund McGarrell, both at Michigan State University, USA Series: Criminology and Justice Studies
Criminal Justice in the United States is in the midst of momentous changes: an era of low crime rates not seen since the 1960s, and a variety of budget crunches also exerting profound impacts on the system. This is the first book available to chronicle these changes and suggest a new, emerging model to the Criminal Justice system, emphasizing
• collaboration across agencies previously viewed as relatively autonomous • a focus on location problems and local solutions rather than a widely shared understanding of crime or broad application of similar interventions • a deep commitment to research which guides problem assessment and policy formulation and intervention. Selected Contents: Section 1: The Changing World of Criminal Justice 1. The New Criminal Justice 2. Modeling the New Criminal Justice 3. Strategic Problem Solving in Criminal Justice Section 2: The New Criminal Justice in Practice 4. Building Successful Partnerships – Lessons from the Strategic Approaches to 5. Project Exile Gun Crime Reduction 6. Strategic Problem Solving Gun Crime Reduction 7. Identifying Effective Policing Strategies for Reducing Crime 8. The Drug Market Initiative in Rockford, Illinois Section 3: New Knowledge for New Practice in Criminal Justice 9. Action Research for Crime Control and Prevention 10. Added Value through a Partnership Model of Action Research 11. The Participation of Academics in the Criminal Justice Working Group Process 12. Collaborations between Police and Research/Academic Organizations. Some Prescriptions from the Field 13. The Challenge of Timeliness and Utility in Research and Evaluation Section 4: Some Final Thoughts on the New Criminal Justice 14. Accumulating Lessons from Project Safe Neighborhoods 15. Post Script. Teaching the New Criminal Justice February 2010: 235 x 187: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-99722-5: £95.00 Pb: 978-0-415-99728-7: £32.99 eBook: 978-0-203-86016-8
The first three sections of the book explore in turn key definitions, key pieces of legislation and key documents that have helped to shape the operations of the criminal justice system, whilst the fourth details websites of particular relevance to this field. As such, this dictionary provides an extensive but accessible introduction to the important terms that relate to both the development and the contemporary processes of criminal justice. It also succeeds in placing the UK criminal justice system within an international setting through the inclusion of entries that acknowledge the global setting in which British justice operates. Guides to key legislation and documents are included, and each definition is accompanied by references for further reading, making this book an invaluable learning tool for both students and practitioners of criminal justice. Selected Contents: Introduction Part 1: Definitions Part 2: Key Acts Part 3: Key Documents Part 4: Internet Sources. Index July 2010: 234 x 156: 336pp Hb: 978-0-415-49245-4: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-49246-1: £21.99 eBook: 978-0-203-85030-5 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415492461
Full Table of Contents For full table of contents on all titles featured in this catalogue, visit: www.routledge.com/criminology
For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415997287
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C RIMINAL J USTIC E
Forthcoming in 2011
Lifers
4th Edition
Seeking Redemption in Prison
Corrections
John Irwin
Foundations for the Future
Series: Criminology and Justice Studies
Jeanne B. Stinchcomb, Florida Atlantic University, USA Series: Criminology and Justice Studies Written by a master teacher with over a decade of experience in federal, state, and local justice agencies, this is the most comprehensive, yet affordable, corrections text on the market. Students will like everything about it from the reasonable cost to the user-friendly narrative that keeps them engaged. Chapters are written with the passion of a former correctional trainer and administrator, while balancing both sides of every issue. Based on proven concepts of instructional design, the narrative features: • measurable learning outcomes that are placed strategically throughout the chapters • material is presented in a “building-block” method designed to enhance learning • ”Close-up on Corrections” boxes reinforce content with real-life stories and examples. Realistic insights are provided into virtually every aspect of the “correctional conglomerate” from the impact of sentencing policies to the effects of institutional life and the difficulties of re-entry. Unlike most other texts, an entire chapter is devoted to the correctional workforce, which gives students insights into the challenges as well as rewards of such employment. Best of all for the instructor, the bookís flexibility and supplemental material make it a breeze to use in the classroom. Electronic versions are available for online and hybrid courses, and it is customizable in inexpensive paperback form. The instructorís manual, written entirely by the author of the text itself, includes over 500 high-quality test questions directly correlated with each learning outcome featured in the text, along with annotated websites, teaching tips, and powerpoint slides. Selected Contents: 1. The Correctional Framework 2. The Impact of Sentencing Policies on Corrections 3. The Development of Corrections 4. Community Based Alternatives 5. Jails: Pretrial Detention and Short-Term Confinement 6. Prisons and Other Correctional Facilities 7. Institutional Procedures: Custody 8. Institutional Procedures: Treatment 9. The Effects of Institutional Life 10. Transition from Confinement to the Community 12. Special Populations in Corrections 13. Juvenile Corrections 14. Staff – The Key Ingredient 15. Legal Issues and Liability 16. Current Trends and Future Issues January 2011: 235 x 187: 640pp Pb: 978-0-415-87333-8: £60.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415873338
John Irwin writes about prisons from an unusual academic perspective. Before receiving a Ph.D. in sociology, he served five years in a California state penitentiary for armed robbery. Lifers is an ethnography of prisoners who have served more than twenty years in a California correctional institution. Its purpose is to take issue with the conventional wisdom on homicide, society’s purposes of imprisonment, and offenders’ reformability. Through the lifers’ stories, he reveals what happens to prisoners serving very long sentences and what this should tell us about effective sentencing policy. 2009: 229 x 152: 152pp Hb: 978-0-415-80168-3: £65.00 Pb: 978-0-415-80198-0: £13.99 eBook: 978-0-203-87622-0 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415801980
Crime, Justice and the Media Ian Marsh and Gaynor Melville, both at Liverpool Hope University, UK
Crime, Justice and the Media provides a clear, accessible and comprehensive analysis of theoretical thinking on the relationship between the media, crime and criminal justice and a detailed examination of how crime, criminals and others involved in the criminal justice process are portrayed by the media.
Selected Contents: Part 1: Introduction – A Brief History of the Media Portrayal of Crime and Criminals Part 2: Applying Theoretical Perspectives on the Media to Crime Part 3: The Media and Moral Panics – Theories and Examples Part 4: The Media Portrayal of Criminals Part 5: The Media Portrayal of Victims Part 6: The Media and the Criminal Justice System Part 7: New Media Technology and Crime – Cybercrime Part 8: The Media, Punishment and Public Opinion. References 2008: 246 x 174: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-44489-7: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-44490-3: £23.99 eBook: 978-0-203-89478-1 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415444903
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26
CRIMINAL JUSTI CE
Forthcoming
NEW
2nd Edition
Textbook
Community Justice
Punishment
Todd R. Clear, John Jay College, City University of New York, USA and John R. Hamilton, Jr., Park University, USA
Thom Brooks, University of Newcastle, UK
Community Justice discusses concepts of community within the context of justice policy and programs, and addresses the important relationship between the criminal justice system and the community in the USA. Taking a bold stance in the criminal justice debate, this book argues that crime management is more effective through the use of informal (as opposed to formal) social control. It demonstrates how an increasing number of criminal justice elements are beginning to understand that the development of partnerships within the community that enhance informal social control will lead to a stabilization and possible a decline in crime, especially violent crime, and make communities more liveable. Borrowing from an eclectic toolbox of ideas and strategies - community organizing, environmental crime prevention, private-public partnerships, justice initiatives – Community Justice puts forward a new approach to establishing safe communities, and highlights the failure of the current American justice system in its lack of vision and misuse of resources. Providing detailed information about how community justice fits within each area of the criminal justice system, and including relevant case studies to exemplify this philosophy in action, this book is essential reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students of subjects such as criminology, law and sociology. Selected Contents: 1. Criminal Justice and the Community 2. Policing and Community Justice 3. The Courts and Community Justice 4. Corrections and Community Justice 5. The Future of Community Justice Appendix. Community Justice as a Strategy: How CASES Make it Work October 2010: 234 x 156: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-78026-1: £75.00 Pb: 978-0-415-78027-8: £24.99 eBook: 978-0-203-85580-5
This is not only the first textbook to examine all major perspectives on punishment (including restorative justice, expressivist theories, and others for the first time), and it also looks at several case studies (capital punishment, juvenile offenders, domestic abuse, and sexual crimes) and how these theories grapple with them. Punishment is aimed at those approaching the topic for the first time, although also is appropriate to those already working in the field. In addition to further readings offered in each chapter, there is an extensive bibliography at the conclusion listing all the major works in the field which itself may be a valuable resource to beginners and more advanced readers alike. Punishment is an ideal starting point for undergraduate students of Law, Criminology, and Philosophy. Selected Contents: Introduction Part 1: General Theories 1. Retributivism 2. Deterrence 3. Rehabilitation 4. Restorative Justice Part 2: Hybrid Theories 5. Rawls and Hart 6. Expressivist Theories 7. Idealist Theories Part 3: Case Studies 8. Capital Punishment 9. Juvenile Offenders 10. Domestic Abuse 11. Sexual Crimes. Conclusion August 2010: 234 x 156: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-43181-1: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-43182-8: £23.99 eBook: 978-0-203-92942-1
For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415780278
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Punishment is an area of increasing importance and concern to both citizens and politicians. How do we decide what should be crimes? How do we decide when someone is responsible for a crime? What should we do with criminals? These are the main questions this introductory textbook on the philosophy of punishment discusses.
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C RIMINAL J USTIC E
Criminal Law
4 Volume Set
The Basics
Restorative Justice
Jonathan Herring, University of Oxford, UK
Edited by Carolyn Hoyle, Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford, UK
Series: The Basics
Criminal Law: The Basics is an insightful introduction to the legal aspects of criminal acts, ranging from battery to burglary and harassment to homicide. Starting with an in-depth exploration of the very concept of crime, this book considers such questions as: • how should we decide what is criminal and what isn’t? • what is the difference between murder and manslaughter?
• could you ever be guilty of stealing your own property? • what defences are available to those accused of crime? The book features numerous case studies from the infamous to the bizarre and key questions for consideration throughout. Each chapter ends with lists of relevant cases, statutes and suggestions for further reading, making this an ideal starting point for anyone interested in criminal law. Selected Contents: 1. Basic Concepts 2. Homicide 3. Assaults 4. Property Offences 5. Accomplices 6. Defences 2009: 198 x 129: 160pp Hb: 978-0-415-49311-6: £55.00 Pb: 978-0-415-49312-3: £11.99 eBook: 978-0-203-86740-2 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415493123
Series: Critical Concepts in Criminology As research on and around restorative justice flourishes as never before, this new four-volume collection in the Routledge Major Works series, Critical Concepts in Criminology, meets the need for an authoritative reference work to make sense of the subdiscipline’s rich and diverse heritage. It provides a much-needed map to steer students and scholars towards the truly essential foundational and cutting-edge materials and offers an essential grounding in the philosophy and principles of restorative justice in a number of jurisdictions around the world. Furthermore, it furnishes users with a critical awareness of the potential and the pitfalls of restorative justice in responses to crime, conflict, and civil disputes. Restorative Justice is fully indexed and includes a comprehensive introduction, newly written by the editor, a leading scholar in the field, which places the collected material in its historical and intellectual context. An essential reference collection, it is destined to be valued by scholars, students, and practitioners of restorative justice as a vital one-stop research and pedagogic resource. Selected Contents: Volume One: The Rise of Restorative Justice Volume Two: Restorative Practices on the International Stage Volume Three: The Promise of Restorative Justice Volume Four: Stumbling Blocks on the Road to a Restorative Jurisprudence 2009: 234 x 156: 1792pp Hb: 978-0-415-45001-0: £650.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415450010
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28
CRIMINAL JUSTI CE
Forthcoming
New
Rethinking Violence
The Right to Silence
Edited by Vittorio Bufacchi, University College Cork, Ireland
Principle, Pragmatism and Policy Making
The aim of the book is to bring together in one volume different approaches, and methodologies, to the study of violence. This exercise is valuable not only because it suggests ways in which different disciplines can learn from one another, but also because it encourages each branch of learning to reassess their conception, understanding and evaluation of violence.
Within an international context in which the right to silence has long been regarded as sacrosanct, this book provides the first comprehensive, empirically-based analysis of the effects of curtailing the right to silence. The right to silence has served as the practical expression of the principles that an individual was to be considered innocent until proven guilty, and that it was for the prosecution to establish guilt. In 1791, the Fifth Amendment to the US Constitution proclaimed that none ‘shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself’. In more recent times, the privilege against self-incrimination has been a founding principle for the International Criminal Court, the new South African constitution and the Ad Hoc International Criminal Tribunals for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia. Despite this pedigree, over the past thirty years when governments have felt under pressure to combat crime or terrorism, the right to silence has been reconsidered, (as in Australia) curtailed (in most of the United Kingdom), or circumvented (by the creation of the military tribunals to try the Guantánamo detainees). The analysis here focuses upon the effects of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 in England and Wales. There, curtailing the right to silence was advocated in terms of ‘common sense’ policy making and was achieved by an eclectic borrowing of concepts and policies from other jurisdictions. The implications of curtailing this right are here explored in detail with reference to the UK, but within a comparative context that examines how different ‘types’ of legal system regard the right to silence and the effects of constitutional protection.
Coming from their own unique perspective, the contributors to this volume address the following three key questions about violence: How should the concept of violence be defined? What are the different dimensions embodied by the act of violence? Can violence be distinguished, and how, from the idea of injustice? This book was orginally published as a special issue of Global Crime. Selected Contents: Introduction Part 1: The Meaning of Violence Part 2: Aspects of Violence Part 3: Violence and Social Justice December 2010: 246 x 174: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-48344-5: £80.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415483445
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Hannah Quirk, University of Manchester, UK
Selected Contents: Part 1 – Principles Versus Pragmatism A ‘Benchmark of Justice?’. A Crime Control Target Part 2: The Right to Silence in Practice The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994. The Right to Silence and Cop Culture. The Right to Silence and the Realities of Legal Representation. The Right to Silence and the Courts Part 3: Policy Making Criminal Justice and ‘Common Sense’ Policy Making. Conclusions – The Right to Silence: Why the Debate Must Continue July 2010: 234 x 156: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-54771-0: £70.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415547710
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C RIMINAL J USTIC E
Criminal Justice Theory
Explaining the Nature and Behavior of Criminal Justice Edited by David Duffee and Edward R. Maguire Series: Criminology and Justice Studies
Criminal Justice Theory is the first comprehensive volume on the theoretical foundations of criminal justice. While the field of criminology has produced many books of theory, the larger field of criminal justice has been undertheorized. Most basically, criminal justice theory explains the variations in official responses to behavior labeled criminal. It does this in part by examining variations in government social control systems that choose certain criminal sanctions over other forms of social control. Criminal justice theory also investigates the decisions about whether to use punishment as a control and whether to consider people blameworthy for harmful acts. 2007: 229 x 152: 400pp Hb: 978-0-415-95479-2: £95.00 Pb: 978-0-415-95480-8: £25.00 eBook: 978-0-203-94120-1 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415954808
Forthcoming in 2011
The Criminology of Pleasure Mike McGuire and Simon Hallsworth, both at London Metropolitan University, UK The Criminology of Pleasure offers a new way of thinking about crime and crime control, as it maintains that the very rationale of the criminal justice system lies in the channelling of desire and regulating of pleasure. Criminology has only confronted the importance of the desire/pleasure nexus tangentially: through the reference to transgression, resistance and edge-work, and in its concern with social marginalization. The Criminology of Pleasure, however, argues for the fundamental importance of desire/ pleasure in understanding social order and control. Whilst ostensibly concerned with crime and its control, the criminal justice system is, the authors argue, centred upon a more fundamental project – that of managing desire. Precisely what this means is systematically articulated here: first, by considering how various pleasures have been regulated in history; and, second, by mapping the key ways in which desire is now regulated. In a political landscape that has witnessed attempts both on the part of the political right and left to attack and replace criminology with something else – a science of crime or a science of social harm – this book not only provides a highly original analysis; but also a radical, innovative and heretical defence of criminology. January 2011: 234 x 156: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-54778-9: £70.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415547789
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29
c ult u r a l CRIMINolog y
CRIMINAL JUSTI CE
30
New
Crime and Media
Nationbuilding, Gender and War Crimes in South Asia
A Reader
Bina D’Costa, Australian National University Series: Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series This book gives a detailed historical analysis of nationbuilding processes and how these are closely linked to statebuilding and to issues of war crime, gender and sexuality, and marginalization of minority groups. With a focus on the Indian subcontinent, the author demonstrates how the state itself is involved in the construction of a gendered identity, and how control of women and their sexuality is central to the nationbuilding project. She applies a critical feminist approach to two major conflicts in the Indian subcontinent – the Partition of India in 1947 and the Liberation War of Bangladesh in 1971 – and offers suggestions for addressing historical injustices and war crimes in the context of modern Bangladesh. Addressing how the social and political elites were able to construct and legitimize a history of the state that ignored these issues, the author suggests a critical re-examination of the history of the creation of Bangladesh which takes into account the rise of the Islamic right and their involvement in war crimes. Selected Contents: Introduction 1. The Politics of Nationalism and Nationbuilding 2. 1947: From Partition to Creation 3. 1971: Politics of Silence, or Refusal to Remember? 4. Gendered Nationbuilding 5. Frozen in Time? War Crimes, Justice and Political Forgiveness 6. Partnership with Transnational Networks for Gender-Sensitive Justice Mechanism. Conclusion July 2010: 234 x 156: 240pp Hb: 978-0-415-56566-0: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-85001-5
Edited by Chris Greer, City University London, UK Series: Routledge Student Readers
’In the late modern world the screen reflects the street and the street the screen. This state of the art collection is the only text which fully covers the interaction and intimacy between the act of crime and its representation. Perfect for courses, a must for scholars’ – Jock Young, Distinguished Professor of Criminal Justice, The Graduate Center and John Jay College, City University of New York, USA This engaging and timely collection gathers together for the first time key and classic readings in the ever-expanding area of crime and media. Comprizing a carefully distilled selection of the most important contributions to the field, Crime and Media: A Reader tackles a wide range of issues including: understanding media; researching media; crime, newsworthiness and news; crime, entertainment and creativity; effects, influence and moral panic; and cybercrime, surveillance and risk. Specially devized introductory and linking sections contextualize each reading and evaluate its contribution to the field, both individually and in relation to competing approaches and debates. This book provides a single source around which criminology, media and cultural studies modules can be structured, an invaluable revision and consultation guide for students, and an extremely useful resource for scholars writing and researching across a wide range of relevant fields. Accessible yet challenging, and packed with additional pedagogical devices, Crime and Media: A Reader will be an invaluable resource for students and academics studying crime, media, culture, surveillance and control.
For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415565660
Selected Contents: Introduction Part 1: Understanding Media Part 2: Researching Media Part 3: Crime, Newsworthiness and News Part 4: Crime, Entertainment and Creativity Part 5: Effects, Influence and Moral Panic Part 6: Cybercrime, Surveillance and Risk 2009: 246 x 174: 624pp Hb: 978-0-415-42238-3: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-42239-0: £29.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415422390
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cultu r al C RIMINolog y
Forthcoming in 2011
Framing Crime
Crime Scenes
Cultural Criminology and the Image
Forensics and Aesthetics
Edited by Keith Hayward and Mike Presdee, both at University of Kent, UK
Rebecca Scott Bray, University of Sydney, Australia Focusing upon the representations that take place in law, forensic medicine, criminology and culture, Crime Scenes examines the ways in which knowledge about crime, death and the dead body is produced. Forensic and medico-legal practices are charged with ‘handling’ the dead (who cannot speak for themselves) and do so primarily by making injurious events visible so that the law might pass judgment. The image is thus a key site for interpreting and reconstructing the past in legal discourse. Arguing that the images (photographic images, autopsy pictures, legal testimonies) and the narratives generated through their production are the prisms through which crime and death are seen and comprehended within law, Crime Scenes explores the tension exhibited by images, as both evidential and imaginative products. Key forensic and legal spaces – such as the crime scene, the mortuary and the courtroom – as well as key methods of representing crime and death – police photography, mortuary photography and the autopsy, and legal testimony - are considered in relation to the non-legal use of historical forensic photographs, the broader cultural fascination with such images, and the canon of mortuary art quarried from medico-legal domains. The formal ‘forensic’ image, it is argued, is a site of conjecture. And its various aspects are elucidated here through an examination of the creation and the exhibition of forensic images, and the trouble that emerges when discursive boundaries – such as those between law and art – begin to haemorrhage. Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. A History of Law’s Life with the Corpse 3. Picturing Crime and Police Photography: In Love with Law’s Images 4. Truancy: The Cultural Life of Legal Pictures 5. Letters from the Dead House: Forensic Pathology and the Mortuary 6. The Trouble with Testimony 7. Law’s Lacunae 8. The Aesthetic Life of Law’s Corpses 9. Conclusion June 2011: 234 x 156: 240pp Hb: 978-0-415-48390-2: £75.00 Pb: 978-0-415-48391-9: £21.99 eBook: 978-0-203-09139-5 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415483919
Images of crime and crime control have become almost as ’real’ as crime and criminal justice itself. The meaning of both crime and crime control now resides, not solely in the essential – and essentially false – factuality of crime rates or arrest records, but also in the contested processes of symbolic display, cultural interpretation, and representational negotiation.
It is essential, then, that criminologists are closely attuned to the various ways in which crime is imagined, constructed and framed within modern society. Framing Crime responds to this demand with a collection of papers aimed at helping the reader to understand the ways in which the contemporary ‘story of crime’ is constructed and promulgated through the image. It also provides the relevant analytical and research tools to unearth the hidden social and ideological concerns that frequently underpin images of crime, violence and transgression. Selected Contents: 1. Opening the Lens: Cultural Criminology and the Image Keith Hayward 2. Crime, Punishment and the Force of Photographic Spectacle Phil Carney 3. The Decisive Moment: Documentary Photography and Cultural Criminology Jeff Ferrell and Cécile Van de Voorde 4. Hindley’s Ghost: The Visual Deconstruction of Maxine Carr Phil J. Jones and Claire Wardle 5. Screening Crime: Cultural Criminology goes to the Movies Majid Yar 6. The Scene of the Crime: Is there Such a Thing as ‘Just Looking’? Alison Young 7. Imagining the ‘War on Terror’: Fiction, Film, and Framing Alexandra Campbell 8. Framing the Crimes of Colonialism: Critical Images of Aboriginal Art and Law Chris Cuneen 9. ‘Drive it Like you Stole It’: Cultural Criminology, Images and Automobiles in Advertisements Stephen L. Muzzati 10. Staging an Execution: The Media at McVeigh, Bruce Hoffman and Michelle Brown 11. Fighting with Images: The Production and Consumption of Violence among Online Football Supporters Damián Zaitch and Tom de Leeuw 12. A Reflected Gaze of Humanity: Cultural Criminology and Images of Genocide, Wayne Morrison January 2010: 234 x 156: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-45903-7: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-45904-4: £27.99 eBook: 978-0-203-88075-3 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415459044
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Forthcoming
Forthcoming
Rights of Passage
Sport, Violence and Society
Sidewalks and the Regulation of Public Flow
Kevin Young, University of Calgary, Canada
Nicholas Blomley, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Offering a sophisticated new theoretical framework for understanding sport-related violence, and including a wide range of case-studies and empirical data, from professional soccer in Europe to ice hockey in North America, the book establishes a benchmark for the study of violence within sport and wider society. Through close examination of often contradictory trends, from anti-violence initiatives in professional sports leagues to the role of the media in encouraging hyper-aggressivity, the book throws new light on our understanding of the socially-embedded character of sport and its fundamental ties to history, culture, politics, social class, gender and the law.
Series: Social Justice Rights of Passage: Sidewalks and the Regulation of Public Flow documents a powerful and under-researched form of urban governance that focuses on pedestrian flow. This logic, which Nicholas Blomley terms ’pedestrianism’, values public space not in terms of its aesthetic merits, or its success in promoting public citizenship and democracy. Rather, the function of the sidewalk is understood to be the promotion and facilitation of pedestrian flow and circulation, predicated on the appropriate arrangement of people and objects. This remarkably pervasive yet overlooked logic shapes the ways in which public space is regulated, conceived of, and argued about. Rights of Passage: Sidewalks and the Regulation of Public Flow shows how the sidewalk is literally produced, encoded, rendered legible and operational with reference to a dense array of codes, diagrams, specifications, academic and professional networks, engineering rubrics, regulation and case law – all in the name of unfettered circulation. Selected Contents: 1. Pedestrianism: Pedestrianism and Police 2. Civic Humanism and the Sidewalk: The Sidewalk as Political Space 3. Thinking like an Engineer 4. Producing and Policing the Sidewalk: Sidewalk Law 5. The History of Pedestrianism 6. Judicial Pedestrianism 7. Obstructions of Justice?: Speech, Protest and Circulation 8. Taking a Constitutional: Circulation, Begging, and the Mobile Self 9. Hidden in Plain View
Selected Contents: 1. Understanding Violence Sociologically: Approaches, Dimensions, Problems 2. Violence Among Players 3. Violence Among Fans 4. Formations of Violence: Widening the Focus 5. Risk, Pain and Injury in Sport: Violence Outcomes 6. Surveillance, Regulation, Sanction: The Social Control of Sports-Related 7. An Eye on Violence: Media Coverage of Violence in Sport 8. Gender, Culture and Identity: Reproducing and Transforming the Cycle of Violence December 2010: 234 x 156: 248pp Hb: 978-0-415-54994-3: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-54995-0: £24.99 eBook: 978-0-203-87461-5 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415549950
October 2010: 234 x 156: 190pp Hb: 978-0-415-57561-4: £75.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415575614
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cu ltural CRIMIN o lo gy
FORMS OF C RIME
The Scene of Violence
Forthcoming in 2011
Cinema, Crime, Affect
Serial Killers
Alison Young, Melbourne University, Australia
Psychiatry, Criminology and Responsibility
’Alison Young may be the best law and film scholar in the world. Her insight and eminence in the field are amply on display in The Scene of Violence. Here Young draws our attention to what she calls ’the spectatorial relation engendered by film.’ No one who watches a film will ever watch it the same way after reading this book. No one who has ever thought about the relationship of law, violence and film will ever think about them the same way after reading this book. The Scene of Violence will be an instant classic.’ - Austin Sarat, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence & Political Science at Amherst College In the contemporary fascination with images of crime, violence gets under our skin and keeps us enthralled. The Scene of Violence explores the spectator’s encounter with the cinematic scene of violence – rape and revenge, homicide and serial killing, torture and terrorism. Providing a detailed reading of both classical and contemporary films – for example, Kill Bill, Blue Velvet, Reservoir Dogs, The Matrix, Psycho, The Accused, Elephant, Seven, Thelma & Louise, United 93, Zodiac, and No Country for Old Men – Alison Young returns the affective processes of the cinematic image to the study of law, crime and violence. Engaging with legal theory, cultural criminology and film studies, the book unfolds both our attachment to the authority of law and our identification with the illicit. Its original contribution is to bring together the cultural fascination of crime with a nuanced account of what it means to watch cinema. The Scene of Violence shows how the spectator is bound by the laws of film to the judgment of the crime-image.
Francesca Biagi-Chai, University of Leicester, UK Translated by Veronique Voruz, University of Leicester, UK and Suzanne Yang, University of Pittsburgh, USA and Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinics Francesca Biagi-Chai’s book – a translation from the French of Le Cas Landru – tackles the issue of criminal responsibility in the case of serial killers, and other ’mad’ people who are nonetheless deemed to be answerable before the law in most jurisdictions. The author, a Lacanian psychoanalyst and senior psychiatrist in France, with extensive experience working in institutional settings, analyzes the logic informing the crimes of famous serial killers. Addressing the Landru case (which was the inspiration for Chaplin’s Monsieur Verdoux), as well as those of Pierre Riviere, Donato Bilancia, Harold Shipman and others such as Jeffrey Dahmer and Ted Bundy, the author casts light on the confusion that pervades forensic psychiatry and criminal law as to the distinction between mental illness and ‘madness’. Finally, she elaborates the consequences of her argument in a sustained critique of the insanity defence as it currently operates in France and elsewhere. The book includes a Preface by the renowned psychoanalyst, Jacques-Alain Miller. It also includes an introduction by the translators on the question of insanity before the law in the US and in the UK, which considers the pertinence of Biagi-Chai’s argument for forensic psychiatry, for criminal law, and for the increasing contemporary focus on the assessment of dangerousness and risk-management strategies in crime control practices. April 2011: 234 x 156: 240pp Hb: 978-0-415-56112-9: £80.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415561129
2009: 234 x 156: 200pp Hb: 978-0-415-49071-9: £75.00 Pb: 978-0-415-58508-8: £27.99 eBook: 978-0-203-88079-1 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415585088
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The State of Sex
Forthcoming
Tourism, Sex and Sin in the New American Heartland
Understanding Hate Crimes
Barbara G. Brents, Crystal A. Jackson and Kathryn Hausbeck, all at University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA
Carolyn Turpin-Petrosino
Series: Contemporary Sociological Perspectives
The State of Sex is a study of Nevada’s brothels that situates the nation’s only legal brothel industry in the political economy of contemporary tourism. Nevada is part of the ’new American heartland,’ as its pastimes, people, and politics have become more central to the nation. The rise of a service and leisure economy over the past sixty years has propelled sexuality into the heart of contemporary markets. Yet, neoliberal laws in the United States promote business but limit sexual commerce. How have Nevada’s legal brothels survived, while the rest of the country criminalizes prostitution? How do brothels operate? Who works in them? This book brings social theory on globalizing economies, politics, leisure consumption, and emotional labor in interactive service work together with research on contemporary prostitution and sexual commerce. The authors employ an innovative, multi-method sociological approach, combining historical analysis of how the brothels came to be with over a decade’s worth of ethnographic research on the current state of the industry. Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: The State of Sex 2. Contexts of Sexual Commerce 3. The Making of Nevada Prostitution 4. The Business of Selling Sex 5. Paths to Brothel Work 6. Brothel Labor: Making Fantasies 7. Conclusion: Learning from Nevada
Acts, Motives, Offenders, Victims, and Justice Hate crimes and lesser acts of bigotry and intolerance are constants in today’s world. Since 1990 the federal government has monitored hate crime incidents in the United States. While the numbers are disturbing, even more devastating is the impact of these crimes on individuals, communities, and society. This comprehensive textbook serves as a stand-alone source for instructors and students who study courses in hate crimes and/or other related courses. This text explores criminal justice policy as it relates to hate crimes by presenting a thorough and complete presentation of the subject in context. A comprehensive single source, as an efficient and useful option for both instructors and students, also assesses hate crimes policy. Selected Contents: Part 1: Introduction Part 2: A History of Hate in America Part 3: Hate Crime Laws and the Constitution Part 4: The Criminology of Hate Crimes Part 5: Offenders – Who Are They? Part 6: Victims – Who Are They? Part 7: Hate Crime Research – What Have We Learned? Part 8: Criminal Justice Responses Part 9: International Perspectives Part 10: A Look to the Future October 2010: 234 x 156 Hb: 978-0-415-48400-8: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-48401-5: £24.99 eBook: 978-0-203-88369-3 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415484015
2009: 229 x 152: 320pp Hb: 978-0-415-92947-9: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-92948-6: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-86025-0 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415929486
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New
Forthcoming
Defining and Defying Organised Crime
Eco Crime and Genetically Modified Food
Discourse, Perceptions and Reality
Reece Walters, The Open University, UK
Edited by Felia Allum, University of Bath, UK, Francesca Longo and Daniela Irrera, both at Università degli Studi di Catania, Italy and Panos A. Kostakos, University of Bath, UK
Series: Routledge Advances in International Relations and Global Politics Organised crime is now a major threat to all industrial and non-industrial countries. Using an inter-disciplinary and comparative approach this book examines the existing, official institutional discourse on organised crime to examine whether, or not, it has an impact on perceptions of the threat and on the reality of organized crime. Selected Contents: Part 1: Discourse and Definitions 1. Discoursing Organized Crime: Towards a Two Level Analysis? 2. The Criminal not the Crime: Practitioner Discourse and the Policing of Organized Crime in England and Wales 3. The Evolution of the European Union’s Understanding of Organized Crime and its Embedment in EU Discourse 4. International Policy Discourses on Transnational Organized Crime: The Role of an International Expertise Part 2: Perceptions 5. Transnational Organized Crime and the Global Security Agenda: Different Perceptions and Conflicting strategies? 6. Evolving Perceptions of Organized Crime: The Use of RICO in the United States 7. The Yakuza and its Perceived Threat 8. The Social Perception of Organized Crime in the Balkans: A World of Diverging Views? Part 3: Reality 9. The Fire behind the Smoke: The Realities of Human trafficking in Northern Ireland 10. Organized Crime in transition-era Bulgaria: The Elites and the State 11. Organized Crime and Local Politics in Contemporary Italy: Willing or Unwilling Bedfellows? 12. The Crime-Terror Nexus: Do Threat Perceptions Align with ‘Reality’? Conclusion: Getting to Grips with the Deconstruction of Organized Crime February 2010: 234 x 156: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-54852-6: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-86034-2
The GM debate has been ongoing for over a decade, yet it has been contained in the scientific world and presented in technical terms. Eco Crime and Genetically Modified Food brings the debates about GM food into the social and criminological arena.
This book highlights the criminal and harmful actions of state and corporate officials. It concludes that corporate and political corruption, uncertain science, bitter public opposition, growing farmer concern and bankruptcy, irreversible damage to biodervisty, corporate monopolies and exploitation, disregard for social and cultural practices, devastation of small scale and local agricultural economies, imminent threats to organics, weak regulation, and widespread political and biotech mistrust – do not provide the bases for advancing and progressing GM foods into the next decade. Yet, with the backing of the WTO, the US and UK Governments march on – but at what cost to future generations? Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: Planting the Seed 2. The Politicisation of GM: Terrain, Terms and Concepts 3. The Perils, Prospects and Controversies of GM FOOD 4. Risk, Public Opinion and Consumer Resistance 5. Biotech , Papal and Trade ‘Wars’: Third World Hunger, Exploitation and the Politics of GM Food 6. Regulatory Regimes: Ensuring Safety or Enhancing Profits? 7. Green Criminology: Power, Harm and (In) Justice 8. Reflections and Conclusions September 2010: 234 x 156: 192pp Hb: 978-1-904385-22-6: £75.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9781904385226
For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415548526
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New 4 Volume Set
Organized Crime Edited by Federico Varese Series: Critical Concepts in Criminology The systematic study of organized crime dates back to John Landesco’s classic ethnography, Organized Crime in Chicago (1929). Since then, the field has grown considerably and, as well as criminologists and sociologists, the topic has been embraced by researchers from a broad range of disciplines, including political science, anthropology, economics, as well as literary and film studies. While at first attention was principally devoted to the study of ‘traditional’ organized-crime groups, such as the Sicilian and the American mafias, since the 1980s, serious scholarly work has also emerged on, for example, the Russian mafia, the Japanese Yakuza, and the Triads in both Hong Kong, China, and the USA. Furthermore, researchers have recognized that the behaviour and structure of ‘traditional’ organized-crime groups, and their role in both legal and illegal markets, can be fruitfully compared and contrasted to new forms of organized crime in places as varied as Africa, Columbia, Northern Ireland, and Asia. The study of organized crime has also attracted researchers interested in popular representations of the phenomenon, mainly in films and novels. Furthermore, after the events of 11 September 2001, the intersection between organized crime and terrorism, and the ability of organized-crime groups to operate transnationally and expand to new territories, has gained a new significance. As research on organized crime continues to flourish, this new title in the Routledge’s Critical Concepts in Criminology series, addresses the need for an authoritative reference work to make sense of a rapidly growing and ever more complex corpus of interdisciplinary scholarly literature. Organized Crime is a four-volume collection of the foundational and the very best cutting-edge scholarship. It is also fully indexed and includes a comprehensive introduction, newly written by the editor, which places the collected material in its historical and intellectual context. An indispensable reference collection, it is destined to be valued by scholars and students of the subject as a vital one-stop research and pedagogic resource. Selected Contents: Volume 1: Definitions and Theories Volume 2: Origins, Resources, Organization Volume 3: Organized Crime and Penetration of Markets Volume 4: Organized Crime and Popular Culture, States and Terrorism May 2010: 234 x 156: 1632pp Hb: 978-0-415-46074-3: £650.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415460743
Routledge Major Works • reference@routledge.com
Law and Criminology Routledge’s Major Works meet today’s research, reference and teaching needs. These multi-volume collections contain a selection of previously published articles which together provide readers with historical context as well as a thorough overview of current issues. Each set is edited by a leading scholar in the field and provides a unique, one-stop reference resource of canonical and cutting-edge material and easy access to material that is often not widely available.
For further information please contact: reference@routledge.com
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f or ms of c r i me
Forthcoming
Called to Account
The Politics of Organised Crime
Fourteen Financial Frauds that Shaped the American Accounting Profession
Theory and Practice Sappho Xenakis, London School of Economics Series: Routledge Transnational Crime and Corruption Organized crime has become one of most prominent international security concerns of our age. Nevertheless, international efforts to combat it have often been criticized as inadequate, ineffective and illiberal. Repeated calls have been made for greater international collaboration, better data collection, fairer international systems of economic exchange, more accurate and relevant threat assessments, and more humane anti-organized crime policies. This book argues that such outlooks miss the essential political functions of the international agenda against organized crime. Combining insights from International Relations and Criminology, policy against organized crime is explained as a potent means by which state cohesiveness and the authority of state elites are strengthened, a means valid as much for stronger as for weaker states, internationally and domestically. Assessing the wider political impact of the agenda, the study includes an unprecedented account of resistance to it. In an age of intensifying international co-operation, an awareness of both should be indispensable.
Paul M. Clikeman, University of Richmond, USA
This book describes fourteen financial frauds that influenced the American public accounting profession and directly led to the development of accounting standards and legislation as practiced in the US today. This entertaining and educational look at these historic frauds helps enliven and increase understanding of auditing and forensic accounting for students.
2008: 229 x 152: 360pp Pb: 978-0-415-99698-3: £29.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415996983
Selected Contents: Introduction Part 1: Comparing Organised Crime Groups Internationally: What (or Who) is Organised Crime? Part 2: Scientism and the International Effort to Combat Organised Crime Part 3: The Logic of Threat Assessments – A. Human Security B. Threats to the State Part 4: Born Rivals? Organised Crime and the State Part 5: The Political Function of the International Organised Crime Agenda: A Two-level Game Part 6: Resistance to Policy against Organised Crime Conclusion October 2010: 234 x 156: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-49543-1: £80.00 eBook: 978-0-203-87856-9 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415495431
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f orm s o f crime
Forthcoming
New
Human Security, Transnational Crime and Human Trafficking
Internet Child Abuse
Asian and Western Perspectives
Edited by Julia Davidson, Kingston University, UK and Petter Gottschalk, Norwegian School of Management
Edited by Shiro Okubo, Ritsumeikan University, Japan and Louise Shelley, George Mason University, USA Series: Routledge Transnational Crime and Corruption Examining transnational crime, human trafficking and its implications for human security from both Western and Asian perspectives, this book, with essays from contributors based in Europe, the US and Asia fills a gap on all bookshelves; providing an excellent volume on the under considered area of Asian transnational crime. Considering it as a globalized phenomenon which is no longer confined to operating at the traditional regional level, it: • outlines the overall picture of organized crime and human trafficking in the contemporary world, examining the current trends and recent developments • contrasts the experience and perception of these problems in Asia with those in Western countries, analyzing the distinctive Japanese perspective on globalization, human security and transnational crime • examines the policy responses of key states and international institutions - both Asian and Western including Germany, Canada, the United States, the European Union, Japan, Korea and Thailand. A timely analysis of the increasingly serious problems of transnational crime, human trafficking and their impact on human security, linking both Western and Asian perspectives. November 2010: 234 x 156: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-43701-1: £80.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415437011
Current Research and Policy
Internet Child Abuse: Current Research and Policy provides a timely overview of international policy, legislation and offender management and treatment practice in the area of Internet child abuse. Internet use has grown considerably over the last five years, and information technology now forms a core part of the formal education system in many countries. There is however, increasing evidence that the internet is used by some adults to access children and young people in order to ‘groom’ them for the purposes of sexual abuse; as well as to produce and distribute indecent illegal images of children. This book presents and assesses the most recent and current research on internet child abuse, addressing: its nature, the behaviour and treatment of its perpetrators, international policy, legislation and protection, and policing. It will be required reading for an international audience of academics, researchers, policy makers and criminal justice practitioners with interests in this area.
Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Legislation & Policy: Protecting Young People, Sentencing and Managing Internet Sex Offenders 3. Characteristics of the Internet and Child Abuse 4. Combating Child Abuse Images on the Internet 5. Stage Model for Online Grooming Offenders 6. Understanding the Perpetrators Online Behaviour 7. Policing Social Networking Sites & Online Grooming 8. Assessment and Treatment Approaches with Online Sexual Offenders. Conclusion July 2010: 234 x 156: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-55980-5: £75.00 eBook: 978-0-203-84743-5 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415559805
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f or ms o f crime
Violence and Abuse Issues Cross-Cultural Perspectives for Health and Social Services Lee Ann Hoff, Life Crisis Institute, USA
’Dr. Hoff’s book speaking to the issues of indigenous people is a breath of fresh air to a topic too long relegated to the back pages of history.’ – Michael E. Bird, Past President of the American Public Health Association
Health and social service providers are in pivotal positions to provide preventive and restorative services to those affected by violent and abusive behaviour. This comprehensive textbook presents theoretical background and practical strategies for doing so, providing a solid knowledge base for good practice in this area. It emphasizes the interdisciplinary aspects of violence and victim/survivor care and addresses violence over the lifespan, covering: • child sexual and physical abuse • sexual assault of adults • battering and emotional abuse of intimate partners • elder abuse • perpetrators of violence and abuse • violence in learning and work environments
forens i c c r i mi n olog y
An Introduction to Forensic Linguistics Language in Evidence Malcolm Coulthard and Alison Johnson Overview of the interface of language and the law, illustrated with authentic data and contemporary case studies. Topics include collection of evidence, discourse, courtroom interaction, legal language, comprehension and forensic phonetics. 2007: 234 x 156: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-32024-5: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-32023-8: £21.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415320238
Learning Forensic Assessment Edited by Rebecca Jackson Series: International Perspectives on Forensic Mental Health 2007: 235 x 156: 632pp Hb: 978-0-8058-5922-5: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-8058-5923-2: £50.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93988-8 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780805859232
• vicarious trauma and self-care • interconnections between various forms of violence, including socially approved violence in the media and in war. This text is an essential resource for qualified practitioners wanting to learn more about this area and for students starting out in health and social care. Each chapter includes case studies and thinking points, and suggestions for application in practice settings. A companion website provides materials for students and educators, enabling the inclusion of violence issues in an already busy curriculum. 2009: 246 x 174: 264pp Hb: 978-0-415-46571-7: £75.00 Pb: 978-0-415-46572-4: £21.99 eBook: 978-0-203-87562-9 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415465724
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h i sto rica l crimin ology
Forthcoming in 2011
New
An Economic History of Organized Crime
The Origin of Organized Crime in America
A National and Transnational Approach
The New York City Mafia, 1891–1931
Dennis M. P. McCarthy, Iowa State University, USA
David Critchley
Series: Routledge Studies in Crime and Economics
’This is one of the most comprehensive studies of the New York Mafia... Essential.’ - W.M. Fontane, McNeese State University, Choice
Organized crime is a growing international phenomenon and, as it intersects with terrorism, an increasingly dangerous force. Organized crime has been studied from the perspectives of many scholarly disciplines, and there is a massive literature on the topic created by academics, journalists, government officials, and the criminals themselves. Surprisingly, while economists and historians have written about organized crime, there is no international economic history on the subject. This book redresses the balance. In this book, Dennis M. P. McCarthy asks two major questions. What can economic history tell us about organized crime – its origins, rise, spread, and decline, or strengthening and weakening? And are there things in the history of organized crime that might help us better understand its present and future? With a range of case studies, the author looks at various issues in the economic history of organized crime, including organization, social environment, underground economy, government and ‘the twilight zone’ – the intersection of the legal and underground economy. Selected Contents: Part 1: Europe Part 2: North America Part 3: Central America Part 4: Africa Part 5: Asia and the Western Pacific May 2011: 234 x 156: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-48796-2: £70.00 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415487962
’In an ideal world every writer, whether academic, professional or popular, should consult David Critchley’s book before repeating assertions about the history of organized crime in New York in particular and the United States as a whole. ... Above all the depth of research in The Origin of Organized Crime in America captures the diversity and modesty of scale and outcomes that characterized New York City’s Mafia in its formative years.’ – Michael Woodiwiss, University of the West of England, UK While the later history of the New York Mafia has received extensive attention, what has been conspicuously absent until now is an accurate and conversant review of the formative years of Mafia organizational growth. David Critchley examines the Mafia recruitment process, relations with Mafias in Sicily, the role of non-Sicilians in New York’s organized crime families, kinship connections, the Black Hand, the impact of Prohibition, and allegations that a ’new’ Mafia was created in 1931. This book will interest historians, criminologists, and anyone fascinated by the American Mafia. Selected Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Black Hand, Calabrians, and the Mafia 3. ’First Family’ of the New York Mafia 4. The Mafia and the Baff Murder 5. The Neapolitan Challenge 6. New York City in the 1920s 7. Castellammare War and ’La Cosa Nostra’ 8. Americanization and the Families 9. Localism, Tradition, and Innovation March 2010: 229 x 152: 362pp Pb: 978-0-415-88257-6: £22.50 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415882576
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histori cal c r i mi n olog y
The Origins of Criminology
Forthcoming
A Reader
The Handbook of Deviant Behavior
Edited by Nicole H. Rafter, Northeastern University, USA
’This is an indispensable source for anyone interested in the history of criminology and a must read for all criminologists. As criminology moves toward establishing a settled disciplinary identity, this volume provides a collection of wonderfully rich insights into its intellectual genealogy and a timely reminder of its eclecticism. The selected texts derive from a striking array of disciplines and have an astonishingly wide geographical spread – Lucia Zedner, Professor of Criminal Justice, University of Oxford and Conjoint Professor, University of New South Wales The Origins of Criminology: A Reader is a collection of nineteenth-century texts from the key originators of the practice of criminology – selected, introduced, and with commentaries by the leading scholar in this area, Nicole Rafter. 2009: 234 x 156: 376pp Hb: 978-0-415-45111-6: £95.00 Pb: 978-0-415-45112-3: £28.99 eBook: 978-0-203-86994-9 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415451123
Edited by Clifton D. Bryant, Virginia Tech University, USA Series: Routledge International Handbooks The Handbook of Deviant Behaviour presents a comprehensive, integrative, and accessible overview of the contemporary body of knowledge in the field of social deviance in the twenty-first century. This book addresses the full range of scholarly concerns within this area – including theoretical, methodological, and substantive issues – in over seventy original entries, written by an international mix of recognized scholars. Each of these essays provides insight not only into the historical and sociological evolution of the topic addressed, but also highlights associated notable thinkers, research findings, and key published works for further reference. As a whole, this Handbook undertakes an in depth evaluation of the contemporary state of knowledge within the area of social deviance, and beyond this considers future directions and concerns that will engage scholars in the decades ahead. The inclusion of comparative and cross-cultural examples and discussions, relevant case studies and other pedagogical features make this book an invaluable learning tool for undergraduate and post graduate students in disciplines such as criminology, mental health studies, criminal theory, and contemporary sociology. Selected Contents: Part 1: Conceptualizing Deviance Part 2: Research Methodology in Studying Deviance Part 3: Theories of Deviance Part 4: Becoming Deviant as a Person Part 5: Deviant Lifestyles and Subcultures Part 6: Continuous Deviance Part 7: Self-destructive Behavior as Deviance Part 8: Deviance in Social Institutions Part 9: Sexual Deviance Part 10: Crimes of the Times Part 11: Crime: Traditional Non-violent Modes Part 12: Crime: Traditional Violent Modes Part 13: Handicap, Disability, and Impairment Deviance Part 14: Exiting Deviance Part 15: New Horizons in Deviance October 2010: 246 x 174: 608pp Hb: 978-0-415-48274-5: £110.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88054-8 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415482745
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Handbook of Youth and Young Adulthood
Forthcoming in 2011
New Perspectives and Agendas
Hopeful Girls, Troubled Boys
Edited by Andy Furlong, Glasgow University, UK
Race and Gender Inequality in Urban Education
Written by leading academics from several countries, this Handbook introduces up to date perspectives on a wide range of issues that affect and shape youth and young adulthood. It provides an authoritative and multi-disciplinary overview of a field of study that offers unique insight on social change in advanced societies and is aimed at academics, students, researchers and policy-makers.
The Handbook introduces some of the key theoretical perspectives used within youth studies and sets out future research agendas. Each of the ten sections covers an important area of research – from education and the labour market to youth cultures, health and crime whilst discussing change and continuity in the lives of young people. This work introduces readers to some of the most important work in the field while highlighting the underlying perspectives that have been used to understand the complexity of modern youth and young adulthood. Selected Contents: Part 1: Re-conceptualising Youth and Young Adulthood Part 2: Divisions Part 3: Education Part 4: Employment and Unemployment Part 5: Dependency and Family Relations Part 6: Youth Culture and Lifestyles Part 7: Civic Engagement and Disengagement Part 8: Physical and Mental Health Part 9: Identities, Values and Beliefs Part 10: Crime and Deviance
2nd Edition
Nancy Lopez An exciting revision of a classic book. Hopeful Girls, Troubled Boys focuses on the life histories of the largest immigrant group in New York City – the youth from the Dominican Republic, the West Indies, and Haiti – to explain why girls of colour are succeeding at higher rates than their male counterparts. Nancy Lopez brings to life the attitudes, feelings, and expectations of these teens, and shows that girls maintain optimistic outlooks on their lives, while boys are ambivalent about the promises of education. This fascinating account explains how and why our schools and cities are failing boys of color. Selected Contents: 1. Unequal Schooling: Race and Gender Disparity in Urban Education 2. From ’Mamasita’ to ’Hoodlum’: Stigma as Lived Experience 3. ’Urban High Schools’: The Reality of Unequal Schooling 4. ’Problem’ Boys 5. Rewarding Femininity 6. Homegrown: How the Family Does Gender 7. After Graduation: Race and Gender in the Workplace 8. Education as a Way Out: The Future of Latino and Black Education January 2011: 229 x 152: 256pp Hb: 978-0-415-87422-9: £90.00 Pb: 978-0-415-87423-6: £28.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415874236
2009: 246 x 174: 496pp Hb: 978-0-415-44540-5: £125.00 Pb: 978-0-415-44541-2: £28.99 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415445412
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youth an d c r i me
New
Young Offenders and the Law How the Law Responds to Youth Offending Raymond Arthur, University of Teeside, UK
How does the law deal with young offenders, and to what extent does the law protect and promote the rights of young people in conflict with the law? These are the central issues addressed by Young Offenders and the Law in its examination of the legal response to the phenomenon of youth offending, and the contemporary forces that shape the law.
This book develops the reader’s understanding of the sociological, criminological, historical, political, and philosophical approaches to youth offending in England and Wales, and also presents a comparative review of developments in other jurisdictions. It provides a comprehensive critical analysis of the legislative and policy framework currently governing the operation of the youth justice system in England and Wales, and evaluates the response of the legal system in light of modern legislative framework and international best practice. All aspects of trial and pre-trial procedure affecting young offenders are covered, including: the age of criminal responsibility, police powers, trial procedure, together with the full range of detention facilities and non-custodial options. Young Offenders and the Law provides, for the first time, a primary source of reference on youth offending. It is an essential text for undergraduate and postgraduate students of Law, Criminology, and Criminal Justice Studies. Selected Contents: Part 1: Historical Development of the English Youth Justice System Part 2: Legal Principles Underpinning the English Youth Justice System Part 3: The English Youth Justice System in Practice
Young People and Sexual Exploitation ’It’s Not Hidden, You Just Aren’t Looking’ Jenny J. Pearce, University of Bedfordshire, UK
’Jenny Pearce has produced a marvellous book which is readable and encyclopaedic in its coverage of policy, practice and research. This book should be essential reading for everybody working with young people but especially for those providing services in CAMHS, education and health.’ – Lorraine Radford, Head of Research, NSPCC
Jenny J. Pearce draws on young people’s voices to explore the difficulties that arise for researchers and for practitioners when working with sexually exploited young people. While child protection interventions must guide social work, she argues that other agencies such as health, education, housing and training each have a role to play in supporting a sexually exploited young person. Challenging the uncritical acceptance of the child as victim, the book suggests ‘therapeutic outreach’ as an approach to working with sexually exploited young people that can complement child protection procedures, support practitioners in the field and enhance the young person’s sense of autonomy and responsibility during their transition to adulthood. The book advocates the relationship between practitioners and the young people they aim to support to be one of the most important resources in practice. 2009: 234 x 156: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-40715-1: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-40716-8: £21.99 eBook: 978-0-203-87418-9 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415407168
May 2010: 234 x 156: 160pp Hb: 978-0-415-49661-2: £80.00 Pb: 978-0-415-49662-9: £24.99 eBook: 978-0-203-87816-3 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415496629
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Youth, Drugs, and Nightlife Geoffrey Hunt, Molly Moloney and Kristin Evans, all at Institute of Scientific Analysis, USA
Youth, Drugs, and Night Life examines the relationships between the electronic dance scene and drug use for young ravers and clubbers today. Based on over 300 interviews with ravers, DJ’s and promoters, Hunt, Moloney, and Evans examine the different social groupings that make up the scene. The authors explore the accomplishment of gender, sexuality, and Asian American ethnic identity and critically analyze the negotiation of risk and pleasure within the world of raves and dance clubs. We learn about young ravers and clubbers’ frustrations with recent attempts to control clubs and raves and their skepticism about official pronouncements on the dangers of ecstasy and other drugs, in this book that pivots between the local, the national, and the global in its approach.
Selected Contents: Part 1: Theory and Methods for Studying Youth 1. Epidemiology Meets Cultural Studies: Studying and Understanding Youth Cultures, Clubs, and Drugs 2. Clubbers, Candy Kids and Jaded Ravers: Introducing the Scene, the Participants, and the Drugs Part 2: The Global the National and the Local 3. Clubbing, Drugs, and the Dance Scene in a Global Perspective 4. Youth, US Drug Policy, and Social Control of the Dance Scene 5. Uncovering the Local: San Francisco’s Nighttime Economy Part 3: Drug Pleasures, Risks and Combinations 6. ’The Great Unmentionable’: Exploring the Pleasures and Benefits of Ecstasy 7. Drug Use and the Meaning of Risk 8. Combining Different Substances in the Dance Scene: Enhancing Pleasure, Managing Risk, and Timing Effects Part 4: Gender, Social Context, and Ethnicity 9. Drugs, Gender, Sexuality, and Accountability in the World of Raves 10. Alcohol, Gender, and Social Context 11. Asian American Youth: Consumption, Identity, and Drugs in the Dance Scene January 2010: 234 x 156: 288pp Hb: 978-0-415-37471-2: £75.00 Pb: 978-0-415-37473-6: £23.99 eBook: 978-0-203-92941-4 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415374736
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i n de x
A Abbas, Tahir................................................................................... 16 Abu-Laban, Yasmeen..................................................................... 18 Afrocentric Theory of Crime, An.................................................... 15 Allum, Felia.................................................................................... 35 Alvarez, Alex.................................................................................... 5 Arthur, Raymond........................................................................... 43 Asencio, Emily K............................................................................ 13
B Banks, Sarah.................................................................................. 21 Barberet, Rosemary........................................................................ 10 Barton, Adrian............................................................................... 17 Basics (series)............................................................................. 3, 27 Beaver, Kevin M............................................................................... 8 Benavie, Arthur.............................................................................. 18 Benson, Michael.......................................................................... 8, 9 Bessant, Judith................................................................................. 4 Beyond Bad Girls............................................................................ 15 Biagi-Chai, Francesca..................................................................... 33 Biosocial Criminology....................................................................... 8 Blomley, Nicholas........................................................................... 32 Brents, Barbara G........................................................................... 34 Brightman, Hank J........................................................................... 9 Brightman, Sara............................................................................. 12 Brooks, Thom................................................................................ 26 Browne-Marshall, Gloria J.............................................................. 16 Brownridge, Douglas A.................................................................. 16 Bryant, Clifton D............................................................................ 41 Bufacchi, Vittorio........................................................................... 28
C Called to Account.......................................................................... 37 Caringella, Susan........................................................................... 12 Carrabine, Eamonn.......................................................................... 2 Cass Series on Political Violence (series).......................................... 23 Chesney-Lind, Meda...................................................................... 15 Clear, Todd R................................................................................. 26 Clikeman, Paul M........................................................................... 37 Community Justice......................................................................... 26 Community Policing in America...................................................... 22 Contemporary Critical Criminology................................................... 4 Contemporary Issues in Public Policy (series)............................. 20, 21 Contemporary Perspectives on Life After Punishment..................... 19 Contemporary Sociological Perspectives (series)............................................................ 13, 16, 34 Corporate Criminal, The................................................................... 6 Corrections.................................................................................... 25 Coulthard, Malcolm....................................................................... 39 Cox, Pam......................................................................................... 2 Crime and Media........................................................................... 30 Crime and the Lifecourse................................................................. 8 Crime Scenes................................................................................. 31 Crime, Justice and the Media......................................................... 25 Criminal Justice Theory.................................................................. 29
Criminal Law: The Basics................................................................ 27 Criminological Perspectives on Race and Crime.............................. 14 Criminology..................................................................................... 2 Criminology and Justice Studies (series)............................. 8, 9, 12, 14, 15, 16, 22, 24, 25, 29 Criminology of Pleasure, The.......................................................... 29 Criminology: The Basics.................................................................... 3 Criminology: The Key Concepts........................................................ 3 Critchley, David.............................................................................. 40 Critical Concepts in Criminology (series)................................... 27, 36
D D’Costa, Bina................................................................................. 30 Davidson, Julia............................................................................... 38 Defining and Defying Organised Crime.......................................... 35 Deflem, Mathieu............................................................................ 22 DeKeseredy, Walter S....................................................................... 4 DePoy, Elizabeth............................................................................ 12 Descriptions of Deviance................................................................ 19 Deterrence and Crime Prevention................................................... 23 Dictionary of Criminal Justice, A..................................................... 24 Discourses of Law (series)............................................................... 31 Douglas, Kevin S............................................................................ 13 Drugs............................................................................................. 18 Drugs, Crime and Public Health...................................................... 18 Duffee, David................................................................................. 29
E Eco Crime and Genetically Modified Food...................................... 35 Economic History of Organized Crime, An...................................... 40 Ethical Issues in Youth Work........................................................... 21 Ethnography in Social Science Practice........................................... 13 Evaluation Practice......................................................................... 12 Evans, Kristin................................................................................. 44
F Farrall, Stephen.............................................................................. 19 Feminist Criminology........................................................................ 7 Fifty Key Thinkers in Criminology...................................................... 3 Foucault and Criminology.............................................................. 10 Framing Crime............................................................................... 31 Furlong, Andy................................................................................ 42
G Gabbidon, Shaun L........................................................................ 15 Gabbidon, Shaun L........................................................................ 14 Genocidal Crimes............................................................................. 5 Gilson, Stephen French.................................................................. 12 GIS and Spatial Analysis for the Social Sciences.............................. 13 Gordon, Rachel A.......................................................................... 11 Gottschalk, Petter.......................................................................... 38 Greer, Chris.................................................................................... 30 Guide to Surviving a Career in Academia, A................................... 12
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Haggerty, Kevin D.......................................................................... 23 Hallsworth, Simon.......................................................................... 29 Hamilton, Jr., John R...................................................................... 26 Handbook of Deviant Behavior, The............................................... 41 Handbook of Violence Risk Assessment.......................................... 13 Handbook of Youth and Young Adulthood.................................... 42 Hausbeck, Kathryn......................................................................... 34 Hayward, Keith.......................................................................... 3, 31 Herring, Jonathan.......................................................................... 27 Hester, Stephen............................................................................. 19 Higgins, George E.......................................................................... 12 Hil, Richard...................................................................................... 4 Hipple, Natalie Kroovand............................................................... 24 History of Drugs, A........................................................................ 17 Hoff, Lee Ann................................................................................ 39 Hollin, Clive................................................................................... 39 Honour, Violence, Women and Islam.............................................. 16 Hopeful Girls, Troubled Boys.......................................................... 42 Hough, Mike.................................................................................. 19 Hoyle, Carolyn............................................................................... 27 Human Security, Transnational Crime and Human Trafficking.......... 38 Hunt, Geoffrey............................................................................... 44
Lenning, Emily............................................................................... 12 Lifers.............................................................................................. 25 Linneman, Thomas J...................................................................... 13 Loader, Ian....................................................................................... 5 Longo, Francesca........................................................................... 35 Lopez, Nancy................................................................................. 42 Lyon, David.................................................................................... 18
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Nationbuilding, Gender and War Crimes in South Asia................... 30 New Criminal Justice, The.............................................................. 24 Nichols-Pethick, Jonathan.............................................................. 31
Idriss, Mohammad Mazher............................................................. 16 Illicit Drugs..................................................................................... 17 Immigration, Social Integration and Crime...................................... 21 International Criminology................................................................. 4 International Handbook of Criminology.......................................... 11 International Perspectives on Forensic Mental Health (series).... 13, 39 Internet Child Abuse: Current Research and Policy.......................... 38 Introduction to Forensic Linguistics, An.......................................... 39 Irrera, Daniela................................................................................ 35 Irwin, John..................................................................................... 25 Irwin, Katherine............................................................................. 15
Maguire, Edward R........................................................................ 29 Marsh, Ian..................................................................................... 25 Maruna, Shadd...................................................................... 3, 7, 19 McCarthy, Dennis M. P................................................................... 40 McGarrell, Edmund.................................................................. 22, 24 McGuire, Mike............................................................................... 29 Melville, Gaynor............................................................................. 25 Mental Health and Crime............................................................... 20 Moloney, Molly.............................................................................. 44 Mooney, Jayne................................................................................. 3
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O O’Brien, Martin................................................................................ 3 Offenders, Deviants or Patients?.................................................... 20 Okubo, Shiro................................................................................. 38 Organized Crime (Volumes 1-4)...................................................... 36 Origin of Organized Crime in America, The.................................... 40 Origins of Criminology, The............................................................ 41 Otto, Randy K................................................................................ 13
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j Jackson, Crystal A.......................................................................... 34 Jackson, Rebecca........................................................................... 39 Johnson, Alison.............................................................................. 39 Joyce, Peter.................................................................................... 24
K Kempa, Michael............................................................................... 6 Kennedy, David M.......................................................................... 23 Kennedy, Leslie.............................................................................. 22 Kett, Martin................................................................................... 11 Key Ideas in Criminology (series)........................................... 4, 5, 6, 7 Klofas, John................................................................................... 24 Knepper, Paul................................................................................ 11 Kostakos, Panos A......................................................................... 35
L Learning Forensic Assessment........................................................ 39 Lee, Maggy...................................................................................... 2
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Parker, Robert Nash....................................................................... 13 Pearce, Jenny J............................................................................... 43 Peay, Jill......................................................................................... 20 Petrosino, Carolyn Turpin-.............................................................. 34 Piquero, Alexis Russell...................................................................... 8 Plummer, Ken.................................................................................. 2 Policing............................................................................................ 6 Policing of Terrorism, The............................................................... 22 Policing Serious Crime in China...................................................... 19 Politics of Organised Crime, The..................................................... 37 Presdee, Mike................................................................................ 31 Prins, Herschel............................................................................... 20 Psychology and Crime.................................................................... 39 Psychology of Counter-Terrorism, The............................................ 23 Public Criminology?......................................................................... 5 Punishment.................................................................................... 26
Q Quirk, Hannah............................................................................... 28
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i n de x
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Race, Law, and American Society................................................... 16 Rafter, Nicole H.............................................................................. 41 Regression Analysis for the Social Sciences..................................... 11 Rehabilitation................................................................................... 7 Renzetti, Claire M............................................................................ 7 Restorative Justice.......................................................................... 27 Rethinking Violence....................................................................... 28 Right to Silence, The...................................................................... 28 Rights of Passage........................................................................... 32 Risk Assessment and Governance in Criminology and Criminal Justice................................................ 22 Routledge Advances in Criminology (series).............................. 15, 19 Routledge Advances in International Relations and Global Politics (series)............................................... 35 Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series (series)........................ 30 Routledge Handbook of International Criminology......................... 10 Routledge International Handbooks (series).................................... 41 Routledge Key Guides (series).......................................................... 3 Routledge Student Readers (series)................................................. 30 Routledge Studies in Crime and Economics (series)................... 23, 40 Routledge Studies in Middle Eastern Politics (series)........................ 18 Routledge Studies on China in Transition (series)............................ 19 Routledge Transnational Crime and Corruption (series)............. 37, 38
Today’s White Collar Crime.............................................................. 9 Tombs, Steve.................................................................................... 6 Trevaskes, Susan............................................................................ 19
S Samatas, Minas.............................................................................. 23 Scene of Violence, The................................................................... 33 Scott Bray, Rebecca........................................................................ 31 Scott-Jones, Julie............................................................................ 13 Security............................................................................................ 7 Seddon, Toby................................................................................. 17 Serial Killers................................................................................... 33 Sex For Sale................................................................................... 15 Shearing, Clifford D......................................................................... 6 Shelley, Louise................................................................................ 38 Shoham, Shlomo Giora.................................................................. 11 Silke, Andrew................................................................................ 23 Simpson, Sally.................................................................................. 9 Smith, Cindy J................................................................................ 10 Social Class and Crime................................................................... 15 Social Justice (series)...................................................................... 32 Social Statistics............................................................................... 13 Solivetti, Luigi M............................................................................ 21 South, Nigel..................................................................................... 2 Sparks, Richard.......................................................................... 5, 19 Sport, Violence and Society............................................................ 32 State of Sex, The............................................................................ 34 Stevens, Alex................................................................................. 18 Stinchcomb, Jeanne B.................................................................... 25 Structual Equations Modeling for Criminology and Criminal Justice Research..................................... 12 Surveillance and Control in Israel/Palestine..................................... 18 Surveillance and Democracy........................................................... 23
U Understanding Hate Crimes........................................................... 34 Unnever, James D.......................................................................... 15
V Varese, Federico............................................................................. 36 Violence Against Women............................................................... 16 Violence and Abuse Issues............................................................. 39 Voruz, Veronique..................................................................... 10, 33
W Wain, Neil...................................................................................... 24 Walklate, Sandra.............................................................................. 3 Walsh, Anthony......................................................................... 8, 15 Walters, Reece............................................................................... 35 Ward, Tony...................................................................................... 7 Watt, Sal........................................................................................ 13 Watts, Rob....................................................................................... 4 Weitzer, Ronald.............................................................................. 15 White Collar Crime........................................................................... 9 Whyte, David................................................................................... 6 Wilson, Jeremy M.......................................................................... 22
X Xenakis, Sappho............................................................................ 37
Y Yang, Suzanne............................................................................... 33 Yar, Majid........................................................................................ 3 Young Offenders and the Law....................................................... 43 Young People and Sexual Exploitation............................................ 43 Young, Alison................................................................................ 33 Young, Kevin................................................................................. 32 Youth, Drugs, and Nightlife............................................................ 44
Z Zedner, Lucia................................................................................... 7 Zhang, Sheldon X.......................................................................... 10 Zureik, Elia..................................................................................... 18
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www.routledge.com/criminology Routledge, 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN Tel: 020 7017 6000 Fax: 020 7017 6699 Email: criminology@routledge.com Paper used in this catalogue is chlorine free and environmentally friendly. It is manufactured with pulp supplied from sustainable managed forests.