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THE ROUTLEGDE HANDBOOK OF INTERNATIONAL CRIME AND JUSTICE STUDIES
ARRIGO B.A. BERSOT H.Y. wydawnictwo: ROUTLEDGE, 2013, wydanie I cena netto: 858.50 Twoja cena 815,58 zł + 5% vat - dodaj do koszyka The Routledge Handbook of International Crime and Justice Studies presents the
enduring debates and emerging challenges in crime and justice studies from an
international and multi-disciplinary perspective. Guided by the pivotal, although vastly
under-examined, role that consumerism, politics, technology, and culture assume in shaping
these debates and in organizing these challenges, individual chapters probe the global
landscape of crime and justice with astonishing clarity and remarkable depth. A
distinguished collection of experts examine the interdisciplinary field of international
crime and justice. Their contributions are divided into thematic sections, including:
theory, culture, and society industries of crime and justice: systems of policing, law,
corrections and punishment the criminal enterprise global technologies media, crime, and
culture green criminology political violence public health criminology the political
economy of crime and justice. All the chapters include full pedagogy and instructional
resources for easy referencing or classroom use. This Handbook will be useful for
students, scholars and practitioners of law, medicine, history, economics, sociology,
politics, philosophy, education, public health, and social policy.
Acknowledgements. Foreword. Introduction: Recognizing and Transforming International
Crime and Justice Studies by Bruce A. Arrigo and Heather Y. Bersot Part I: Theory,
Culture, and Society: The Narratives of Crime and Justice 1. Four Currents of
Criminological Thought by Bruce DiCristina, Martin Gottschalk, and Roni Mayzer 2. Silence
and the Criminalization of Victimization: On the Need for an International Feminist
Criminology by Syeda Tonima Hadi and Meda Chesney-Lind 3. The Radical Philosophy of
Criminology Culturalized: Intellectual History and Ultramodern Developments by Bruce A.
Arrigo and Heather Y. Bersot Part II: The Industries of Crime and Justice: Systems of
Policing 4. Global Non-state Auspices of Security Governance by Julie Berg, Sophie
Nakueira, and Clifford Shearing 5. Policing the Globe: International Trends and Issues in
Policing by Jude McCulloch and James Martin Part III: The Industries of Crime and Justice:
Systems of Law 6. The Politics of International Criminal Justice by David Armstrong and
Florencia Montal 7. The Challenges of International Criminal Law in Addressing Mass
Atrocity by Philip Clark 8. Crimes against Animality: Animal Cruelty and Criminal Justice
in a Globalized World by Deborah Cao 9. Understanding the Intersection Between
International Human Rights and Mental Disability Law: The Role of Dignity by Michael
Perlin Part IV: The Industries of Crime and Justice: Systems of Corrections and Punishment
10. Isolative Confinement: Effective Method for Behavior Change or Punishment for
Punishment's Sake? by Terry Kupers 11. Fabricated Selves and the Rehabilitative Machine:
Toward a Phenomenology of the Social Construction of Offender Treatment by David Polizzi,
Matthew Draper, and Matt Andersen 12. The Society-of-Captives Thesis and the Harm of
Social Dis-ease: The Case of Guantanamo Bay by Bruce A. Arrigo and Heather Y. Bersot Part
V: The Criminal Enterprise: Types of Commerce, Consumerism, and Conspicuous Consumption
13. Global White-Collar Crime by Mary Dodge and Gilbert Geis 14. A Suitable Amount of
Street Crime and a Suitable Amount of White Collar Crime: Inconvenient Truths about
Inequality, Crime and Criminal Justice by Paul Leighton and Jeffrey Reiman Part VI: Global
Technologies: From the Surveillance of Humans to the Management of Situations 15. Current
and Emerging Technologies Employed to Abate Crime and to Promote Security by Rick Sarre,
David Brooks, Clifton Smith, and Rick Draper 16. Technologies of Crime Control:
International Developments and Contexts by Ronnie Lippens and Patrick Van Calster Part
VII: Media, Crime, & Culture: Simulating Identities, Constructing Realities 17. Media,
Entertainment, and Crime: Prospects and Concerns by Ray Surette and Rebecca Gardiner-Bess
18. Media, Crime, and Culture: Simulating Identities, Constructing Realities by Eamonn
Carrabine Part VIII: Green Criminology: Environmental Hazards, Natural Disasters, and
Ecological Sustainability 19. Green Criminology and Green Victimization by Melissa
Jarrell, Michael Lynch, and Paul Stretesky 20. What is to be Done about Environmental
Crime? by Rob White Part IX: Political and State Violence: Struggles, Conflicts, and
Transitions 21. Redressing Violence in Sub-Sahara Africa by Susanne Buckley-Zistel, Teresa
Koloma Beck, Friederike Mieth, and Julia Viebach 22. The Circle of State Violence and Harm
by Dawn Rothe and Victoria E. Collins 23. Fundamentalism, Extremism, Terrorism:
Commonalities, Differences and Policy Implications of 'Blacklisting' by Hans J. Giessmann
Part X: Public Health Criminology: Global Risks and Transnational Responsibilities 24.
HIV/AIDS at the Intersection of Public Health and Criminal Justice: Toward an
Evidence-informed, Health and Human Rights-based Approach by Rachel M. Amiya, Jessica E.
Cope, Krishna C. Poudel, and Masamine Jimba 25. Addressing the "Inherent"
Philosophical and Operational Dichotomies of Corrections from an EpiCrim Approach by Mark
Lanier, David Polizzi, and Alexandra Wade Part XI: The Political Economy of Crime and
Justice: The Trade in Colonialism, Nationalism, and Globalism 26. Crimmigration: Criminal
Justice, Refugee Protection and the Securitisation of Migration by Alison Gerard and
Sharon Pickering 27. Personhood, Legal Judgement and Sovereignty at the Cape, 1793-1810 by
Jennifer Hardes, Patrick McLane, and George Pavlich
688 pages, Hardcover
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