The Culture of Control: Crime and Social Order in Contemporary SocietyOUP Oxford, 2001 M03 29 - 324 páginas The Culture of Control charts the dramatic changes in crime control and criminal justice that have occurred in Britain and America over the last 25 years. It explains these transformations by showing how the social organization of late modern society has prompted a series of political and cultural adaptations that alter how governments and citizens think and act in relation to crime. The book presents an original and in-depth analysis of contemporary crime control, revealing its underlying logics and rationalities, and identifying the social relations and cultural sensibilities that have produced this new culture of control. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 98
Página
... political imitation and policy transfer—though there has been some of that—but from a process of social and cultural change that has recently been altering social relations in both societies. For want of a better term, I describe these ...
... political imitation and policy transfer—though there has been some of that—but from a process of social and cultural change that has recently been altering social relations in both societies. For want of a better term, I describe these ...
Página
... political debate, and policy development, and if one is willing to suspend, for the moment, questions of size and degree, it becomes apparent that there are important similarities in the problems to which actors in both nations appear ...
... political debate, and policy development, and if one is willing to suspend, for the moment, questions of size and degree, it becomes apparent that there are important similarities in the problems to which actors in both nations appear ...
Página
... political elements of penal institutions. The Culture of Control completes the trilogy by bringing Punishment and Welfare's historical account up to the present, and by using the theory developed in Punishment and Modern Society to ...
... political elements of penal institutions. The Culture of Control completes the trilogy by bringing Punishment and Welfare's historical account up to the present, and by using the theory developed in Punishment and Modern Society to ...
Página
... political, popular and professional cultures emerging in these years. Having described these governmental adaptations and the politics of crime control to which they gave rise, I next explore the cultural conditions that account for ...
... political, popular and professional cultures emerging in these years. Having described these governmental adaptations and the politics of crime control to which they gave rise, I next explore the cultural conditions that account for ...
Página
... political and cultural choices that have been made in relation to it. And the new world of crime control provides, in its turn, important sources of legitimation for an antiwelfare politics and for a conception of the poor as an ...
... political and cultural choices that have been made in relation to it. And the new world of crime control provides, in its turn, important sources of legitimation for an antiwelfare politics and for a conception of the poor as an ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Culture of Control: Crime and Social Order in Contemporary Society David Garland Vista previa limitada - 2012 |
The Culture of Control: Crime and Social Order in Contemporary Society David Garland Vista previa limitada - 2001 |
The Culture of Control: Crime and Social Order in Contemporary Society David Garland Vista previa limitada - 2002 |
Términos y frases comunes
actors American Britain British British Crime Survey Cambridge Chicago Press contemporary control and criminal correctionalist Crime and Justice crime and punishment crime control crime policy crime prevention crime rates criminal justice criminal justice system Criminal Law Criminology critical critique cultural decades decisionmaking Delinquency deviance discourse effect emerged England and Wales experience fear of crime Foucault groups History HMSO Home Office impact imprisonment increasingly individual institutions J. K. Galbraith late modernity London Lord Windlesham mandatory sentences middle classes moral offenders organizations Oxford University Press patterns penal policy penalwelfare Penology policymaking political population postwar practices prison probation problem professional programmes punishment punitive rational reform rehabilitative rhetoric of reaction rise risk routine Routledge sentencing sentencing laws shift social control state’s strategies structure Theory today’s Tonry transformed treatment twentieth century Underclass University of Chicago victims welfare York