ABSTRACT

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.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

Recognizing and transforming International Crime and Justice Studies

part |67 pages

Theory, culture, and society

chapter |20 pages

Silence and the criminalization of victimization

On the need for an international feminist criminology

chapter |21 pages

The radical philosophy of criminology culturalized

Intellectual history and ultramodern developments

part |47 pages

The industries of crime and justice

chapter |24 pages

Policing the globe

International trends and issues in policing

part |88 pages

The industries of crime and justice

part |68 pages

The industries of crime and justice

chapter |20 pages

Isolated confinement

Effective method for behavior change or punishment for punishment's sake?

chapter |23 pages

Fabricated selves and the rehabilitative machine

Toward a phenomenology of the social construction of offender treatment

part |46 pages

The criminal enterprise

chapter |23 pages

A suitable amount of street crime and a suitable amount of white-collar crime

Inconvenient truths about inequality, crime and criminal justice

part |46 pages

Global technologies

part |49 pages

Media, crime, and culture

part |70 pages

Political and state violence

part |47 pages

The political economy of crime and justice

chapter |25 pages

Crimmigration

Criminal justice, refugee protection and the securitisation of migration