ABSTRACT

What survives of the notions, principles and values of critical criminology? Faced with contexts that could not be more dramatically different to those fostering critical approaches to crime and its control, what is left of the radical theories and practical initiatives that characterized it in the 1970s? This book argues that critical criminology today can be reimagined if new concepts are elaborated, which bring academic efforts close to the practices of social movements.

Building on an original collection of anti-hegemonic essays focused on specific criminological areas, including femicide, organized crime, drug use, punishment, state-corporate terrorism and financial crime, this book identifies the radical potential inherent in the choice of areas, topics and variables that critical criminologists can address today. In discussing concepts of distance, power, mercy and troublemaking, this book considers the relationship between critical criminology, social justice and activism.

An accessible and compelling read, this book will appeal to all those engaged with critical criminology, sociology and cultural studies.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|11 pages

For a Sociology of Power

chapter 3|12 pages

For a Sociology of Counter-Power

chapter 4|12 pages

Woman as Colony

chapter 6|13 pages

State-Corporate Terrorism

chapter 7|14 pages

Pandemics, Desire and Melancholy

chapter 9|13 pages

There is Money in Death

chapter 10|13 pages

Civil War or Transnational Crime?

chapter 11|12 pages

Convicts, Crime and Evil

chapter 12|15 pages

Crime, Punishment and Utopia

chapter 13|5 pages

Conclusion