ABSTRACT

Bringing together a range of perspectives, this book establishes a criminology of the domestic, paying particular attention to emerging spatial and relational reconfigurations. We move beyond criminologies of public and urban domains to consider over-looked non-public locales, and crimes and harms that occur in the home and other private spaces. Developed in the context of the COVID-19 lockdowns, where distinctions between public and private became increasingly untenable, the book considers how the pandemic has accelerated new patterns of behaviour, enabled by technology and shifting social relations.

Drawing on a range of criminological topics, including victimisation, offending, property and violent crime, consumption, deviance and leisure, and zemiology, the book argues that the domestic sphere, and its relation to the public realm, needs to be more carefully conceptualised if criminology is to respond to new spatial and relational dimensions of changing lifestyles.

An accessible and compelling read, this book will appeal to students and scholars of criminology, sociology, politics, geography, history, gender, surveillance and security, and all those interested in a criminology of the domestic sphere.

chapter 2|21 pages

Topologies of dwelling

Re-imagining domestic space

chapter 3|16 pages

Technology, crime and policing

The remaking of domestic life?

chapter 4|19 pages

Consumption, crime and harm at home

Regulating for what and whom?

chapter 5|16 pages

Staying In

Women and gambling in contemporary domestic life

chapter 6|16 pages

Gender, control, and regulation

Institutions for maternal confinement

chapter 7|16 pages

Eating animals

A critical criminology of the domestic

chapter 9|14 pages

"This is my home"

The prison as a site of domicide-through-displacement