ABSTRACT

This edited collection brings together established global scholars and new thinkers to outline fresh concepts and theoretical perspectives for criminological research and analysis in the 21st century. Criminologists from the UK, USA, Canada and Australia evaluate the current condition of criminological theory and present students and researchers with new and revised ideas from the realms of politics, culture and subjectivity to unpack crime and violence in the precarious age of global neoliberalism.

These ideas range from the micro-realm of the ‘personality disorder’ to the macro-realm of global ‘power-crime’. Rejecting or modifying the orthodox notion that crime and harm are largely the products of criminalisation and control systems, these scholars bring causes and conditions back into play in an eclectic yet thematic way that should inspire students and researchers to once again investigate the reasons why some individuals and groups elect to harm others rather than seek sociability. This collection will inspire new criminologists to both look outside their discipline for new ideas to import, and to create new ideas within their discipline to reinvigorate it and further strengthen its ability to explain the crimes and harms that we see around us today.

This book will be of particular interest to academics and both undergraduate and postgraduate students in the field of criminology, especially to those looking for theoretical concepts and frameworks for dissertations, theses and research reports.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

The need for new directions in criminological theory

part I|65 pages

Epistemological and political reflections

chapter 1|13 pages

Criminological knowledge

Doing critique; doing politics 1

chapter 2|22 pages

Political economy and criminology

The return of the repressed

part II|100 pages

Criminological theory, culture and the subject

part III|57 pages

Criminological theory and violence

chapter 11|16 pages

Psychosocial perspectives

Men, madness and violence

chapter 12|17 pages

‘All that is sacred is profaned'

Towards a theory of subjective violence

part IV|94 pages

Crime and criminological theory in the global age

chapter 14|16 pages

Outline of a criminology of drift

chapter 15|19 pages

‘It was never about the money'

Market society, organised crime and UK criminology

chapter 16|16 pages

After the crisis

New directions in theorising corporate and white-collar crime

chapter 17|25 pages

Crimes against reality

Parapolitics, simulation, power crime