Routledge handbook of public criminologies

Bibliographic Information

Routledge handbook of public criminologies

edited by Kathryn Henne and Rita Shah

(Routledge handbooks)

Routledge, 2020

  • : hbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Serves as a comprehensive resource outlining the foundations of and developments in public criminology, and provides critical perspectives on practices, challenges, and praxis related to public criminological engagement. Ideal for use in graduate-level courses. The current political climate has sparked renewed interest in and debate about taking criminology public, making a comprehensive volume on the subject timely and important.

Table of Contents

  • Foreword: The State of Public Criminology: Progress and Challenges
  • Introduction: Public Criminology Reconsidered: An Invitation
  • PART I: The Emergence of Public Criminologies
  • 1. Everything Still to Play for: Revisiting "Public Criminologies: Diverse Perspectives on Academia and Policy"
  • 2. Re-Thinking Public Criminology: Politics, Paradoxes, and Challenges
  • 3. Where is the Public in Public Criminology? Towards a Participatory Public Criminology
  • 4. The Challenge of Transformative Justice: Insurgent Knowledge and Public Criminology
  • 5. Articulation of Liberation Criminologies and Public Criminologies: Advancing a Countersystem Approach and Decolonization Paradigm
  • PART II: Engaging Publics
  • 6. A Revolution in Prosecution: The Campaign to End Mass Incarceration in Philadelphia
  • 7. Reflections from an Accidental Public Scholar
  • 8. Engaging the Public: Access to Justice for the Most Vulnerable
  • 9. Public Feminist Criminologies: Reflections on the Activist-Scholar in Violence Against Women Policy
  • 10. Limits of Visibility in the Struggle for Abortion Rights: Reflection from Latin America
  • PART III: Barriers and Challenges
  • 11. Strangers Within: Carving Out a Role for Engaged Scholarship in the University Space
  • 12. The Push and Pull of Going "Public": Barriers and Risks to Mobilizing Criminological Knowledge
  • 13. Public Criminology in China: Neither Public, nor Criminology
  • 14. A Case for a Public Pacific Criminology?
  • 15. The Challenges of Academics Engaging in Environmental Justice Activism
  • Josh Ozymy and Melissa Jarrell
  • PART IV:Critiques and Critical Reflections
  • 16. You're a Criminologist? What Can You Offer Us? Interrogating Criminological Expertise in the Context of White Collar Crime
  • 17. "Our North is the South": Lessons from Researching Police-Community Encounters in Sao Paulo and Los Angeles
  • 18. Confronting Politics of Death in Papua
  • 19. Rethinking How "the Public" Counts in Public Criminology
  • 20. Does the Public Need Criminology?
  • PART V: Future Trajectories
  • 21. Starting the Conversation in the Classroom: Pedagogy as Public Criminology
  • 22. You are on Indigenous Land: Acknowledgment and Action in Criminology
  • 23. Time to Think about Patriarchy? Public Criminology in an Era of Misogyny
  • 24. Value-Responsible Design and Sexual Violence Interventions: Engaging Value-Hypotheses in Making the Criminological Imagination
  • 25. Abolitionism as a Philosophy of Hope: "Inside-outsiders" and the Reclaiming of Democracy

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