Fr. 264.00

Theoretical Foundations of Criminology - Place, Time and Context

English · Hardback

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Description

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To confront the challenges criminologists face today and to satisfactorily critique the theories on which criminology is founded, we need to learn from the past. To do this we must give context to both theorist and theory. Written from a critical perspective, this book brings criminological theory to life. It presents the core theories of criminology as historical and cultural products and theorists as producers of culture located in particular places, writing in specific historical periods and situated in precise intellectual networks and philosophical controversies.

This book illustrates that theory does not arise 'out of the blue' and highlights the importance of understanding how and why ideas emerge at certain points in time, why they gained currency and the influence that they have had. It follows the trajectory of criminology from pre-Enlightenment society through to the present day and the proliferation of criminological thinking. It explores:

Setting the Stage for the Emergence of Criminology

Classicist Criminology: The Search for Justice, Equality and the Rational 'Man'

The Positivist Revolution, Physiognomy, Phrenology and the Science of 'Othering'

Chicago School of Sociology: An Explosion of Ideas

Developing a Sociological Criminology: Durkheim, Du Bois, Merton and Tannenbaum

Feminism: Redressing the Gender Imbalance

Confronting the Establishment: The Emergence of Critical Criminology

From Theoretical Innovations to Political Engagement

The Theoretical Foundations of Criminology provides an invaluable contribution to the growing conversation about criminology's 'origin story' and the level that this is grounded in the idiosyncrasies of the North Atlantic world and its historical development. This book will be invaluable reading to students and academics engaged in studies of criminology and criminal justice.

List of contents










Introduction; 1. Setting the Stage for the Emergence of Criminology; 2. Classicist Criminology: The Search for Justice, Equality and the Rational 'Man'; 3. The Positivist Revolution, Physiognomy, Phrenology and the Science of '; 4. Chicago School of Sociology: An Explosion of Ideas; 5. Developing a Sociological Criminology: Durkheim, Du Bois, Merton and Tannenbaum; 6. Feminism: Redressing the Gender Imbalance; 7. Confronting the Establishment: The Emergence of Critical Criminology; 8. From Theoretical Innovations to Political Engagement


About the author

Jayne Mooney is an associate professor of sociology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and a member of the doctoral faculties in sociology and women studies at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. Her focus of scholarship is on the history of crime and punishment, gender and crime, the sociology of violence, social deviance and critical criminology. She was previously on the criminology faculties of Middlesex University and the University of Kent at Canterbury in the UK.

Summary

Written from a critical perspective, this book brings criminological theory to life. It presents the core theories as historical and cultural products and theorists as producers of culture located in particular places, writing in specific historical periods and situated in precise intellectual networks and philosophical controversies.

Additional text

‘Mooney is like the best of urban tour guides leading us through a complicated metropolitan landscape where the evolution of space is a multivalent story of corporate interests, state power, local zoning, and diverse working populations struggling to get to work, raise kids, and seek respite in a night on the town. This book is exciting because it offers us a sophisticated guide for criminological theory charted by an author with a historian’s depth, and ethnographer’s instincts, and a poet’s heart. The writing is elegant yet accessible; the purpose clear and serious. Students of criminology will not only learn about theories and their contexts, but about the importance of theory itself for understanding the world as it is and for changing it.’

Corey Dolgan, Professor of Sociology and Criminology, Stonehill College, USA and President-Elect for the Society for the Study of Social Problems

Product details

Authors Jayne Mooney
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd.
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.12.2019
 
EAN 9780415733953
ISBN 978-0-415-73395-3
No. of pages 382
Subjects Non-fiction book > Politics, society, business > Politics
Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Sociological theories

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