Fr. 110.00

The Safety Utopia - Contemporary Discontent and Desire as to Crime and Punishment

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 6 to 7 weeks

Description

Read more

My ?rst encounter with the world of crime and punishment was more than two decades ago, and it has since undergone vast changes. No one could have foreseen that crime-related problems would occupy such a prominent position in cultural awareness. Crime is on the rise, the public attention devoted to it has increased even more, and its political importance has mushroomed. The major change in the 1990s was perhaps the transformation of crime into a safety issue. Crime is no longer a matter involving offenders, victims, the police and the courts, it involves everyone and any number of agencies and institutions from security companies to the local authorities and from schools to pub and restaurant owners. Crime has become a much larger complex than the judicial system-a complex organized mentally and institutionally around this one concept of safety. In this book I make an effort to get to the bottom of this complex. It is the sequel to my dissertation Crime and Morality-The Moral Signi?cance of Criminal Justice in a Postmodern Culture (2000), where I hold that the victim became the essence of crime in Western culture, and that this in turn shaped public morality. In the second half of the twentieth century, a personal morality based on an awareness of our own and other people's vulnerability, i. e. potential victimhood, succeeded the ethics of duty.

List of contents

Morality and Risks.- Realistic Discontent and Utopian Desire.- The Safety Utopia.- Characters and Manifestations.- The Pornographic Context of Sex Crimes.- Senseless Violence and the Sound of Silent Marches.- The Controversial Victim and the Offender.- Punishment, Control and Democracy.- The Changing Significance of Criminal Justice.- Criminal Proceedings as Tragedy.- Democratic Safety Policy.- Closing Comments.

Summary

My ?rst encounter with the world of crime and punishment was more than two decades ago, and it has since undergone vast changes. No one could have foreseen that crime-related problems would occupy such a prominent position in cultural awareness. Crime is on the rise, the public attention devoted to it has increased even more, and its political importance has mushroomed. The major change in the 1990s was perhaps the transformation of crime into a safety issue. Crime is no longer a matter involving offenders, victims, the police and the courts, it involves everyone and any number of agencies and institutions from security companies to the local authorities and from schools to pub and restaurant owners. Crime has become a much larger complex than the judicial system—a complex organized mentally and institutionally around this one concept of safety. In this book I make an effort to get to the bottom of this complex. It is the sequel to my dissertation Crime and Morality—The Moral Signi?cance of Criminal Justice in a Postmodern Culture (2000), where I hold that the victim became the essence of crime in Western culture, and that this in turn shaped public morality. In the second half of the twentieth century, a personal morality based on an awareness of our own and other people’s vulnerability, i. e. potential victimhood, succeeded the ethics of duty.

Additional text

Comments in the Dutch press (translated):
"an ongoing Aha-erlebnis, ...a brilliant diagnosis of today's society."
"…The Safety Utopia belongs on the bookshelf alongside other social-scientific analyses of our times such as Anthony Giddens’s The Consequences of Modernity (1990), Richard Ericson and Kevin Haggerty’s Policing the Risk Society (1997) and David Garland’s The Culture of Control (2001)."
(Sir Anthony Bottoms)

Report

Comments in the Dutch press (translated):
"an ongoing Aha-erlebnis, ...a brilliant diagnosis of today's society."
"...The Safety Utopia belongs on the bookshelf alongside other social-scientific analyses of our times such as Anthony Giddens's The Consequences of Modernity (1990), Richard Ericson and Kevin Haggerty's Policing the Risk Society (1997) and David Garland's The Culture of Control (2001)."
(Sir Anthony Bottoms)

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.