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Chaos theory challenges the presumption that the cosmos is orderly, linear, and predictable-but it does not imply pure randomness and chance events. Rather, chaos-informed postmodernist analysis introduces a new vision by celebrating unexpected, surprise, ironic, contradictory, and emergent elements. Scholars in many disciplines are taking this perspective as an alternative to the entrenched structural functionalism and empiricism rooted in linear science. In the early 1990s studies began to emerge applying chaos theory to criminology, law, and social change. This book brings together some of the key thinkers in these areas. Part I situates chaos theory as a constitutive thread in contemporary critical thought in criminology and law. It seeks to provide the reader with a sensitivity to how chaos theory fits within the postmodern perspective and an understanding of its conceptual tools. Part II comprises chapters on applying the chaos perspective to critical criminology and law and, beyond, to peacemaking. Part III presents studies in chaos-informed perspectives on new social movement theory, social change, and the development of social justice. While the book emphasizes the usefulness of the conceptual tools of chaos theory in critical criminology and law, its ultimate goal goes beyond theory-building to provide vistas for understanding the contemporary social scene and for the development of the new just society.
List of contents
Introduction by Dragan Milovanovic
Chaos Theory: Conceptual Contributions to a Postmodern Criminology and LawPostmodernist versus the Modernist Paradigm: Conceptual Differences by Dragan Milovanovic
Challenges: For a Postmodern Criminology by T. R. Young
Chaos, Criminology, and Law: Critical ApplicationsChaos and Modeling Crime: Quinney's Class, State, and Crime by Allison Forker
The ABCs of Crime: Attractors, Bifurcations, and Chaotic Dynamics by T. R. Young
Geometric Forms of Violence by Hal Pepinsky
Law and Social Change: The Implications of Chaos Theory in Understanding the Role of the American Legal System by Glenna Simons and William F. Stroup, III
Chaos, Law, and Critical Legal Studies: Mapping the Terrain by Glenna Simons
The Chaotic Law of Forensic Psychology: The Postmodern Case of the (In)Sane Defendant by Bruce Arrigo
Chaos Theory, Social Justice, and Social ChangeSurfing the Chaotic: A Non-Linear Articulation of Social Movement Theory by Robert Schehr
Dimensions of Social Justice in an SRO (Single Room Occupancy): Contributions from Chaos Theory, Policy, and Practice by Bruce Arrigo
Visions of the Emerging Orderly (Dis)Order by Dragan Milovanovic
Index
About the Editor and Contributors
About the author
DRAGAN MILOVANOVIC is Professor of Criminal Justice at Northeastern Illinois University. He has authored, coauthored, or edited ten books, including Constitutive Criminology (1996), Postmodern Criminology (1996), The Sociology of Law (1994), and Postmodern Law and Disorder (1992), as well as over one hundred other publications. He was editor of the journal Humanity and Society and coeditor of Critical Criminology and is currently coeditor of the Journal of Human Justice.