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“A timely collection of important writings on radical criminology rooted in abolition and decolonisation, this handbook offers a much-needed map of racial injustice and esistance to it in a global context."
Avery F. Gordon, Visiting Professor, Birkbeck School of Law, University of London and author of The Hawthorn Archives: Letters from the Utopian Margins
"This cutting-edge collection challenges Eurocentric social scientific understandings of crime, law, and social control and stimulates new, much needed ways of thinking critically about these topics. It is an essential source of reference for both undergraduate and postgraduate students of criminology, deviance and social control, criminological theory, social policy, race and ethnic relations, and criminal justice."
Walter S. DeKeseredy, Anna Deane Carlson Endowed Chair of Social Sciences, Director of the Research Center on Violence, and Professor of Sociology, West Virginia University
This handbook addresses the role of the criminal-legal system in projecting and enforcing racial injustice across the globe. It consists of high-profile contributions that expose structural relations, global colonial and imperial histories, class oppression, and ongoing hegemonic domination that generate racial injustices and are embedded in criminalization and law enforcement. The handbook considers racist ideologies and their origins, racist institutions, procedures, and practices, and their impacts, and resistance/collective responses to racism. It includes a range of different types of chapters including conceptual/theoretical, empirical, methodological, practitioner, and activist insights. It speaks to contemporary issues and is first of its kind to address racial injustice on a global scale. It is explicitly anti-racist and gathers works of critical criminology, sociology, cultural studies, postcolonial studies, and cognate fields. The handbook pays special attention to intersectional dynamics including nexuses of racism, class, gender, and sexuality. The Handbook focusses on the settler-colonial and global majority countries, their peoples and their struggles, including questions of Indigenous justice.
Thalia Anthony is Professor at University of Technology Sydney, Australia.
Monish Bhatia is Lecturer in Sociology at University of York, UK.
Kathryn Pillay is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
Jason M. Williams is Professor of Justice Studies at Montclair State University, USA.