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The
Routledge International Handbook on Decolonizing Justice focuses on the growing worldwide movement aimed at decolonizing state policies and practices, and various disciplinary knowledges including criminology, social work and law.
Sommario
Contents PART I Why decolonization? From the personal to the global 1 Between the lines of land and time
Viviane Saleh-Hanna 2 Exposing the complexities of the colonial project
Michaela McGuire 3 "Feeding people's beliefs": mass media representations of M¿ori and criminality
Angela Moewaka Barnes and Tim McCreanor 4 Girramaa marramarra waluwin: decolonizing social work
Sue Green 5 The plastic shamans of restorative justice
Juan Tauri 6 Southern disorders: the criminogenesis of neo-imperialism
Pablo Ciocchini and Joe Greener 7 Place, borders, and the decolonial
Leanne Weber, Robyn Newitt and Claire Loughnan PART II State terror and violence 8 Law's violence: the police killing of Kumanjayi Walker and the trial of Zachary Rolfe
Maria Giannacopoulos 9 The criminalization and racialization of Palestinian resistance to settler colonialism
Adan Tatour and Lana Tatour 10 Criminalizing Gypsies, Roma, and Travellers in the UK
Zoë James 11 Romani people, policing, and penality in Europe
Iulius Rostas and Florin Mois¿ 12 The obsolescence of 'police brutality': counterinsurgency in a moment of police reform
Dylan Rodríguez 13 Army of the rich
Emmy R¿kete 14 Algorithms, policing, and race: insights from decolonial and critical algorithm studies
Pamela Ugwudike 15 Decolonizing policing in the Gulf Cooperation Council
Nabil Ouassini and Arvind Verma 16 Inherited structures and 'indigenized' policing in Africa: insights from South Africa and Zimbabwe
Tariro Mutongwizo and Nyasha Mutongwizo 17 Policing and imperialism in France and the French empire
Florian Bobin 18 Policing Muslims: counter-terrorism and Islamophobia in the UK and Australia
Waqas Tufail & Scott Poynting 19 Decolonizing terrorism: racist pre-crime, cheap orientalism, and the Taqiya trap
Ahmed Ajil 20 State terror, resistance, and community solidarity: dismantling the police
Chris Cunneen Part III Abolishing the Carceral 21 Abolition as a decolonial project
Debbie Kilroy, Tabitha Lean and Angela Y. Davis 22 Colonial carceral feminism
Aya Gruber 23 Both sorry and happy: inquests into Indigenous deaths in custody
Sherene H. Razack 24 The quotidian violence of incarcerating Indigenous people in the Canadian state: why reform is not an option for decolonization
Vicki Chartrand 25 Disability, race, and the carceral state: toward an inclusive decolonial abolition
Simone Rowe and Leanne Dowse 26 'Risk' and the challenges in moving beyond marginalizing frameworks
Grace Gordon and Robert Webb 27 The school-to-prison pipeline
Nancy A. Heitzeg 28 Seeking justice in (and beyond) colonial carceral archives
Ethan Blue PART IV Transforming and decolonizing justice 29 Decolonizing First Peoples child welfare
Cindy Blackstock, Terri Libesman, Jennifer King, Brittany Mathews and Wendy Hermeston 30 Anti-violence efforts and Native American communities
Cheryl Redhorse Bennett 31 Decolonizing family violence in Aotearoa New Zealand
Michael Roguski 32 Access to justice in South Africa - Not yet Uhuru but not quite Sisulu: an examination of the decolonizing journey from colonial-apartheid rule
Jackie Dugard and Nompumelelo Seme 33 Indigenous sentencing courts and Gladue reports
Elena Marchetti, Valmaine Toki and Johnathan Rudin 34 Decolonizing restorative justice
Alana Abramson and Muhammad Asadullah 35 Colonialism and penality
Mark Brown 36 Decolonizing criminal law in India
Rishika Sahgal 37 Transitional justice and decolonization
Augustine Park 38 First, they took the land: decolonizing nature to decolonize society
David Rodrîguez Goyes 39 Decolonizing genocide
Andrew Woolford PART V
Disrupting epistemic violence 40 The decolonization paradigm in criminology
Biko Agozino 41 Black criminology
Coretta Phillips 42 Decolonial criminology: oxymoron for necrocapitalism, racial capitalism, and the westernization of the professoriate
Wesley Crichlow 43 Mis-education of the critical criminologist: theory, meta-curriculum of onto-epistemology, and the myth decolonization
Tamari Kitossa 44 Neocolonial practices and narratives in criminological research
Antje Deckert 45 Decolonizing criminological research methodologies: cognition, commitment, and conduct
Michael A. Guerzoni & Maggie Walter 46 Decolonizing criminology theories by centring First Nations praxis and knowledges
Thalia Anthony, Harry Blagg, Carly Stanley & Keenan Mundine 47 Tackling whiteness as a decolonizing task in contemporary criminology
Rod Earle Index
Info autore
Chris Cunneen is Professor of Criminology at the Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research at the University of Technology Sydney, Australia.
Antje Deckert is an Associate Professor in Criminology at Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand.
Amanda Porter is Senior Fellow at Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne, Australia.
Juan Tauri is Adjunct Professor at Indigenous Studies, Macquarie University, Australia.
Robert Webb is Senior Lecturer in Criminology at the University of Auckland, New Zealand.