Justice in Society
Autor Belinda Carpenter, Matthew Ballen Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 noi 2012
By exploring the ways in which we think about justice in the wider Australian society, this book considers these questions. As disciplines that have the most to say about justice and injustice, it analyses the contributions of political philosophy and sociology, and examines how their ideas have come to dominate discussion on issues ranging from asylum seeking to homophobic violence. By examining the shared assumptions about justice and injustice that underpin these discussions, this book also charts a course between and beyond these debates, and seeks to engage, challenge, and offer new possibilities for justice in Australian society.
Relevant contemporary social issues like sex trafficking, homelessness, mental illness and Indigenous policing are examined throughout, placed in their historical, social and cultural context, and linked to local, national and global debates. Such analyses examine the broader implications of these criminological, social and legal issues for those excluded from justice in Australian society.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781862878952
ISBN-10: 1862878951
Pagini: 242
Dimensiuni: 135 x 208 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Editura: Federation Press
ISBN-10: 1862878951
Pagini: 242
Dimensiuni: 135 x 208 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Editura: Federation Press
Cuprins
Introduction - Justice in Society
Part I – Thinking About Justice Justice and Injustice: Stories About Society Space, Place and Time: Stories about Ourselves Class, Race and Sex: Stories about Difference Part 2 – Justice and the Self Poverty, Power and Justice Women, Difference and Justice Indigenous Australians, Othering and Justice Sexuality, Normalisation and Justice Young People, Responsibility and Justice Part 3 – Responding to Injustice Criminal Law, Equality and Justice Punishment, Treatment and Justice Human Rights, Empathy and Justice Citizenship, Belonging and Justice Conclusion
Part I – Thinking About Justice Justice and Injustice: Stories About Society Space, Place and Time: Stories about Ourselves Class, Race and Sex: Stories about Difference Part 2 – Justice and the Self Poverty, Power and Justice Women, Difference and Justice Indigenous Australians, Othering and Justice Sexuality, Normalisation and Justice Young People, Responsibility and Justice Part 3 – Responding to Injustice Criminal Law, Equality and Justice Punishment, Treatment and Justice Human Rights, Empathy and Justice Citizenship, Belonging and Justice Conclusion
Notă biografică
Dr Belinda Carpenter is Professor and Director of the Centre for Crime and Justice in the Faculty of Law at the Queensland University of Technology. She teaches, supervises and researches at the intersection of social and criminal justice in areas as diverse as death investigation, sex crimes, and violent offending women.
Dr Matthew Ball is Senior Lecturer in the School of Justice in the Faculty of Law at the Queensland University of Technology. He teaches and researches on a range of issues covering the intersection of social and criminal justice. These include issues of domestic violence in same-sex relationships, gender and sexuality, and legal education and social justice.
Dr Matthew Ball is Senior Lecturer in the School of Justice in the Faculty of Law at the Queensland University of Technology. He teaches and researches on a range of issues covering the intersection of social and criminal justice. These include issues of domestic violence in same-sex relationships, gender and sexuality, and legal education and social justice.
Recenzii
Happily, Justice in Society is not a work that throws around [these] weighty concepts with glib abandon. Nor does it try to neatly parcel them as straightforwardly divisible and definable propositions. ... In this respect Justice in Society is, refreshingly, a true discussion, with the reader left in many instances to draw their own conclusions based on arguments and well-selected statistics. The strength of this book is its targeted and precise discussion of issues highly relevant to the way our society is evolving. It is only a slender work but the arguments, or the "questioning of assumptions", as the book states, is done with an impressive brevity given the breadth and complexity of the issues addressed. The principle, and the book, is salutary. ... In this respect, a book that poses the question of justice and provokes an answer, instead of delivering it, is to be applauded. Read full review... - Benjamin Dighton, Hearsay, July 2013, 63