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Towards a Victimology of State Crime

Editat de Dawn Rothe, David Kauzlarich
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 ian 2017
State crime victimization often leaves a legacy of unrecognized victims that are ignored, forgotten, or negated the right to be labeled as such. Victims are often glossed over, as the focus is on a state’s actions or inactions rather than the subsequent victimization and victims. Towards a Victimology of State Crime serves to highlight the forgotten victims, processes and cases of revictimization within a sociological, criminological framework. Contributors include expert scholars of state crime and victimology from North America, Europe, Africa, and Latin America to provide a well-rounded focus that can address and penetrate the issues of victims of state crime. This includes a diverse number of case study examples of victims of state crime and the systems of control that facilitate or impede addressing the needs of victims. Additionally, with the inclusion of a section on controls, this volume taps into an area that is often overlooked: the international level of social control in relation to a victimology of state criminality.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781138160606
ISBN-10: 1138160601
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate and Undergraduate

Cuprins

Part I. State Crimes, Harms, and Victimizations, 1. A Victimology of State Crime, Dawn L. Rothe and David Kauzlarich 2. The Victimization of Street Children in Brazil, Fernanda Fonseca Rosenblatt, 3. Accumulating Atrocities: Capital, State Killing and the Cultural Life of the Dead, Tyler Wall and Travis Linneman, 4. The Victimization of Children in State-Run Homes in New Zealand, Elizabeth Stanley, 5. Somali Pirates: Victims or Perpetrators or Both?, Victoria Ellen Collins, 6. Victimizing the Undocumented: Immigration Policy and Border Enforcement as State Crime, Raymond Michalowski and Lisa Hardy, 7. "Death Flies Down": The Bombing of Civilians and the Paradox of International Law, Ronald C. Kramer and Amanda Marie Smith, 8 State Crime and the Re-Victimization of Displaced Populations: The Case of Haiti, Victoria Ellen Collins, 9. Victimisation during and after war: empirical findings from Bosnia, Stephan Parmentier and Elmar Weitekamp, Part II: Responses to State Crime Victimization, 10. European Court of Human Rights – accountability to whom?, Isabel Schoultz, 11. The victims of the Colombian conflict and restorative justice, Isabella Bueno and Andrea Diaz Rozas, 12. Institutional and Structural Victimisation: Apartheid South Africa, Robert Peacock, 13. Controlling State Crime and the Possibility of Creating More Victims, Jeffrey Ian Ross and Peter Grabosky, 14. Can an International Criminal Justice System Address Victims’ Needs?, Dawn L. Rothe.

Notă biografică

Dawn L. Rothe is an Associate Professor at Old Dominion University and the director of the International State Crime Research Consortium. She is the author or co-author of four other books and over four dozen peer reviewed articles and book chapters dealing with the topics of state crime, corporate crime, and international institutions of control.
David Kauzlarich is Professor of Sociology at Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville. He is the author of several books and articles on state crime, criminology, and sociological theory. He has been given several honours for both his teaching and research.

Descriere

This book provides the first text focused solely on a victimology of state crime, bringing together an international collection of scholars, illuminated with a diverse range of case studies and bridging the latest thinking, theory and research.

Recenzii

This book is long overdue. Rothe and Kauzlarich expose the most pervasive forms of victimization, and have given voice to the millions of people that have been victimized by states. States, since their inception, have had a monopoly on violence and oppression. This book demands our attention.
Rick Matthews, Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice, Carthage College, USA.
Towards a Victimology of State Crime is a book long overdue in the evolving field of state crime. Dawn Rothe and David Kauzlarich have assembled an outstanding team of experts to advance our understanding of state violence and highlight the victimization that is all too often glossed over or ignored in the state crime literature. By placing a spotlight on the experiences of victims of state crime and further illuminating the causes and consequences of state-sanctioned violence, Rothe and Kauzlarich have laid the foundation for significant progress in the empirical and theoretical realms of explaining state criminality and victimization.
Dr. Emily Lenning, Assistant Professor, Fayetteville State University, USA.
State crime exacts a significant human toll; it destroys communities and burdens entire generations. Yet criminologists have devoted very little attention to the experience and struggle of state crime’s victims. Consequently, Towards a Victimology of State Crime is a timely and important intervention. Its rigorous and stimulating range of international case studies – composed by leading scholars in the field – will help push victimology debates in the right direction.
Dr Kristian Lasslett, Lecturer in Criminology, University of Ulster and member of the International State Crime Initiative’s Executive Board, Ireland, UK.
In pulling together this excellent collection of essays on state crimes and victimization from around the globe, Rothe and Kauzlarich have not only helped to fill a gap in the existing literature, by connecting these two areas of criminological theory and practice, but they have also provided a launching pad for navigating the complexities of state crime victimization.
Gregg Barak, Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Eastern Michigan University, USA.