Why Prison?
Herausgeber: Scott, David
Why Prison?
Herausgeber: Scott, David
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This book brings together some of the world's leading writers to engage with the most profound question in penology: why prison?
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This book brings together some of the world's leading writers to engage with the most profound question in penology: why prison?
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 408
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. November 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 589g
- ISBN-13: 9781107521803
- ISBN-10: 1107521807
- Artikelnr.: 42316903
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 408
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. November 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 589g
- ISBN-13: 9781107521803
- ISBN-10: 1107521807
- Artikelnr.: 42316903
Foreword: on stemming the tide Thomas Mathiesen; 1. Why prison? Posing the
question David Scott; 2. Prisons and social structure in late-capitalist
societies Alessandro De Giorgi; 3. The prison paradox in neoliberal Britain
Emma Bell; 4. Crafting the neoliberal state: workfare, prisonfare, and
social insecurity Loïc Wacquant; 5. Pleasure, punishment and the
professional middle class Magnus Hörnqvist; 6. Penal spectatorship and the
culture of punishment Michelle Brown; 7. Prison and the public sphere:
toward a democratic theory of penal order Vanessa Barker; 8. The iron cage
of prison studies Mark Brown; 9. The prison and national identity:
citizenship, punishment and the sovereign state Emma Kaufman and Mary
Bosworth; 10. Punishing the detritus and the damned: penal and semi-penal
institutions in Liverpool Vickie Cooper and Joe Sim; 11. Why prison?
Incarceration and the great recession Keally McBride; 12. Ghosts of the
past, present, and future of penal reform in the United States Marie
Gottschalk; 13. Schooling the carceral state: challenging the school to
prison pipeline Erica Meiners; 14. Why no prisons? Julia Oparah; 15.
Unequalled in pain David Scott.
question David Scott; 2. Prisons and social structure in late-capitalist
societies Alessandro De Giorgi; 3. The prison paradox in neoliberal Britain
Emma Bell; 4. Crafting the neoliberal state: workfare, prisonfare, and
social insecurity Loïc Wacquant; 5. Pleasure, punishment and the
professional middle class Magnus Hörnqvist; 6. Penal spectatorship and the
culture of punishment Michelle Brown; 7. Prison and the public sphere:
toward a democratic theory of penal order Vanessa Barker; 8. The iron cage
of prison studies Mark Brown; 9. The prison and national identity:
citizenship, punishment and the sovereign state Emma Kaufman and Mary
Bosworth; 10. Punishing the detritus and the damned: penal and semi-penal
institutions in Liverpool Vickie Cooper and Joe Sim; 11. Why prison?
Incarceration and the great recession Keally McBride; 12. Ghosts of the
past, present, and future of penal reform in the United States Marie
Gottschalk; 13. Schooling the carceral state: challenging the school to
prison pipeline Erica Meiners; 14. Why no prisons? Julia Oparah; 15.
Unequalled in pain David Scott.
Foreword: on stemming the tide Thomas Mathiesen; 1. Why prison? Posing the
question David Scott; 2. Prisons and social structure in late-capitalist
societies Alessandro De Giorgi; 3. The prison paradox in neoliberal Britain
Emma Bell; 4. Crafting the neoliberal state: workfare, prisonfare, and
social insecurity Loïc Wacquant; 5. Pleasure, punishment and the
professional middle class Magnus Hörnqvist; 6. Penal spectatorship and the
culture of punishment Michelle Brown; 7. Prison and the public sphere:
toward a democratic theory of penal order Vanessa Barker; 8. The iron cage
of prison studies Mark Brown; 9. The prison and national identity:
citizenship, punishment and the sovereign state Emma Kaufman and Mary
Bosworth; 10. Punishing the detritus and the damned: penal and semi-penal
institutions in Liverpool Vickie Cooper and Joe Sim; 11. Why prison?
Incarceration and the great recession Keally McBride; 12. Ghosts of the
past, present, and future of penal reform in the United States Marie
Gottschalk; 13. Schooling the carceral state: challenging the school to
prison pipeline Erica Meiners; 14. Why no prisons? Julia Oparah; 15.
Unequalled in pain David Scott.
question David Scott; 2. Prisons and social structure in late-capitalist
societies Alessandro De Giorgi; 3. The prison paradox in neoliberal Britain
Emma Bell; 4. Crafting the neoliberal state: workfare, prisonfare, and
social insecurity Loïc Wacquant; 5. Pleasure, punishment and the
professional middle class Magnus Hörnqvist; 6. Penal spectatorship and the
culture of punishment Michelle Brown; 7. Prison and the public sphere:
toward a democratic theory of penal order Vanessa Barker; 8. The iron cage
of prison studies Mark Brown; 9. The prison and national identity:
citizenship, punishment and the sovereign state Emma Kaufman and Mary
Bosworth; 10. Punishing the detritus and the damned: penal and semi-penal
institutions in Liverpool Vickie Cooper and Joe Sim; 11. Why prison?
Incarceration and the great recession Keally McBride; 12. Ghosts of the
past, present, and future of penal reform in the United States Marie
Gottschalk; 13. Schooling the carceral state: challenging the school to
prison pipeline Erica Meiners; 14. Why no prisons? Julia Oparah; 15.
Unequalled in pain David Scott.