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Transnational Penal Cultures New perspectives on discipline, punishment and desistance Routledge SOLON Explorations in Crime and Criminal Justice Histories Series

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Miller Vivien, Campbell James

Couverture de l’ouvrage Transnational Penal Cultures

Focusing on three key stages of the criminal justice process, discipline, punishment and desistance, and incorporating case studies from Asia, the Americas, Europe, Africa and Australia, the thirteen chapters in this collection are based on exciting new research that explores the evolution and adaptation of criminal justice and penal systems, largely from the early nineteenth century to the present. They range across the disciplinary boundaries of History, Criminology, Law and Penology.

Journeying into and unlocking different national and international penal archives, and drawing on diverse analytical approaches, the chapters forge new connections between historical and contemporary issues in crime, prisons, policing and penal cultures, and challenge traditional Western democratic historiographies of crime and punishment and categorisations of offenders, police and ex-offenders.

The individual chapters provide new perspectives on race, gender, class, urban space, surveillance, policing, prisonisation and defiance, and will be essential reading for academics and students engaged in the study of criminal justice, law, police, transportation, slavery, offenders and desistance from crime.

Introduction, Vivien Miller and James CampbellPart 1. Discipline 1."Insufficiently Cruel" or "Simply Inefficient"? Discipline, Punishment and Reform in the Gold Coast Prison System, c. 1850-1957, Stacey Hynd 2. "Who’s really wicked and immoral, women or men?": Uneasy classifications, Hindu gender roles and infanticide in late nineteenth century India, Daniel J. R. Grey 3. At "war against our institutions": Cultures of Policing and Punishment in the Slave Cities of the Americas, James Campbell 4. "Thank goodness Habeas Corpus did not run in Nahud": Bifurcated Systems of Policing in Condominium Sudan, 1898-c.1956, Will Berridge 5. Policing in Hong Kong and Macau: Transformations from the Colonial Era to Special Administrative Regions, Lawrence Ka-Ki Ho 6. "A Holy Panic": Race, Surveillance and the Origins of the War on Drugs in Britain, 1915-1918, Sascha Auerbach Part 2. Punishment 7.Austria’s Penal Colonies: Facts and Visions, Stephan Steiner 8. Punishment and Parade: The Cultural Form of Penal Exile in Russia, Laura Piacentini 9. "A perfect hell of misery": real and imagined prison lives in an "American Siberia", Vivien Miller Part 3.Desistance 10. "What is a man that is a bolter to do? I would steal the Governor’s axe rather than starve": Old lags and recidivism in the Tasmanian penal colony, Hamish Maxwell-Stewart and Rebecca Kippen 11. On Licence: Understanding punishment, recidivism and desistance in penal policy, 1853-1945, David Cox, Barry Godfrey, Helen Johnston and Joanne Turner 12. "Whose prisoners are these anyway?" Church, state and society partnerships and co-production of offender "resocialisation" in Brazil, Fiona Macaulay 13. Recoverers Helping Recoverers: Discipline and Peer-Facilitated Rehabilitation in Brazilian Faith-Based Prisons, Sacha Darke.

Postgraduate and Undergraduate

Vivien Miller is Associate Professor of American and Canadian Studies at the University of Nottingham. She is the author of Hard Labor and Hard Time: Florida’s ‘Sunshine Prison’ and Chain Gangs (2012) and Crime, Violence and Sexual Clemency: Florida’s Pardon Board and Penal System in the Progressive Era (2000), and co-editor of Cross-Cultural Connections in Crime Fictions (2012). She is currently working on capital punishment in the pre-1972 United States.

James Campbell is Lecturer in American History at the University of Leicester. He is the author of Slavery on Trial: Race, Class and Criminal Justice in Antebellum Richmond, Virginia (2007) and Crime and Punishment in African American History (2012). He is currently working on a study of the death penalty in twentieth-century Jamaica.