Preface: John Braithwaite Mary Bosworth and Carolyn Hoyle: Introduction PART I Criminology and its Constituencies 1. Conceptual allegiances: whose side are you on? 1: Ian Loader and Richard Sparks: Criminology''s Public Roles: A Drama in Six Acts 2: Michael R. Gottfredson: Some Advantages of a Crime-Free Criminology 3: Eugene McLaughlin: Critical Criminology: The Renewal of Theory Politics and Practice 4: Jeff Ferrell: Disciplinarity and Drift 5: David Brown: The Global Financial Crisis: Neo-Liberalism, Social Democracy and Criminology 6: Pat Carlen: Against Evangelism in Academic Criminology: For Criminology as a Scientific Art 2. Methodological allegiances: how should criminology be done? 7: Kathleen Daly: Shake it up Baby: Practicing Rock ''n'' Roll Criminology 8: Clifford Shearing and Monique Marks: Criminology''s Disney World: The Ethnographer''s Ride of South African Criminal Justice 9: Nicole Rafter: Origins of Criminology 10: Linda G. Mills: He was a Woman: Pitfalls and Possibilities of Popular Audiences 11: Marcus Felson: Sort Crimes, Not Criminals 12: Paternoster and Shawn Bushway: Studying Desistance from Crime: Where Quantitative Meets Qualitative Methods 13: Mike Hough: Criminology and the Role of Experimental Research 3. Political allegiances: what is criminology for? 14: Beth E. Richie: Criminology and Social Justice: Expanding the Intellectual Commitment 15: Thomas Mathiesen and Ole Kristian Hjemdal: A New Look at Victim and Offender - An Abolitionist Approach 16: Natalie J. Sokoloff and Amanda Burgess-Proctor: Remembering Criminology''s ''Forgotten Theme'': Seeking Justice in U.
S. Crime Policy Using an Intersectional Approach 17: Chris Cunneen: Postcolonial Perspectives for Criminology PART II Criminology and its Borders 1. The limits of the discipline: where do we draw the line? 18: Lucia Zedner: Putting Crime Back on the Criminological Agenda 19: Aaron Doyle, Janet Chan, and Kevin D. Haggerty: Transcending the Boundaries of Criminology: The Example of Richard Ericson 20: David Garland: Criminology''s Place in the Academic Field 21: Shadd Maruna and Charles Barber: Why Can''t Criminology Be More Like Medical Research?: Be Careful What You Wish For 22: Andrew Ashworth: Criminal Justice, Not Criminology? 23: William A. Schabas: Criminology, Accountability and International Justice 2. The limits of geography: does criminology travel? 24: Ben Bowling: Transnational Criminology and the Globalization of Harm Production 25: Stephan Parmentier: The Missing Link: Criminological Perspectives on Dealing with the Past 26: David Nelken: Why Compare Criminal Justice? 27: Katja Franko Aas: Visions of Global Control: Cosmopolitan Aspirations in a World of Friction 3. The limits of the academy: what is the impact of criminology? 28: Lawrence W. Sherman: Criminology as Invention 29: Kelly Hannah-Moffat: Criminological Cliques: Narrowing Dialogues, Institutional Protectionism, and the Next Generation 30: Tim Hope: Official Criminology and the New Crime Sciences 31: Alfred Blumstein: Criminology: Science and Policy Analysis 32: Ian O''Donnell: Criminology, Bureaucracy and Unfinished Business 33: Tim Newburn: Criminology and Government: Some reflections on Recent Developments in England 34: Alison Liebling: Being a Criminologist: Investigation as a Lifestyle and Living Mary Bosworth and Carolyn Hoyle: Conclusion Preface: John Braithwaite Introduction, Mary Bosworth and Carolyn Hoyle PART I Criminology and its Constituencies 1.
Conceptual allegiances: whose side are you on? 1. Criminology''s Public Roles: A Drama in Six Acts, Ian Loader and Richard Sparks 2. Some Advantages of a Crime-Free Criminology, Michael R. Gottfredson 3. Critical Criminology: The Renewal of Theory Politics and Practice, Eugene McLaughlin 4. Disciplinarity and Drift, Jeff Ferrell 5. The Global Financial Crisis: Neo-Liberalism, Social Democracy and Criminology, David Brown 6. Against Evangelism in Academic Criminology: For Criminology as a Scientific Art, Pat Carlen 2.
Methodological allegiances: how should criminology be done? 7. Shake it up Baby: Practicing Rock ''n'' Roll Criminology, Kathleen Daly 8. Criminology''s Disney World: The Ethnographer''s Ride of South African Criminal Justice, Clifford Shearing and Monique Marks 9. Origins of Criminology, Nicole Rafter 10. He was a Woman: Pitfalls and Possibilities of Popular Audiences, Linda G. Mills 11. Sort Crimes, Not Criminals, Marcus Felson 12. Studying Desistance from Crime: Where Quantitative Meets Qualitative Methods, Paternoster and Shawn Bushway 13.
Criminology and the Role of Experimental Research, Mike Hough 3. Political allegiances: what is criminology for? 14. Criminology and Social Justice: Expanding the Intellectual Commitment, Beth E. Richie 15. A New Look at Victim and Offender - An Abolitionist Approach, Thomas Mathiesen and Ole Kristian Hjemdal 16. Remembering Criminology''s ''Forgotten Theme'': Seeking Justice in U.S. Crime Policy Using an Intersectional Approach, Natalie J.
Sokoloff and Amanda Burgess-Proctor 17. Postcolonial Perspectives for Criminology, Chris Cunneen PART II Criminology and its Borders 1. The limits of the discipline: where do we draw the line? 18. Putting Crime Back on the Criminological Agenda, Lucia Zedner 19. Transcending the Boundaries of Criminology: The Example of Richard Ericson, Aaron Doyle, Janet Chan, and Kevin D. Haggerty 20. Criminology''s Place in the Academic Field, David Garland 21. Why Can''t Criminology Be More Like Medical Research?: Be Careful What You Wish For, Shadd Maruna and Charles Barber 22.
Criminal Justice, Not Criminology?, Andrew Ashworth 23. Criminology, Accountability and International Justice, William A. Schabas 2. The limits of geography: does criminology travel? 24. Transnational Criminology and the Globalization of Harm Production, Ben Bowling 25. The Missing Link: Criminological Perspectives on Dealing with the Past, Stephan Parmentier 26. Why Compare Criminal Justice?, David Nelken 27. Visions of Global Control: Cosmopolitan Aspirations in a World of Friction, Katja Franko Aas 3.
The limits of the academy: what is the impact of criminology? 28. Criminology as Invention, Lawrence W. Sherman 29. Criminological Cliques: Narrowing Dialogues, Institutional Protectionism, and the Next Generation, Kelly Hannah-Moffat 30. Official Criminology and the New Crime Sciences, Tim Hope 31. Criminology: Science and Policy Analysis, Alfred Blumstein 32. Criminology, Bureaucracy and Unfinished Business, Ian O''Donnell 33. Criminology and Government: Some reflections on Recent Developments in England, Tim Newburn 34.
Being a Criminologist: Investigation as a Lifestyle and Living, Alison Liebling Conclusion, Mary Bosworth and Carolyn Hoyle.