Revolution in Penology is a thoroughly original and thought-provoking critique of penal harm, the recursive pains of imprisonment cycle, and the normalization of violence.
Revolution in Penology is a thoroughly original and thought-provoking critique of penal harm, the recursive pains of imprisonment cycle, and the normalization of violence.
Bruce A. Arrigo is professor of crime, law, and society in the Department of Criminal Justice at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte. Dragan Milovanovic is professor in the Justice Studies Department at Northeastern Illinois University.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction Part I. Developments In Constitutive Theory and Penology Chapter 1: From Constitutive Criminology to Constitutive Penology Chapter 2: Constitutive Penology Chapter 3: The Phenomenology of Penal Harm Part II. Developments in Constitutive Practice and Penology Chapter 4: Constitutive Penology and the "Pains of Imprisonment" Chapter 5: The Shadow and Stranger in Constitutive Penology Conclusion References Author Index Subject Index About the Authors
Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction Part I. Developments In Constitutive Theory and Penology Chapter 1: From Constitutive Criminology to Constitutive Penology Chapter 2: Constitutive Penology Chapter 3: The Phenomenology of Penal Harm Part II. Developments in Constitutive Practice and Penology Chapter 4: Constitutive Penology and the "Pains of Imprisonment" Chapter 5: The Shadow and Stranger in Constitutive Penology Conclusion References Author Index Subject Index About the Authors
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