The Routledge International Handbook of Penal Abolition (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Coyle, Michael J.; Scott, David
45,95 €
45,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
23 °P sammeln
45,95 €
Als Download kaufen
45,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
23 °P sammeln
Jetzt verschenken
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
45,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
23 °P sammeln
The Routledge International Handbook of Penal Abolition (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Coyle, Michael J.; Scott, David
- Format: PDF
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei
bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
This handbook provides an authoritative and comprehensive look at the latest developments in the 21st Century penal abolitionism movement, both reflecting on key critical thought and setting the agenda for local and global abolitionist ideas and interventions over the coming decade.
- Geräte: PC
- mit Kopierschutz
- eBook Hilfe
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- The Routledge International Handbook of Penal Abolition (eBook, ePUB)45,95 €
- John R. Hamilton Jr.Community Justice (eBook, PDF)48,95 €
- Critical and Intersectional Gang Studies (eBook, PDF)40,95 €
- Thomas MathiesenThe Politics of Abolition Revisited (eBook, PDF)51,95 €
- Women's Imprisonment and the Case for Abolition (eBook, PDF)39,95 €
- Huan GaoYouth Involvement in Street Gangs in California's Central Valley (eBook, PDF)41,95 €
- Handbook on Contemporary Issues in Health, Crime, and Punishment (eBook, PDF)45,95 €
-
-
-
This handbook provides an authoritative and comprehensive look at the latest developments in the 21st Century penal abolitionism movement, both reflecting on key critical thought and setting the agenda for local and global abolitionist ideas and interventions over the coming decade.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 504
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. März 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429756795
- Artikelnr.: 61172436
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 504
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. März 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780429756795
- Artikelnr.: 61172436
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Michael J. Coyle, PhD, is a professor at the Department of Political Science and "Criminal" Justice, California State University, Chico. He is the author of Talking Criminal Justice: Language and the Just Society (2013) and the forthcoming Seeing Crime: Penal Abolition as the End of Utopian Criminal Justice. David Scott, PhD, works at The Open University. He has published widely on prisons and punishment and recent books include Why Prison? (2013), Against Imprisonment (2018) and For Abolition (2020).
Introduction: The Six Hues of Penal Abolitionism PART 1: Abolition Now:
Social Movements in Abolitionism 1.Escaping The Carceral State 2.Musselman
3.A Word Waiting to Happen: Sisters Inside's Abolition Journey
4.Abolitionist Reforms 5.The Case Against Prisons 6.Lessons from the Prison
Abolitionist Movement in Aotearoa/New Zealand 7.Building Movements to
Abolish Prisons in America 8.Abolitionist Media Making 9.The Agricultural
Industrial Complex: Abolition and Subversion PART 2: Resisting Penal
Subjugation 10.Watches 11.A Failed Penal System 12.Concerning the Abolition
of Prisons from the Perspective of a Long-term Prisoner 13.The Maroon as
Abolitionist: On Fugitivity and Gangs in Cape Town 14."Dare to Struggle,
Dare to Win": U.S. Prisoners Collectively Resisting Against Systems of
Death 15.'Help Me Please': Death and Self-Harm in Male Prisons in England
and Wales 16.Prison is a Place 17.Prisons are Broken 18.If These Walls
Could Talk 19.Emerging from a Colonialist and Punitive Era? A Story of
Prison Abolition in Aotearoa/New Zealand 20.Feminist and Other Abolitionist
Initiatives in Modern Spain 21.The Prison Abolition Movement in France:
Theoretical and Tactical Debates since the 1970s 22.My Child, Questions
PART 3: Abolitionism is for the Oppressed 23.The Struggle for Individual
and Human Rights within an Oppressive Dystopian Totalitarian Regime
24.Journal Entry: December 1, 2018 25.Queering Penal Abolition 26.Queer
Abolitionist Alternatives to Criminalizing Hate Violence 27.Surviving
Domestic Violence and its Consequences in the 'Good Ole Boy State' of
Tennessee 28.Cruel and Unusual Punishment: The Need to Abolish Prisons from
the Perspective of a Person with a Disability 29.Enabling Penal
Abolitionism: The Need for Reciprocal Dialogue Between Critical Disability
Studies and Penal Abolitionism 30.Barred by the Maddening State: Mental
Health and Incarceration in the Heterosexist, Anti-Black, Settler Colonial
Carceral State 31.Political Prisoner: An Irish Republican in the British
Penal System PART 4: Abolitionism: Decolonizing, Decriminalizing, and
Decarcerating 32.If I were a Nuclear Power Plant 33.Count 34.My Prison
Experience 35.Prisons as Colonial Relics: Anti-Prison Thought and Ghanaian
History 36.Thinking Beyond Penal Reform in India: Questioning the Logic of
Colonial Punishments 37.A Disbelief in Colonial Penalty: Settler
Colonialism and Abolitionism 38.The NSW Prisoners Action Group Submission
to the Nagle Royal Commission 39.Mestizo Penal Abolitionism: The Case of
Argentina 40.Transitional Justice in Rwanda and South Africa 41.Penal
Abolitionism and Restorative Justice in Brazil: Towards a Transformative
Justice Model? 42.As Goes the South, So Goes the Nation: Abolition as a
Regional Force in the United States PART 5: Abolitionist Re-imaginings
43.The Systems 44.Security Detention 45.Abolition as Radical Reform 46.The
Revolutionary Consciousness of Abolition: Social Morality and Value-Based
Praxis 47.The 'Dark Matter' of Justice: Penal Abolition Practices in
Everyday Life 48.War, Peace and Penal Abolition in the North of Ireland
49.Rethinking Punitive Paternalism: Abolitionism, the Personal and
Political 50.Planning Prisons and Imagining Abolition in Appalachia
51.Beyond Racial Capitalism's Spacetime: Unleashing the Utopian Imagination
for Youth Justice 52.Overcoming Obstacles to Abolition and Challenging the
Myths of Imprisonment PART 6: Activist Toolbox: Abolitionist Campaign
Tools, Manifestos and Statements 1.Our Values and Vision 2.Inclusive
Support: A Guide to Our Model of Service for New Sisters Inside Workers
3.Abolition Organizing Toolkit (Selections) 4.Reformist Reforms Vs.
Abolitionist Steps in Policing 5.Abolitionst Demands: Toward the End of
Prisons in Aotearoa
Social Movements in Abolitionism 1.Escaping The Carceral State 2.Musselman
3.A Word Waiting to Happen: Sisters Inside's Abolition Journey
4.Abolitionist Reforms 5.The Case Against Prisons 6.Lessons from the Prison
Abolitionist Movement in Aotearoa/New Zealand 7.Building Movements to
Abolish Prisons in America 8.Abolitionist Media Making 9.The Agricultural
Industrial Complex: Abolition and Subversion PART 2: Resisting Penal
Subjugation 10.Watches 11.A Failed Penal System 12.Concerning the Abolition
of Prisons from the Perspective of a Long-term Prisoner 13.The Maroon as
Abolitionist: On Fugitivity and Gangs in Cape Town 14."Dare to Struggle,
Dare to Win": U.S. Prisoners Collectively Resisting Against Systems of
Death 15.'Help Me Please': Death and Self-Harm in Male Prisons in England
and Wales 16.Prison is a Place 17.Prisons are Broken 18.If These Walls
Could Talk 19.Emerging from a Colonialist and Punitive Era? A Story of
Prison Abolition in Aotearoa/New Zealand 20.Feminist and Other Abolitionist
Initiatives in Modern Spain 21.The Prison Abolition Movement in France:
Theoretical and Tactical Debates since the 1970s 22.My Child, Questions
PART 3: Abolitionism is for the Oppressed 23.The Struggle for Individual
and Human Rights within an Oppressive Dystopian Totalitarian Regime
24.Journal Entry: December 1, 2018 25.Queering Penal Abolition 26.Queer
Abolitionist Alternatives to Criminalizing Hate Violence 27.Surviving
Domestic Violence and its Consequences in the 'Good Ole Boy State' of
Tennessee 28.Cruel and Unusual Punishment: The Need to Abolish Prisons from
the Perspective of a Person with a Disability 29.Enabling Penal
Abolitionism: The Need for Reciprocal Dialogue Between Critical Disability
Studies and Penal Abolitionism 30.Barred by the Maddening State: Mental
Health and Incarceration in the Heterosexist, Anti-Black, Settler Colonial
Carceral State 31.Political Prisoner: An Irish Republican in the British
Penal System PART 4: Abolitionism: Decolonizing, Decriminalizing, and
Decarcerating 32.If I were a Nuclear Power Plant 33.Count 34.My Prison
Experience 35.Prisons as Colonial Relics: Anti-Prison Thought and Ghanaian
History 36.Thinking Beyond Penal Reform in India: Questioning the Logic of
Colonial Punishments 37.A Disbelief in Colonial Penalty: Settler
Colonialism and Abolitionism 38.The NSW Prisoners Action Group Submission
to the Nagle Royal Commission 39.Mestizo Penal Abolitionism: The Case of
Argentina 40.Transitional Justice in Rwanda and South Africa 41.Penal
Abolitionism and Restorative Justice in Brazil: Towards a Transformative
Justice Model? 42.As Goes the South, So Goes the Nation: Abolition as a
Regional Force in the United States PART 5: Abolitionist Re-imaginings
43.The Systems 44.Security Detention 45.Abolition as Radical Reform 46.The
Revolutionary Consciousness of Abolition: Social Morality and Value-Based
Praxis 47.The 'Dark Matter' of Justice: Penal Abolition Practices in
Everyday Life 48.War, Peace and Penal Abolition in the North of Ireland
49.Rethinking Punitive Paternalism: Abolitionism, the Personal and
Political 50.Planning Prisons and Imagining Abolition in Appalachia
51.Beyond Racial Capitalism's Spacetime: Unleashing the Utopian Imagination
for Youth Justice 52.Overcoming Obstacles to Abolition and Challenging the
Myths of Imprisonment PART 6: Activist Toolbox: Abolitionist Campaign
Tools, Manifestos and Statements 1.Our Values and Vision 2.Inclusive
Support: A Guide to Our Model of Service for New Sisters Inside Workers
3.Abolition Organizing Toolkit (Selections) 4.Reformist Reforms Vs.
Abolitionist Steps in Policing 5.Abolitionst Demands: Toward the End of
Prisons in Aotearoa
Introduction: The Six Hues of Penal Abolitionism PART 1: Abolition Now:
Social Movements in Abolitionism 1.Escaping The Carceral State 2.Musselman
3.A Word Waiting to Happen: Sisters Inside's Abolition Journey
4.Abolitionist Reforms 5.The Case Against Prisons 6.Lessons from the Prison
Abolitionist Movement in Aotearoa/New Zealand 7.Building Movements to
Abolish Prisons in America 8.Abolitionist Media Making 9.The Agricultural
Industrial Complex: Abolition and Subversion PART 2: Resisting Penal
Subjugation 10.Watches 11.A Failed Penal System 12.Concerning the Abolition
of Prisons from the Perspective of a Long-term Prisoner 13.The Maroon as
Abolitionist: On Fugitivity and Gangs in Cape Town 14."Dare to Struggle,
Dare to Win": U.S. Prisoners Collectively Resisting Against Systems of
Death 15.'Help Me Please': Death and Self-Harm in Male Prisons in England
and Wales 16.Prison is a Place 17.Prisons are Broken 18.If These Walls
Could Talk 19.Emerging from a Colonialist and Punitive Era? A Story of
Prison Abolition in Aotearoa/New Zealand 20.Feminist and Other Abolitionist
Initiatives in Modern Spain 21.The Prison Abolition Movement in France:
Theoretical and Tactical Debates since the 1970s 22.My Child, Questions
PART 3: Abolitionism is for the Oppressed 23.The Struggle for Individual
and Human Rights within an Oppressive Dystopian Totalitarian Regime
24.Journal Entry: December 1, 2018 25.Queering Penal Abolition 26.Queer
Abolitionist Alternatives to Criminalizing Hate Violence 27.Surviving
Domestic Violence and its Consequences in the 'Good Ole Boy State' of
Tennessee 28.Cruel and Unusual Punishment: The Need to Abolish Prisons from
the Perspective of a Person with a Disability 29.Enabling Penal
Abolitionism: The Need for Reciprocal Dialogue Between Critical Disability
Studies and Penal Abolitionism 30.Barred by the Maddening State: Mental
Health and Incarceration in the Heterosexist, Anti-Black, Settler Colonial
Carceral State 31.Political Prisoner: An Irish Republican in the British
Penal System PART 4: Abolitionism: Decolonizing, Decriminalizing, and
Decarcerating 32.If I were a Nuclear Power Plant 33.Count 34.My Prison
Experience 35.Prisons as Colonial Relics: Anti-Prison Thought and Ghanaian
History 36.Thinking Beyond Penal Reform in India: Questioning the Logic of
Colonial Punishments 37.A Disbelief in Colonial Penalty: Settler
Colonialism and Abolitionism 38.The NSW Prisoners Action Group Submission
to the Nagle Royal Commission 39.Mestizo Penal Abolitionism: The Case of
Argentina 40.Transitional Justice in Rwanda and South Africa 41.Penal
Abolitionism and Restorative Justice in Brazil: Towards a Transformative
Justice Model? 42.As Goes the South, So Goes the Nation: Abolition as a
Regional Force in the United States PART 5: Abolitionist Re-imaginings
43.The Systems 44.Security Detention 45.Abolition as Radical Reform 46.The
Revolutionary Consciousness of Abolition: Social Morality and Value-Based
Praxis 47.The 'Dark Matter' of Justice: Penal Abolition Practices in
Everyday Life 48.War, Peace and Penal Abolition in the North of Ireland
49.Rethinking Punitive Paternalism: Abolitionism, the Personal and
Political 50.Planning Prisons and Imagining Abolition in Appalachia
51.Beyond Racial Capitalism's Spacetime: Unleashing the Utopian Imagination
for Youth Justice 52.Overcoming Obstacles to Abolition and Challenging the
Myths of Imprisonment PART 6: Activist Toolbox: Abolitionist Campaign
Tools, Manifestos and Statements 1.Our Values and Vision 2.Inclusive
Support: A Guide to Our Model of Service for New Sisters Inside Workers
3.Abolition Organizing Toolkit (Selections) 4.Reformist Reforms Vs.
Abolitionist Steps in Policing 5.Abolitionst Demands: Toward the End of
Prisons in Aotearoa
Social Movements in Abolitionism 1.Escaping The Carceral State 2.Musselman
3.A Word Waiting to Happen: Sisters Inside's Abolition Journey
4.Abolitionist Reforms 5.The Case Against Prisons 6.Lessons from the Prison
Abolitionist Movement in Aotearoa/New Zealand 7.Building Movements to
Abolish Prisons in America 8.Abolitionist Media Making 9.The Agricultural
Industrial Complex: Abolition and Subversion PART 2: Resisting Penal
Subjugation 10.Watches 11.A Failed Penal System 12.Concerning the Abolition
of Prisons from the Perspective of a Long-term Prisoner 13.The Maroon as
Abolitionist: On Fugitivity and Gangs in Cape Town 14."Dare to Struggle,
Dare to Win": U.S. Prisoners Collectively Resisting Against Systems of
Death 15.'Help Me Please': Death and Self-Harm in Male Prisons in England
and Wales 16.Prison is a Place 17.Prisons are Broken 18.If These Walls
Could Talk 19.Emerging from a Colonialist and Punitive Era? A Story of
Prison Abolition in Aotearoa/New Zealand 20.Feminist and Other Abolitionist
Initiatives in Modern Spain 21.The Prison Abolition Movement in France:
Theoretical and Tactical Debates since the 1970s 22.My Child, Questions
PART 3: Abolitionism is for the Oppressed 23.The Struggle for Individual
and Human Rights within an Oppressive Dystopian Totalitarian Regime
24.Journal Entry: December 1, 2018 25.Queering Penal Abolition 26.Queer
Abolitionist Alternatives to Criminalizing Hate Violence 27.Surviving
Domestic Violence and its Consequences in the 'Good Ole Boy State' of
Tennessee 28.Cruel and Unusual Punishment: The Need to Abolish Prisons from
the Perspective of a Person with a Disability 29.Enabling Penal
Abolitionism: The Need for Reciprocal Dialogue Between Critical Disability
Studies and Penal Abolitionism 30.Barred by the Maddening State: Mental
Health and Incarceration in the Heterosexist, Anti-Black, Settler Colonial
Carceral State 31.Political Prisoner: An Irish Republican in the British
Penal System PART 4: Abolitionism: Decolonizing, Decriminalizing, and
Decarcerating 32.If I were a Nuclear Power Plant 33.Count 34.My Prison
Experience 35.Prisons as Colonial Relics: Anti-Prison Thought and Ghanaian
History 36.Thinking Beyond Penal Reform in India: Questioning the Logic of
Colonial Punishments 37.A Disbelief in Colonial Penalty: Settler
Colonialism and Abolitionism 38.The NSW Prisoners Action Group Submission
to the Nagle Royal Commission 39.Mestizo Penal Abolitionism: The Case of
Argentina 40.Transitional Justice in Rwanda and South Africa 41.Penal
Abolitionism and Restorative Justice in Brazil: Towards a Transformative
Justice Model? 42.As Goes the South, So Goes the Nation: Abolition as a
Regional Force in the United States PART 5: Abolitionist Re-imaginings
43.The Systems 44.Security Detention 45.Abolition as Radical Reform 46.The
Revolutionary Consciousness of Abolition: Social Morality and Value-Based
Praxis 47.The 'Dark Matter' of Justice: Penal Abolition Practices in
Everyday Life 48.War, Peace and Penal Abolition in the North of Ireland
49.Rethinking Punitive Paternalism: Abolitionism, the Personal and
Political 50.Planning Prisons and Imagining Abolition in Appalachia
51.Beyond Racial Capitalism's Spacetime: Unleashing the Utopian Imagination
for Youth Justice 52.Overcoming Obstacles to Abolition and Challenging the
Myths of Imprisonment PART 6: Activist Toolbox: Abolitionist Campaign
Tools, Manifestos and Statements 1.Our Values and Vision 2.Inclusive
Support: A Guide to Our Model of Service for New Sisters Inside Workers
3.Abolition Organizing Toolkit (Selections) 4.Reformist Reforms Vs.
Abolitionist Steps in Policing 5.Abolitionst Demands: Toward the End of
Prisons in Aotearoa