This article provides a reflexive account on criminological engagement with crimes of states, with special attention to the case of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust, and Berlin and Germany today. The emergence of a criminology of crimes of states is reviewed, along with arguments for and against criminological engagement with such crime. In particular, a response to Carrier and Park’s (2013) critique of ‘entrepreneurial criminology’ is provided in this context. Distinctions are drawn between monumental and mundane crimes of states, and mislabeled and miscalculated crimes of states, with special attention to mundane and miscalculated crimes. A brief concluding section identifies some issues that might be included in an agenda for a criminology...
This special issue traces multifaceted readings of criminal law reform in the context of development...
Using Roger Matthews’ (2014) book Realist Criminology as a launching pad, this article points to som...
Critical criminology must move beyond twentieth-century empiricist and idealist paradigms because th...
The renewal of the Left realist tradition in criminology is vital for a critical understanding of cr...
In 1998 the journal Theoretical Criminology published an innovative special issue on green criminolo...
Crime, Justice and Human Rights is an invaluable resource for those interested in the growing links ...
This issue of the International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy stems from selected ...
Over the past quarter century, a growing volume of rural-focused criminological work has emerged. In...
This article assesses the commonalities and divergences between critical realist criminology and fem...
This paper calls for a green cultural criminology that is more attuned to narrative and a narrative ...
There is growing recognition in criminology and social work of the importance of Indigenous knowledg...
There is growing recognition in criminology and social work of the importance of Indigenous knowledg...
‘Criminalisation’ has attracted considerable scholarly attention in recent years, much of it concern...
This paper aims to provide a summary of some of the key issues outlined in my recent publication Rea...
Beck (2015: 81) observes, metamorphosis ‘is proceeding latently, behind the mind walls of unintended...
This special issue traces multifaceted readings of criminal law reform in the context of development...
Using Roger Matthews’ (2014) book Realist Criminology as a launching pad, this article points to som...
Critical criminology must move beyond twentieth-century empiricist and idealist paradigms because th...
The renewal of the Left realist tradition in criminology is vital for a critical understanding of cr...
In 1998 the journal Theoretical Criminology published an innovative special issue on green criminolo...
Crime, Justice and Human Rights is an invaluable resource for those interested in the growing links ...
This issue of the International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy stems from selected ...
Over the past quarter century, a growing volume of rural-focused criminological work has emerged. In...
This article assesses the commonalities and divergences between critical realist criminology and fem...
This paper calls for a green cultural criminology that is more attuned to narrative and a narrative ...
There is growing recognition in criminology and social work of the importance of Indigenous knowledg...
There is growing recognition in criminology and social work of the importance of Indigenous knowledg...
‘Criminalisation’ has attracted considerable scholarly attention in recent years, much of it concern...
This paper aims to provide a summary of some of the key issues outlined in my recent publication Rea...
Beck (2015: 81) observes, metamorphosis ‘is proceeding latently, behind the mind walls of unintended...
This special issue traces multifaceted readings of criminal law reform in the context of development...
Using Roger Matthews’ (2014) book Realist Criminology as a launching pad, this article points to som...
Critical criminology must move beyond twentieth-century empiricist and idealist paradigms because th...