In this article we use Emirbayer and Desmond’s institutional reflexivity framework to critically examine the production of racial knowledge in British criminology. Identifying weakness, neglect and marginalization in theorizing race and racism, we focus principally on the disciplinary unconscious element of their three-tier framework, identifying and interrogating aspects of criminology’s ‘obligatory problematics’, ‘habits of thought’ and ‘position-taking’ as well as its institutional structure and social relations that combine to render the discipline ‘institutionally white’. We also consider, briefly, aspects of criminology’s relationship to race, racism and whiteness in the USA. The final part of the article makes the case for British cr...
Southern Criminology is a post-colonial movement of knowledge production that has political, empiric...
Drawing on empirical research into racist attacks in three cities in England, this article reveals a...
We live at a time when our understandings and conceptualizations of ‘racism’ are often highly imprec...
In this article we use Emirbayer and Desmond’s institutional reflexivity framework to critically exa...
In this article we use Emirbayer and Desmond’s institutional reflexivity framework to critically exa...
The discipline of Western criminology emerged during the colonial era as a means of controlling the ...
This article explores the neglect of race and racism in the discipline of British politics. I outlin...
Criminology has been slow in recognizing the central organizing logic of race in (post)colonial soci...
Criminology has been slow in recognizing the central organizing logic of race in (post)colonial soci...
Intersectionality is the study of overlapping social identities and related systems of oppression, d...
In 1992, Katheryn Russell (1992) advocated the introduction of a subfield of Black Criminology withi...
In empirical and theoretical criminology references to racism and ethnicity are commonplace, althoug...
This article centers undergraduate criminology students’ concerns regarding their overwhelmingly whi...
In criminology, a developing reliance on the analytical currency of Critical Race Theory (CRT) has f...
There are calls across Higher Education to address deep structural inequalities withspecific concern...
Southern Criminology is a post-colonial movement of knowledge production that has political, empiric...
Drawing on empirical research into racist attacks in three cities in England, this article reveals a...
We live at a time when our understandings and conceptualizations of ‘racism’ are often highly imprec...
In this article we use Emirbayer and Desmond’s institutional reflexivity framework to critically exa...
In this article we use Emirbayer and Desmond’s institutional reflexivity framework to critically exa...
The discipline of Western criminology emerged during the colonial era as a means of controlling the ...
This article explores the neglect of race and racism in the discipline of British politics. I outlin...
Criminology has been slow in recognizing the central organizing logic of race in (post)colonial soci...
Criminology has been slow in recognizing the central organizing logic of race in (post)colonial soci...
Intersectionality is the study of overlapping social identities and related systems of oppression, d...
In 1992, Katheryn Russell (1992) advocated the introduction of a subfield of Black Criminology withi...
In empirical and theoretical criminology references to racism and ethnicity are commonplace, althoug...
This article centers undergraduate criminology students’ concerns regarding their overwhelmingly whi...
In criminology, a developing reliance on the analytical currency of Critical Race Theory (CRT) has f...
There are calls across Higher Education to address deep structural inequalities withspecific concern...
Southern Criminology is a post-colonial movement of knowledge production that has political, empiric...
Drawing on empirical research into racist attacks in three cities in England, this article reveals a...
We live at a time when our understandings and conceptualizations of ‘racism’ are often highly imprec...