This article argues that police studies should draw on the sociology of punishment to better understand state pain-delivery. Whereas penal theorists commonly assess the pain and punishment of inmates in relation to wider social sentiments, police theory has yet to regard police violence and harm in the same fashion. As a result, police scholars often fail to address why the damage caused by public constabularies, even when widely publicized, is accommodated and accepted. Adapting the idea of ‘punitiveness’ from penal theory allows some explanation of how the public views injury and suffering caused by the police by illuminating the emotions and sentiments their actions generate
Apparently growing punitiveness in many countries toward the end of the twentieth century prompted c...
Why does institutional police brutality continue so brazenly? Criminologists and other social scien...
Why do people support tough sentencing of criminal offenders? Three explanations dominate the litera...
This article argues that police studies should draw on the sociology of punishment to better underst...
Many criminal law theorists find the punishment of harm puzzling. They argue that acts should be eva...
This article reports experiments assessing how general threats to social order and severity of a cri...
Criminal law scholarship is marked by a sharp fault line separating substantive criminal law from cr...
This article argues that the justification of punishment is best conceived as a problem of political...
Diarmaid Harkin recently called for a theory of police punishment and its public acceptance. He stat...
The article argues for a conception of the justification of punishment that is compatible with a mod...
In this paper, we analyse pain in police detention and the extent to which Sykes’ pains of imprisonm...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...
abstract: Society places great trust in the police to uphold and protect the law. People who have a ...
We offer an anthropological response to criminologists’ call for a penal theory of police, with a sp...
We are in the midst of a long overdue reevaluation of police violence. To date, most conversations h...
Apparently growing punitiveness in many countries toward the end of the twentieth century prompted c...
Why does institutional police brutality continue so brazenly? Criminologists and other social scien...
Why do people support tough sentencing of criminal offenders? Three explanations dominate the litera...
This article argues that police studies should draw on the sociology of punishment to better underst...
Many criminal law theorists find the punishment of harm puzzling. They argue that acts should be eva...
This article reports experiments assessing how general threats to social order and severity of a cri...
Criminal law scholarship is marked by a sharp fault line separating substantive criminal law from cr...
This article argues that the justification of punishment is best conceived as a problem of political...
Diarmaid Harkin recently called for a theory of police punishment and its public acceptance. He stat...
The article argues for a conception of the justification of punishment that is compatible with a mod...
In this paper, we analyse pain in police detention and the extent to which Sykes’ pains of imprisonm...
The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offer...
abstract: Society places great trust in the police to uphold and protect the law. People who have a ...
We offer an anthropological response to criminologists’ call for a penal theory of police, with a sp...
We are in the midst of a long overdue reevaluation of police violence. To date, most conversations h...
Apparently growing punitiveness in many countries toward the end of the twentieth century prompted c...
Why does institutional police brutality continue so brazenly? Criminologists and other social scien...
Why do people support tough sentencing of criminal offenders? Three explanations dominate the litera...