‘Anti-Nirvana’ explores the relationship between consumer culture, media and criminal motivations. It has appeared consistently on the list of the top-ten most-read articles in this award-winning international journal, and it mounts a serious neo-Freudian challenge to the predominant naturalistic notion of ‘resistance’ at the heart of liberal criminology and media studies. It is also cited in the Oxford Handbook of Criminology and other criminology texts as a persuasive argument in support of the theory that criminality amongst young people is strongly linked to the acquisitive values of consumerism and the images of possessive individualism that dominate mass media
This thesis, whilst taking a predominantly criminological topic as its subject matter, incorporates ...
This chapter offers a zemiological analysis of the market in image- and performance-enhancing drugs....
This book explores the links between crime, deviance and popular culture in our highly-mediatised er...
This book offers the first in-depth investigation into the relationship between today’s criminal ide...
This article argues that the time has arrived for leisure and consumerism to become key objects of s...
For too long criminologists have either ignored consumerism or misunderstood the role it plays in th...
As media proliferate and become more integral to social existence, so too, it might be suggested, th...
This article explains why an understanding of deviant leisure is significant for criminology. Throug...
Crime and community have been inextricably linked since New Labour came to power in 1997. The relati...
Cultural criminology which emerged in the 1990s, based on new criminology of Taylor, Walton, Young, ...
The purpose of this analysis is to investigate the consumer packaging of adolescent deviance through...
The overarching aim of this article is to explore criminal recidivism. Criminal recidivism is one of...
This chapter is concerned with technology, consumption, markets and related crimes and harms (althou...
Consumption and consumerism are now accepted as being fundamental contexts for the construction of y...
In this chapter I take a ‘social harm’ approach to explore some of the degrading impacts of modern c...
This thesis, whilst taking a predominantly criminological topic as its subject matter, incorporates ...
This chapter offers a zemiological analysis of the market in image- and performance-enhancing drugs....
This book explores the links between crime, deviance and popular culture in our highly-mediatised er...
This book offers the first in-depth investigation into the relationship between today’s criminal ide...
This article argues that the time has arrived for leisure and consumerism to become key objects of s...
For too long criminologists have either ignored consumerism or misunderstood the role it plays in th...
As media proliferate and become more integral to social existence, so too, it might be suggested, th...
This article explains why an understanding of deviant leisure is significant for criminology. Throug...
Crime and community have been inextricably linked since New Labour came to power in 1997. The relati...
Cultural criminology which emerged in the 1990s, based on new criminology of Taylor, Walton, Young, ...
The purpose of this analysis is to investigate the consumer packaging of adolescent deviance through...
The overarching aim of this article is to explore criminal recidivism. Criminal recidivism is one of...
This chapter is concerned with technology, consumption, markets and related crimes and harms (althou...
Consumption and consumerism are now accepted as being fundamental contexts for the construction of y...
In this chapter I take a ‘social harm’ approach to explore some of the degrading impacts of modern c...
This thesis, whilst taking a predominantly criminological topic as its subject matter, incorporates ...
This chapter offers a zemiological analysis of the market in image- and performance-enhancing drugs....
This book explores the links between crime, deviance and popular culture in our highly-mediatised er...