The first comprehensive collection of its kind, this handbook addresses the problem of knowledge production in criminology, redressing the global imbalance with an original focus on the Global South. Issues of vital criminological research and policy significance abound in the Global South, with important implications for South/North relations as well as global security and justice. In a world of high speed communication technologies and fluid national borders, empire building has shifted from colonising territories to colonising knowledge. The authors of this volume question whose voices, experiences, and theories are reflected in the discipline, and argue that diversity of discourse is more important now than ever before.
Approaching the subject from a range of historical, theoretical, and social perspectives, this collection promotes the Global South not only as a space for the production of knowledge, but crucially, as a source of innovative research and theory on crime and justice. Wide-ranging in scope and authoritative in theory, this study will appeal to scholars, activists, policy-makers, and students from a wide range of social science disciplines from both the Global North and South, including criminal justice, human rights, and penology.
págs. 3-17
págs. 19-41
págs. 43-59
The Asian Criminological Paradigm and How it Links Global North and South: Combining and Extended Conceptual Tool box from the North with Innovative Asian Contexts
págs. 61-82
págs. 83-104
The Rural Dimensions of a Southern Crimonology: Selected Topics and General Processes
págs. 105-120
Queer Criminology and the Global South: Setting Queer and Southern Criminologies into Dialogue
págs. 121-138
Southern Death Investigation: Theorizing Coronial Work from the Global South
Rebecca Scott Bray, Belinda Carpenter, Ronan Paulo Veizaga Veizaga
págs. 139-161
Research Excellence and Anglophone Dominance: The Case of Law, Criminology and Social Science
págs. 163-181
págs. 183-201
págs. 205-221
págs. 223-244
The Digital and Legal Divide: Silk Road, Transnational Online Policing and Southern Criminology
págs. 245-260
Marginalized Voices: The Absence of Nigerian Scholars in Global Examinations of Online Fraud
págs. 261-280
págs. 281-300
págs. 301-321
Green Criminology as Decolonial Tool: A Stereoscope of Environmental Harm
págs. 323-346
págs. 347-367
págs. 369-390
Capturing Crime in the Antipodes: Colonist Cultural Representation of Indigeneity
págs. 391-413
págs. 415-432
Staying Safe in Colombia and Mexico: Skilled Navigation and Everyday Insecurity
págs. 433-449
págs. 451-472
págs. 473-492
Public Spitting in "Developing" Nations of the Global South: Harmless Embedded Practice or Disgusting, Harmful and Deviant?
págs. 493-520
págs. 521-550
págs. 551-567
Expectations and Encounters: Comparing Perceptions of Police Services Among the Underprivileged in South Africa and Zimbabwe
págs. 569-585
págs. 587-609
Crime, Criminality, and North-to-South Criminological Complexities: Theoretical Implications for Policing "Hotspot" Communities in "Underdeveloped" Countries
págs. 611-632
Crimes of the Powerful in the Global South: "State Failure" as Elite Success
págs. 633-655
págs. 659-685
págs. 687-708
Punishment at the Margins: Groundwork for a Revisited Sociology of Punishment
págs. 709-728
One of the Smallest Prison Populations in the World Under Threat: The Case of Tuvalu
págs. 729-750
Rethinking Penal Modernism from the Global South: The Case of Convict Transportation to Australia
págs. 751-774
"Profiles" of Deportability: Analyzing Spanish Migration Control Policies from a Neocolonial Perspective
págs. 775-795
págs. 797-817
Globalizing Feminist Criminology: Gendered Violence During Peace and War
págs. 821-845
Criminology and the Violence(s) of Northern Theorizing: A Critical Examination of Policy Transfer in Relation to Violence Against Women from the Global North to the Global South
Sandra Walklate, Kate Fitz Gibbon
págs. 847-865
págs. 867-882
Male Violence Against Women in the Global South: What We Know and What We Don't Know
Walter S. Dekeseredy, Amanda Hall Sanchez
págs. 883-900
págs. 901-912
Feminicide: Impunity for the Perpetrators and Injustice for the Victims
págs. 913-929
págs. 931-945
Constructions of Honor-Based Violence: Gender, Context and Orientalism
David Tokiharu Mayeda, Raagini Vijaykumar, Meda Chesney Lind
págs. 947-967
Criminology, Peacebuilding and Transitional Justice: Lessons from the Global South
John Braithwaithe
págs. 971-990
págs. 991-1010
Trauma on Trial: Survival and Witnessing at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
págs. 1011-1030
Critical Reflections on the Operation of Aboriginal Night Patrols
John Scott, Elaine Barclay, Margaret Sims, Trudi Cooper, Terence Love
págs. 1031-1053
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