McGarry / Walklate The Palgrave Handbook of Criminology and War
1. Auflage 2016
ISBN: 978-1-137-43170-7
Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, 469 Seiten, eBook
ISBN: 978-1-137-43170-7
Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
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Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction. The Criminology of War, What is it Good For?; Ross McGarry and Sandra Walklate.- Part I. The Criminogenic Contexts of War.- Chapter 1. War and Criminal Justice and the Rebirth of Privatisation; John Lea.- Chapter 2. Terrorism and War: Interrogating Discourses of Risk and Security; Gabe Mythen.- Chapter 3. Corporate War Crimes; Vincenzo Ruggiero.- Chapter 4. Criminology, War and Environmental Despoliation; Carmel O’Sullivan and Reece Walters.- Part II. Violence and Victimization at War.- Chapter 5. Genocide in the Context of War; Alex Alvarez.- Chapter 6. Sexual Violence During Armed Conflict; Christopher W. Mullins.- Chapter 7. Soldiers and Victims: Conceptions of Military Service and Victimhood, <1914-1945; Zoe Alker and Barry Godfrey.- Chapter 8. "I'm the Victim Here": Intrastate Conflict and the Legacy of Political Violence; Neil Ferguson.- Chapter 9. Framing Blame and Victimhood in Post-Conflict Northern Ireland; Ruth Jamieson.- Part III. Violence, War and Security.- Chapter 10. Private Security Contractors as Criminals/Victims; Adam White.- Chapter 11. Police Pluralisation and Private Security; Ruth Delaforce.- Chapter 12. An Analysis of the War-Policing Assemblage: The Case of Iraq (2003-2015); Teresa Degenhardt.- Chapter 13. Violence, Policing and War; Jude McCulloch.- Part IV. Perpetrators of Violence and the Aftermath of War.- Chapter 14. The Dark Side of Defence: Masculinities and Violence in the Military; Ben Wadham.- Chapter 15. Imprisonment in Military Realms; Barry Goldson.- Chapter 16. Veterans, Crime and Criminal Justice Policy in England and Wales; Emma Murray.- Chapter 17. Should the Forces be in the Firing Line? Social Policy, the Veteran and the 'Acceptable Face' of Violent Criminality; James Treadwell.- Chapter 18. Lethal Innovation: TheNexus of Criminology, War and Malevolent Creativity; David H. Cropley.- Part V. Cultural and Methodological Developments for a Criminology of War.- Chapter 19. Cultural Criminology of War; Josh Klein.- Chapter 20. Reading Between the Lines: the Normalisation of Violence within Military Memoirs; Rachel Woodward and K. Neil Jenkings.- Chapter 21. Online Engagements: War and Social Media; Andrew Kirton.- Chapter 22. The Violence You Were/n't Meant to See: Representations of Death in an Age of Digital Reproduction; Michael Mair, Chris Elsey, Paul V. Smith and Patrick G. Watson.- Conclusion. Taking Account of War, Making it Count; Sandra Walklate and Ross McGarry.