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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Dick Hobbs (Professor of Sociology, University of Durham) , Philip Hadfield (ESRC funded Researcher, Department of Sociology, University of Durham) , Stuart Lister (Research Fellow, University of Leeds) , Simon Winlow (Senior Lecturer in Criminology, University of Teesside)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 14.50cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.40cm Weight: 0.496kg ISBN: 9780199252244ISBN 10: 0199252246 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 20 March 2003 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents1: Let the Good Times Roll: Liminality and the Night-time Economy 2: After-Dark: 'Fun' and Control in the Industrial City 3: Post-Industrial Manchester: From Cotton to Carlsberg 4: Tommy Smith's Story: Four Decades on the Door 5: Russ's Bar: A Bouncer's Tale 6: A Word at the Door: Bouncers on their Work. 7: Dogs that Pass in the Night: Training Bouncers 8: Badging Up: Registering Bouncers 9: Market Force: Class, Violence, and Liminal Business on the Night-time Frontier 10: Conclusion.Reviews`Review from other book by this author Hobbs is without doubt Britain's most insightful and penetrating criminological ethnographer, and he uses his skill to provide an extremely useful service...my advice to all interested academics and students is to get a copy, read it, and keep it as a principal guide book to take with you on your theoretical excursions into the subject of professional crime.' International Journal of Sociology and Law `His book contains the thrills of voyeuristic participation in a world of almost untramelled opportunities for hedonistic pleasure, with the frisson of realisation that burgalries and robberies are the price we pay as victims. This book conveys a fascinating if disturbing sense of the complex, messy lives of those in the bad business.' Times Literary Supplement `'Dick Hobbs has succeeded at every level...this is a very good book. It is written with confidence and gusto, in a way which makes the subjects ... come to life.'' New Law Journal Dick Hobb's research has always traversed the large distance between the criminal and the criminologist and his writing the even larger gap between the novelist and the academic. This has meant that his books are as full of characters as facts and of wry comment as dry analysis and Bouncers is no exception. The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice ... a comprehensive account of bouncers: their occupational culture, their role in the alcohol fuelled expanding night-time economy and the failure of all strata of regulation to contain the violence which is endemic within it. The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice ... may be read and enjoyed at a variety of levels ... may also be read with profit by those interested in richly-woven descriptions of the life of doormen, their adventures, their sense of chivalry and of 'rough justice', and the legal and extra-legal codes that govern their conduct ... a serious social study that charms and enthrals. Law Society Journal ... a pioneering and exciting study that opens up for police researchers, criminologists, urban ethnographers and sociologists a fascinating look into the night-time economy... Theoretical Criminology Author Information"Dick Hobbs is Professor of Sociology at the University of Durham. He has published widely on various aspects of criminal cultures, policing, research methods, professional and organised crime, and the night-time economy. He has published edited collections of papers on ethnographic research, and professional crime, and his two single authored books (both published with OUP) are Doing the Business (1988) which won the Abrams Prize, and Bad Business (1995). He was, with Steve Hall, the co-grant holder for the ESRC ""Bouncers"" project Philip Hadfield is currently an ESRC funded postgraduate student at the University of Durham. He recently graduated from the Universities of Keele and Cambridge, has published widely on regulatory and licensing aspects of the night-time economy and works part time as a DJ. Stuart Lister is a Research Fellow at the University of Leeds. He is a member of the Home Office Alcohol and Crime Steering Group, and has published on various aspects of the night-time economy with particular reference to policing, regulation, and training. Simon Winlow is Senior Lecturer in Criminology at the University of Teesside. He gained his Ph.D. from Durham University in 1999 and has published on crime, masculinities, research methods and various aspects of the night-time economy. His first book, Badfellas,(Berg 2001)an ethnography based upon his Ph.D." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |