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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Simon Green (University of Hull, UK)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9781138120310ISBN 10: 1138120316 Pages: 228 Publication Date: 04 August 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. Crime and the Community 2. Punishment and the Community 3. Community, Ideology and Utopia 4. The Politics of Moral Degeneration 5. Getting a Sense of Community 6. Late-modernity, Insecurity and Identity 7. Community, or Intimacy? Conclusion.Reviews`In Crime, Community and Morality Simon Green offers a searching and searing critical examination of discourses about moral decline and loss of community - discourses that have decisively shaped the direction taken by criminal justice and crime control policies in recent decades. In place of this exhausted paradigm, Green offers a nuanced and theoretically rich account of the role that morality and emotions play in our responses to crime, and points the way towards a new and different language of crime control that speaks to our post-traditional age. Essential reading for criminologists and for all those concerned with the future of criminal justice.' - Professor Majid Yar, University of Hull, UK `Over the last few decades community decline (variously defined) has been deployed as a catch-all explanation for crime, immorality, and a fast-diminishing sense of social responsibility. Typically, these accounts either slather the concept of community with a revanchist moral agenda, or worse still, entirely misunderstand how communities function and thus how they might serve as a locus of crime control or order maintenance. Simon Green's new book provides an excellent and much-needed corrective to this long history of mischaracterization and confusion. Clear-sighted, crisply written and theoretically accessible, it drives a coach and horses through existing thinking in this area, and by doing so kick-starts the debate about how to re-theorize the community-crime link for the twenty-first century.' - Professor Keith Hayward, University of Kent, UK `This is a timely and significant text. Green's work is particularly praiseworthy for its scholarly and accessible coverage of the all too often neglected significance of the moral and political debate around community and crime for students of criminology. In particular, the text provides us with a comprehensive synthesis of existing scholarship arising out of the encounters between social science and moral and political philosophy. All in all it is a pleasing antidote to the all too prevalent narrow, administrative conceptions of the contemporary criminological enterprise.' - Gordon Hughes, Chair in Criminology, Cardiff University, UK 'In Crime, Community and Morality Simon Green offers a searching and searing critical examination of discourses about moral decline and loss of community - discourses that have decisively shaped the direction taken by criminal justice and crime control policies in recent decades. In place of this exhausted paradigm, Green offers a nuanced and theoretically rich account of the role that morality and emotions play in our responses to crime, and points the way towards a new and different language of crime control that speaks to our post-traditional age. Essential reading for criminologists and for all those concerned with the future of criminal justice.' - Professor Majid Yar, University of Hull, UK 'Over the last few decades community decline (variously defined) has been deployed as a catch-all explanation for crime, immorality, and a fast-diminishing sense of social responsibility. Typically, these accounts either slather the concept of community with a revanchist moral agenda, or worse still, entirely misunderstand how communities function and thus how they might serve as a locus of crime control or order maintenance. Simon Green's new book provides an excellent and much-needed corrective to this long history of mischaracterization and confusion. Clear-sighted, crisply written and theoretically accessible, it drives a coach and horses through existing thinking in this area, and by doing so kick-starts the debate about how to re-theorize the community-crime link for the twenty-first century.' - Professor Keith Hayward, University of Kent, UK 'This is a timely and significant text. Green's work is particularly praiseworthy for its scholarly and accessible coverage of the all too often neglected significance of the moral and political debate around community and crime for students of criminology. In particular, the text provides us with a comprehensive synthesis of existing scholarship arising out of the encounters between social science and moral and political philosophy. All in all it is a pleasing antidote to the all too prevalent narrow, administrative conceptions of the contemporary criminological enterprise.' - Gordon Hughes, Chair in Criminology, Cardiff University, UK Author InformationSimon Green is a Lecturer in Criminology at the University of Hull. He teaches and researches in the areas of restorative justice, crime and politics, criminological theory and reducing reoffending. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |