Revisiting Crimes of the Powerful: Marxism, Crime and Deviance

Author:   Steven Bittle (University of Ottawa, Canada) ,  Laureen Snider (Queen's University, Canada) ,  Steve Tombs (Open University, UK) ,  David Whyte (Liverpool University, UK)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367482954


Pages:   342
Publication Date:   31 March 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Revisiting Crimes of the Powerful: Marxism, Crime and Deviance


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Author:   Steven Bittle (University of Ottawa, Canada) ,  Laureen Snider (Queen's University, Canada) ,  Steve Tombs (Open University, UK) ,  David Whyte (Liverpool University, UK)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   1.040kg
ISBN:  

9780367482954


ISBN 10:   0367482959
Pages:   342
Publication Date:   31 March 2021
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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 Contents

Foreword: Autobiographical Context for Crimes of the Powerful, Frank Pearce, Revisiting Crimes of the Powerful: An Introduction, Steven Bittle, Laureen Snider, Steve Tombs and David Whyte, Section I: Theoretical and conceptual excursions. 1. Conceptualisation, Theoretical Practice and Crimes of the Powerful, Jon Frauley, 2. Law: Ideological Whitewashing and Positive Enabling of Coercion, Harry Glasbeek, 3. Underworld as Servant and Smokescreen: Crimes of the Powerful and the Evolution of Organized Crime Control, Michael Woodiwiss, 4. Shadow Boxing against the Crimes of the Powerful, Margaret Beare, 5. Between Force and Consensus, Vincenzo Ruggiero, 6. Developing Pearce’s New Materialism, Nick Hardy, 7. ‘Expropriative’ Sacrifice and Zombie Capitalism: A Radical Durkheimian Approach, Ronjon Paul Datta, 8. Power, Crime and Enclosure: Capital Accumulation in the Twilight of the Neoliberal SSA, Raymond Michalowski, Section II: Crimes of the Powerful Research: Empirical Dimensions. 9. Marx Reloaded for the 21st Century: Capitalism, Agency and the Crimes of the Powerful, Kristian Lasslett, 10. The Imaginary Social Order of Corporate Criminal Liability, Liisa Lähteenmäki and Anne Alvesalo-Kuusi, 11. Global Capital, the Rigging of Interbank Interest Rates, and the Capitalist State, Gregg Barak, 12. Pipelines, Presidents and People Power: Resisting State-Corporate Environmental Crime, Elizabeth A. Bradshaw, 13. Pesticeland: Brazil’s Poison Market, Stéfanie Khoury, 14. No Criminology of Wage Theft: Revisiting ‘Workplace Theft’ to Expose Capitalist Exploitation, Paul Leighton, 15. Prying into the Pockets of Public Figures, Scott Poynting, 16. Crimes of the Powerful and the Spanish Crisis, Ignasi Bernat, 17. Crimes of Globalization and Asian Dam Projects: Powerful Institutions and Slow Violence, David O. Friedrichs, Section III: New Developments in Crimes of the Powerful Research. 18. An Extension of Frank Pearce’s Work on Crimes of the Powerful: ‘Demystification’ and the Role of Our Consent, Dawn L. Rothe and Victoria E. Collins, 19. Debtfarism, Predatory Lending and Imaginary Social Orders: The Case of the US Payday Lending Industry, Susanne Soederberg, 20. Failure to Protect: State Obligations to Victims and State Crime, Laura Finley, 21. ‘Punitive Reformation’: State-Sanctioned Labour Through Criminal Justice and Welfare, Jon Burnett, 22. Imperialism: The General Theory of Crimes of the Powerful, Biko Agozino, 23. Frank Pearce and Colonial State Crimes: Contributions to a research agenda, Jose Atiles, 24. Organized Irresponsibility, Corporations, and the Contradictions of Collective Agency and Individual Culpability, Dean Curran

Reviews

It is high time for a reboot of Crimes of the Powerful and this authoritative anthology accomplishes that task. The editors have rejuvenated a text at risk of becoming criminology’s most prophetic yet esoteric treatise: the foundational and ground-breaking Marxist analysis of corporate crime. - George S. Rigakos, Professor of the Political Economy of Policing, Department of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University, Canada Building on the pioneering research of Frank Pearce, this timely collection demonstrates convincingly that power and crime are intimately linked. Critical, rigorous, and precise, it offers fresh ways of seeing our deeply troubled world and provides intelligent remedies for our real crime problem. - Vincent Mosco, author of Becoming Digital: Toward a Post-Internet Society


It is high time for a reboot of Crimes of the Powerful and this authoritative anthology accomplishes that task. The editors have rejuvenated a text at risk of becoming criminology's most prophetic yet esoteric treatise: the foundational and ground-breaking Marxist analysis of corporate crime. - George S. Rigakos, Professor of the Political Economy of Policing, Department of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University, Canada Building on the pioneering research of Frank Pearce, this timely collection demonstrates convincingly that power and crime are intimately linked. Critical, rigorous, and precise, it offers fresh ways of seeing our deeply troubled world and provides intelligent remedies for our real crime problem. - Vincent Mosco, author of Becoming Digital: Toward a Post-Internet Society


It is high time for a reboot of Crimes of the Powerful and this authoritative anthology accomplishes that task. The editors have rejuvenated a text at risk of becoming criminology's most prophetic yet esoteric treatise: the foundational and ground-breaking Marxist analysis of corporate crime. - George S. Rigakos, Professor of the Political Economy of Policing, Department of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University, Canada Building on the pioneering research of Frank Pearce, this timely collection demonstrates convincingly that power and crime are intimately linked. Critical, rigorous, and precise, it offers fresh ways of seeing our deeply troubled world and provides intelligent remedies for our real crime problem. - Vincent Mosco, author of Becoming Digital: Toward a Post-Internet Society


Author Information

Steven Bittle is an Associate Professor of Criminology at the University of Ottawa, Canada Laureen Snider is an Emeritus Professor of Sociology at Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Steve Tombs is Professor of Criminology at The Open University, UK David Whyte is Professor of Socio-legal Studies at the School of Law and Social Justice, University of Liverpool, UK

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