The new regulatory state and the transformation of criminology

The forms of government and social relations that increasingly characterize contemporary society are giving rise to new ways of thinking about crime and crime control. In particular it is argued that although the discipline of criminology is currently well established in institutional terms, the int...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:  
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Braithwaite, John 1951- (Autor)
Tipo de documento: Print Artículo
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2000
En: The British journal of criminology
Año: 2000, Volumen: 40, Número: 2, Páginas: 222-238
Journals Online & Print:
Gargar...
Verificar disponibilidad: HBZ Gateway
Palabras clave:

MARC

LEADER 00000caa a22000002c 4500
001 1640118330
003 DE-627
005 20220608131141.0
007 tu
008 160223s2000 xx ||||| 00| ||eng c
035 |a (DE-627)1640118330 
035 |a (DE-576)456056033 
035 |a (DE-599)BSZ456056033 
040 |a DE-627  |b ger  |c DE-627  |e rakwb 
041 |a eng 
100 1 |a Braithwaite, John  |d 1951-  |0 (DE-588)131504258  |0 (DE-627)51015445X  |0 (DE-576)160400392  |4 aut 
109 |a Braithwaite, John 1951-  |a Braithwaite, John B. 1951-  |a Braithwaite, John Bradford 1951-  |a Bradford Braithwaite, John 1951-  |a Braithwait, John 1951- 
245 1 4 |a The new regulatory state and the transformation of criminology  |c John Braithwaite 
264 1 |c 2000 
336 |a Text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent 
337 |a ohne Hilfsmittel zu benutzen  |b n  |2 rdamedia 
338 |a Band  |b nc  |2 rdacarrier 
520 |a The forms of government and social relations that increasingly characterize contemporary society are giving rise to new ways of thinking about crime and crime control. In particular it is argued that although the discipline of criminology is currently well established in institutional terms, the intellectual tools of the discipline are of diminishing relevance to the social world that is now emerging. The article describes the major developmental trends in government policy as involving a shift from a welfare state, governed by Keynesian techniques of demand management to a new form of regulatory state, premised upon a neo-liberal combination of market competition, privatized institutions, and decentred, at-a-distance forms of state regulation. These new styles of governance are premised upon a recognition of new social forces and mentalities, particularly of the globalizing logic of risk management, and they will increasingly reconfigure the social and political fields in ways that have consequences for the policing and control of crime. Criminology's traditional focus upon street crimes and the institutions of police, courts and prisons may be decreasingly relevant to the new harms, risks and mechanisms of control that are emerging today. The innovative work of regulatory state scholars' such as Clifford Shearing is identified as pushing criminology in new directions that confound the discipline's traditional boundaries but which give it more leverage in the attempt to understand and respond to the control problems of the end of the century. The possibilities for restorative justice in the new context are also discussed, as are other methods for combating insecurity, and both are linked to the importance of developing forms of local knowledge that are informed by a sense of the global development context. It is argued that the Keynesian state has been replaced by a new regulatory state that is a more Hayekian response to a risk society. Clifford Shearing is identified as a criminological theorist who has come to terms with these developments, especially in his collaborations with Phillip Stenning, David Bayley, Tony Doob and his colleagues at the Community Peace Foundation in Cape Town. Shearing et al. are forging a new paradigm that incorporates the restorative justice paradigm which might just transcend criminology and become something of general import to the social sciences 
773 0 8 |i In  |t The British journal of criminology  |d Oxford : Univ. Press, 1960  |g 40(2000), 2, Seite 222-238  |w (DE-627)129851361  |w (DE-600)280389-6  |w (DE-576)015150712  |x 0007-0955  |7 nnas 
773 1 8 |g volume:40  |g year:2000  |g number:2  |g pages:222-238 
776 1 |o 10.1093/bjc/40.2.222 
935 |a mkri 
951 |a AR 
ELC |b 1 
LOK |0 000 xxxxxcx a22 zn 4500 
LOK |0 001 3301456235 
LOK |0 003 DE-627 
LOK |0 004 1640118330 
LOK |0 005 20250516153915 
LOK |0 008 160208||||||||||||||||ger||||||| 
LOK |0 040   |a DE-21-110  |c DE-627  |d DE-21-110 
LOK |0 689   |a s  |a Kriminologische Themen 
LOK |0 689   |a s  |a Kriminologie 
LOK |0 689   |a s  |a Gesellschaftlicher Wandel 
LOK |0 852   |a DE-21-110 
LOK |0 852 1  |m p  |9 00 
LOK |0 935   |a k110 
LOK |0 938   |k p 
ORI |a WA-MARC-krimdoka001.raw