RT Article T1 Critical genres and radical criminology in Britain JF The British journal of criminology VO 41 IS 1 SP 150 OP 167 A1 Pavlich, George LA English YR 2001 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1640119752 AB Analyses highlighting the genres of critique engaged by radical criminologists are comparatively rare. The few exceptions tend to associate radical criminological thinking with a grammar of critique that (i) establishes universal criteria, (ii) judges (con)texts against these and (iii) prescribes paths of action accordingly. This is an unfortunate tendency since it ties radical thought to an increasingly anachronistic genre of critique, and does not arrest the dwindling plight of critical approaches, or resist dominant technocratic discourses in criminology. In an attempt at redress, this paper identifies four alternate genres of critique in British radical criminology of the 1960s-70s, and shows how these could spawn a deconstructive ethos from which to develop critical analysis with renewed legitimacy K1 Kritische Kriminologie K1 England