Cutting the Edge

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Angela West Crews
Category=JKV
Christopher W. Mullins
class structure analysis
collar
Community Punishment
Contemporary Society
Convict Criminology
Corporate Crime
criminology
critical
Critical Criminological Analysis
Critical Criminological Perspective
Critical Criminology
cultural
Cultural Criminology
David O. Friedrichs
Dawn L. Rothe
Drug Courts
Effective Juvenile Justice
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic research methods
Feminist Criminology
feminist legal theory
Human Suffering
Jeanne Flavin
Jeff Ferrell
Juvenile Justice
Juvenile Justice Interventions
Juvenile Justice Policy
Keith Hayward
Left Realism
Liz Elliott
Peacemaking Criminology
penal system inequality
Preston Elrod
Radical Criminology
Restorative Justice
Restorative Justice Program
Sentencing Guidelines
social justice reform
State Corporate Crime
Stephen C. Richards
Supranational Criminology
Therapeutic Jurisprudence
transformative justice approaches
Vincenzo Ruggiero
white
White Collar Crime
youth crime intervention

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138521919
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Understanding crime, criminals, and criminal justice from a radical/critical perspective is indispensable in today's academic, applied research, and policy sectors. Neglect of this approach leads to narrow-mindedness and the probability of repeating past mistakes or reinventing the wheel. Cutting the Edge by Jeffrey Ian Ross will encourage individuals and organizations, especially students and instructors, to innovatively identify ways of experimenting with new policy initiatives designed to improve not only criminal justice, but social and human justice as well.

Ross has significantly changed this volume to include six new chapters and three revised ones as well. The studies chosen demonstrate the difference between critical criminology and other approaches used to study and explain criminological phenomena. The authors do not approach the inequalities of the criminal justice system as phenomena that should be studied, but as wrongs that must be righted.

Cutting-edge critical criminology combines concerns about fairness in punishment, tools of class analysis and the insights of feminism, postmodernism, and ethnography. The authors included here wield these newer tools with elegance and enthusiasm. Written with passion by experts in the field, the book engages the mind as fully as it engages the emotions.