The International Journal of Crime, Justice & Social Democracy has just released the first issue for 2017 which is a special edition on Southern Criminology.
Knowledge is a commodity and knowledge production does not occur in a geo-political vacuum. The geo-politics of knowledge is unequally skewed, privileging the global north – Anglophone social sciences. Southern criminology as a democratising project aims to address this. This special issue provides a space for interaction between diverse global voices – read on and share widely. Its free to download.
Vol 6 No 1 (2017): International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy
- Editorial
Southern Criminology: Guest Editors’ Introduction - The Four Ways of Eco-global Criminology
Rob White - Confronting the North’s South: On Race and Violence in the United States
Elliot Currie - Seagull Syndrome: Relationships between Patrol Workers and Government Officials in NSW, Australia
Amanda Jayne Porter - The Evidence of What Cannot Be Heard: Reading Trauma into and Testimony against the Witness Stand at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
Julia Viebach - The Asian Criminological Paradigm and How It Links Global North and South: Combining an Extended Conceptual Toolbox from the North with Innovative Asian Contexts
Jianhong Liu - Punishment, Democracy and Transitional Justice in Argentina (1983-2015)
Diego Arturo Zysman Quirós - Navigating Violence: Fear and Everyday Life in Colombia and Mexico
Helen Berents, Charlotte ten Have - The Place of Rural in a Southern Criminology
Joseph Francis Donnermeyer
Dossier: Postneoliberalism and Penalty in South America
- Postneoliberalism and Penality in South America: By Way of Introduction
Maximo Sozzo - Public Security, Criminal Policy and Sentencing in Brazil during the Lula and Dilma Governments, 2003-2014: Changes and Continuities
Ana Claudia Cifali, Rodrigo Ghiringhelli de Azevedo - Chavism and Criminal Policy in Venezuela, 1999-2014
Martha Lia Grajales, Maria Lucrecia Hernández - The ‘Iron Fist’ of the Citizens’ Revolution: The Punitive Turn of Ecuadorian Left-wing Politics
Jorge Vicente Paladines - A Postneoliberal Turn? Variants of the Recent Penal Policy in Argentina
Maximo Sozzo
Comments are closed.