Tracing the Relationship between Inequality, Crime and Punishment: Space, Time and Politics
Tracing the Relationship between Inequality, Crime and Punishment: Space, Time and Politics
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Abstract
The question of inequality has moved decisively to the top of the contemporary intellectual agenda. Going beyond Thomas Piketty’s focus on wealth, increasing inequalities of various kinds, and their impact on social, political and economic life, now present themselves among the most urgent issues facing scholars in the humanities and the social sciences. Key among these is the relationship between inequality, crime and punishment. The propositions that social inequality shapes crime and punishment, and that crime and punishment themselves cause or exacerbate inequality, are conventional wisdom. Yet, paradoxically, they are also controversial. In this volume, historians, criminologists, lawyers, sociologists and political scientists come together to try to solve this paradox by unpacking these relationships in different contexts. The causal mechanisms underlying these correlations call for investigation by means of a sustained programme of research bringing different disciplines to bear on the problem. This volume develops an interdisciplinary approach which builds on but goes beyond recent comparative and historical research on the institutional, cultural and political-economic factors shaping crime and punishment so as better to understand whether, and if so how and why, social and economic inequality influences levels and types of crime and punishment, and conversely whether crime and punishment shape inequalities.
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Front Matter
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1
Tracing the Links between Crime, Punishment, and Inequality: A Challenge for the Social Sciences
Nicola Lacey andDavid Soskice
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2
Inequality and Punishment: The Idiosyncrasies of the Political Economy of Punishment
Susanne Karstedt
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3
American Exceptionalism in Inequality and Poverty: A (Tentative) Historical Explanation
Nicola Lacey andDavid Soskice
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4
The Violence of Inequality: Race and Lobbying in the Politics of Crime and Criminal Justice in the United States
Sappho Xenakis andLeonidas K. Cheliotis
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5
Deplorable or Disposable? The Carceral State and ‘Breaking Bad’ in Rural America
Marie Gottschalk
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6
American Exceptionalism or Exceptionalism of the Americas? The Politics of Lethal Violence, Punishment, and Inequality
Lisa L. Miller
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7
The Political Economy of Punishment and the Penal State in Latin America
Manuel Iturralde
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8
Social Environments of Pervasive Incarceration: Lessons from Australia’s Top End
Bruce Western andCatherine Sirois
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9
Punishing Inequality: Notes on Social Worth from Sweden
Vanessa Barker
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10
Housing Inequalities, Crime, and the Criminal Justice System: The Shifting Context in England and Wales since the 1980s
Emily Gray and others
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11
From Ideologies, to Institutions, to Punishment: The Importance of Political Ideologies to the Political Economy of Punishment
Zelia A. Gallo
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12
Prison, Subordination, Inequality: Again on a Marxist Perspective
Dario Melossi
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13
Exploring the Relationship between Crime, Punishment, and Inequality: Some Afterthoughts on Method
Leonidas K. Cheliotis andSappho Xenakis
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14
Afterword: Unequal Punishment
Lucia Zedner
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End Matter
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