Perspectives on Punishment
The Contours of Control
Edited by Sarah Armstrong and Lesley McAra
Table of Contents
Notes on Contributors
Foreword
Acknowledgements
1. Audience, borders, architecture: the contours of control, Sarah Armstrong and Lesley McAra
2. Ordinary anxieties and states of emergency: statecraft and spectatorship in the new politics of insecurity, Richard Sparks
3. Tony Martin and the nightbreakers: criminal law, victims and the power to punish, Lindsay Farmer
4. European identity, penal sensibilities and communities of sentiment, Evi Girling
5. Penalization, depoliticization, racialization: on the over-incarceration of immigrants in the European Union, Loïc Wacquant
6. Prisons during transition: promoting a common penal identity through international norms, Laura Piacentini
7. The globalization of control - towards a control system without a state?, Thomas Mathiesen
8. Welfare and punishment in comparative perspective, David Downes and Kirstine Hansen
9. Sentencing as a Social Practice, Neil Hutton
10. 'Architecture', criminal justice, and control, Richard Jones
11. Power, social control, and psychiatry: some critical reflections, Andrew Scull
12. Origins of actuarial justice, Malcolm Feeley
Notes on Contributors
Foreword
Acknowledgements
1. Audience, borders, architecture: the contours of control, Sarah Armstrong and Lesley McAra
2. Ordinary anxieties and states of emergency: statecraft and spectatorship in the new politics of insecurity, Richard Sparks
3. Tony Martin and the nightbreakers: criminal law, victims and the power to punish, Lindsay Farmer
4. European identity, penal sensibilities and communities of sentiment, Evi Girling
5. Penalization, depoliticization, racialization: on the over-incarceration of immigrants in the European Union, Loïc Wacquant
6. Prisons during transition: promoting a common penal identity through international norms, Laura Piacentini
7. The globalization of control - towards a control system without a state?, Thomas Mathiesen
8. Welfare and punishment in comparative perspective, David Downes and Kirstine Hansen
9. Sentencing as a Social Practice, Neil Hutton
10. 'Architecture', criminal justice, and control, Richard Jones
11. Power, social control, and psychiatry: some critical reflections, Andrew Scull
12. Origins of actuarial justice, Malcolm Feeley