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Policing Sex Crimes offers an overview of the affordances and
difficulties of investigating and responding to sex crimes in
contemporary digital society. The simplest to most complex sex
crimes investigations can (and often do) have a digital component.
Such a digital society creates a number of inter- and
intra-organizational challenges in terms of investigation of sex
offenses and response to victims of sex crimes. In the proposed
text, the authors elucidate laws defining sex crimes across
international contexts and examine the different ways nation states
have responded to digital sex crimes and related digital
communication technologies via laws, policies, and practices. They
draw on 70 interviews with sex crime investigators to document the
effects of digital sex crimes on the policing profession and the
broader police organizations that sex crime investigators work.
Lastly, they explore how victims are interpreted by police officers
and the challenges they face achieving justice in the wake of
sexual victimization.
Since the 1960s, the field of victimology has developed into a
variegated discipline with its own theoretical and methodological
traditions. In the early 1990s two texts were published-Towards a
Critical Victimology (Fattah, 1992) and Critical Victimology (Mawby
and Walklate, 1994)-that concretized critical victimology as a
paradigm within victimology. Since then, the field has remained
conceptually stale and with few a few exceptions there has not been
a considerable lacuna of works from a critical perspective.
Reconceptualizing Critical Victimology: Interventions and
Possibilities provides a rejoinder to the two aforementioned texts
and demonstrate how critical victimology can be reconceptualized,
where interventions can be made in this victimological paradigm,
and possibilities for future theorizing and research in this
provocative field. Reconceptualizing Critical Victimology includes
eleven papers on the forms of victimization and issues pertinent to
victims written by leading and emerging international scholars in
the field of critical victimology. It is interdisciplinary in scope
and contains contributions from leading and emergent international
scholars on victims and victimization. Reconceptualizing Critical
Victimology serves as a crucible to demonstrate the complexities of
and the multitude of factors that interact to complicate victim
status, the vagaries of victim response, and the phenomenology of
violence and victimization.
Since the 1960s, the field of victimology has developed into a
variegated discipline with its own theoretical and methodological
traditions. In the early 1990s two texts were published-Towards a
Critical Victimology (Fattah, 1992) and Critical Victimology (Mawby
and Walklate, 1994)-that concretized critical victimology as a
paradigm within victimology. Since then, the field has remained
conceptually stale and with few a few exceptions there has not been
a considerable lacuna of works from a critical perspective.
Reconceptualizing Critical Victimology: Interventions and
Possibilities provides a rejoinder to the two aforementioned texts
and demonstrate how critical victimology can be reconceptualized,
where interventions can be made in this victimological paradigm,
and possibilities for future theorizing and research in this
provocative field. Reconceptualizing Critical Victimology includes
eleven papers on the forms of victimization and issues pertinent to
victims written by leading and emerging international scholars in
the field of critical victimology. It is interdisciplinary in scope
and contains contributions from leading and emergent international
scholars on victims and victimization. Reconceptualizing Critical
Victimology serves as a crucible to demonstrate the complexities of
and the multitude of factors that interact to complicate victim
status, the vagaries of victim response, and the phenomenology of
violence and victimization.
This collection investigates the world of nineteenth-century Quaker
women, bringing to light the issues and challenges Quaker women
experienced and the dynamic ways in which they were active agents
of social change, cultural contestation, and gender transgression
in the nineteenth century. New research illuminates the
complexities of Quaker testimonies of equality, slavery, and peace
and how they were informed by questions of gender, race, ethnicity,
and culture. The essays in this volume challenge the view that
Quaker women were always treated equally with men and that people
of color were welcomed into white Quaker activities. The
contributors explore how diverse groups of Quaker women navigated
the intersection of their theological positions and social
conventions, asking how they both challenged and supported
traditional ideals of gender, race, and class. In doing so, this
volume highlights the complexity of nineteenth-century Quakerism
and the ways Quaker women put their faith to both expansive and
limiting ends. Reaching beyond existing national studies focused
solely on white American or British Quaker women, this
interdisciplinary volume presents the most current research,
providing a necessary and foundational resource for scholars,
libraries, and universities. In addition to the editors, the
contributors to this volume include Joan Allen, Richard C. Allen,
Stephen W. Angell, Jennifer M. Buck, Nancy Jiwon Cho, Isabelle
Cosgrave, Thomas D. Hamm, Julie L. Holcomb, Anna Vaughan Kett, Emma
Lapsansky-Werner, Linda Palfreeman, Hannah Rumball, and Janet
Scott.
The sociology of emotions has recently undergone a renaissance,
raising new questions for the social sciences: How should we define
and study emotions? How are emotions related to perennial
sociological debates about structure, power, and agency? Emotions
Matter brings together leading international scholars to build on
and extend sociological understandings of emotions. Moving beyond
reductionist approaches that frame emotions as idiosyncratic states
of mind, the scholars in this collection conceptualize emotions as
the experience of social relations. Empirical and theoretical
chapters demonstrate how emotions relate to sociological theories
of interaction, the body, gender, and communication. Pushing the
boundaries of sociology and stimulating debate for related fields,
Emotions Matter offers diverse relational approaches that
illustrate the crucial importance of emotions to the sociological
imagination.
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