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Spain and Italy have recently become countries of large-scale
immigration. This provocative book explores immigration law and the
immigrant experience in these southern European nations, and
exposes the tension between the temporary and contingent legal
status of most immigrants, and the government emphasis on
integration. This book reveals that while law and the rhetoric of
policymakers stress the urgency of integration, not only are they
failing in that effort, but law itself plays a role in that
failure. In addressing this paradox, the author combines
theoretical insights and extensive data from myriad sources
collected over more than a decade to demonstrate the connections
among immigrants' role as cheap labor - carefully inscribed in law
- and their social exclusion, criminalization, and racialization.
Extrapolating from this economics of alterite, this book engages
more general questions of citizenship, belonging, race and
community in this global era.
Law and society is a rapidly growing field that turns the
conventional view of law as mythical abstraction on its head. Kitty
Calavita brilliantly brings to life the ways in which law is found
not only in statutes and courtrooms but in our institutions and
interactions, while inviting readers into conversations that
introduce the field's dominant themes and most lively
disagreements. Deftly interweaving scholarship with familiar
examples, Calavita shows how scholars in the discipline are
collectively engaged in a subversive expose of law's public
mythology. While surveying prominent issues and distinctive
approaches to both law as it is written and actual legal practices,
as well as the law's potential as a tool for social change, this
volume provides a view of law that is more real but just as
compelling as its mythic counterpart. With this second edition of
Invitation to Law and Society, Calavita brings up to date what is
arguably the leading introduction to this exciting, evolving field
of inquiry and adds a new chapter on the growing law and cultural
studies movement.
Law and society is a rapidly growing field that turns the
conventional view of law as mythical abstraction on its head. Kitty
Calavita brilliantly brings to life the ways in which law is found
not only in statutes and courtrooms but in our institutions and
interactions, while inviting readers into conversations that
introduce the field's dominant themes and most lively
disagreements. Deftly interweaving scholarship with familiar
examples, Calavita shows how scholars in the discipline are
collectively engaged in a subversive expose of law's public
mythology. While surveying prominent issues and distinctive
approaches to both law as it is written and actual legal practices,
as well as the law's potential as a tool for social change, this
volume provides a view of law that is more real but just as
compelling as its mythic counterpart. With this second edition of
Invitation to Law and Society, Calavita brings up to date what is
arguably the leading introduction to this exciting, evolving field
of inquiry and adds a new chapter on the growing law and cultural
studies movement.
Spain and Italy have recently become countries of large-scale
immigration. This provocative book explores immigration law and the
immigrant experience in these southern European nations, and
exposes the tension between the temporary and contingent legal
status of most immigrants, and the government emphasis on
integration. This book reveals that while law and the rhetoric of
policymakers stress the urgency of integration, not only are they
failing in that effort, but law itself plays a role in that
failure. In addressing this paradox, the author combines
theoretical insights and extensive data from myriad sources
collected over more than a decade to demonstrate the connections
among immigrants' role as cheap labor - carefully inscribed in law
- and their social exclusion, criminalization, and racialization.
Extrapolating from this economics of alterite, this book engages
more general questions of citizenship, belonging, race and
community in this global era.
Having gained unique access to California prisoners and corrections
officials and to thousands of prisoners' written grievances and
institutional responses, Kitty Calavita and Valerie Jenness take us
inside one of the most significant, yet largely invisible,
institutions in the United States. Drawing on sometimes startlingly
candid interviews with prisoners and prison staff, as well as on
official records, the authors walk us through the byzantine
grievance process, which begins with prisoners filing claims and
ends after four levels of review, with corrections officials
usually denying requests for remedies. Appealing to Justice is both
an unprecedented study of disputing in an extremely asymmetrical
setting and a rare glimpse of daily life inside this most closed of
institutions. Quoting extensively from their interviews with
prisoners and officials, the authors give voice to those who are
almost never heard from. These voices unsettle conventional wisdoms
within the sociological literature for example, about the
reluctance of vulnerable and/or stigmatized populations to name
injuries and file claims, and about the relentlessly adversarial
subjectivities of prisoners and correctional officials and they do
so with striking poignancy. Ultimately, Appealing to Justice
reveals a system fraught with impediments and dilemmas, which
delivers neither justice, nor efficiency, nor constitutional
conditions of confinement.
The recognized socio-legal study of the Bracero labor program, why
it failed, and what that means to immigration policy and
organizational theory. Professor Calavita unearthed long-buried INS
and Congressional records, and conducted extensive personal
interviews of the people involved, to figure out why this program
of temporary farmworkers, which dominated for more than two decades
in the Southwest U.S., ultimately collapsed. Her findings say a lot
about the catch-22 of migration and labor, as well as refuting
stereotypic political theory of agency "capture" to explain the
program's demise. They also tell a fascinating methodological story
of entrenched agencies and the sheer archaeology of stubborn
research into vested interests and bureaucratic inertia. This book
has been adopted in many college classes over the years, and now is
available in its 2010 edition with the author's new Foreword as
part of the Classics of Law and Society Series: a classic book with
continuing substantive and methodological value. As the Foreword
notes, worries about immigration and labor persist, as does basic
dysfunction of the present form of INS. Digging deeper reveals the
persistence of a structural tension between popular perceptions of
immigration, the needs for agricultural labor, and the dynamics
inside the state's administrative structures -- in fact the human
actors, she emphasizes -- that deal with these controversial
issues. Also available in high-quality digital and ebook formats
from Quid Pro, for flexible classroom adoptions and worldwide
accessibility.
At a cost of $500 billion to American taxpayers, the savings and
loan debacle of the 1980s was the worst financial crisis of the
twentieth century as well as a crime unparalleled in American
history. Yet the vast majority of its perpetrators will never be
prosecuted, and those who were have received minimal sentences. In
the first in-depth scrutiny of the ways and means of this disaster,
this groundbreaking book comes to disturbing conclusions about the
deliberate nature of this financial fraud, the political collusion
involved, and the leniency of the criminal justice system in
dealing with these 'Gucci-clad white-collar criminals'. Using
material from over one hundred interviews with government officials
and industry leaders and recently declassified documents, the
authors show how - contrary to previous government and 'expert'
explanations that chalked the disaster up to business risks gone
awry or adverse economic conditions - S&L leaders engaged in
deliberate fraud, stealing from their own corporations to speculate
on high-risk ventures. Tempted by the insurance net, perpetrators
looted their own institutions in a new kind of white-collar crime
the authors dub 'collective embezzlement'. "Big Money Crime" also
demonstrates how systematic political collusion - not just policy
errors - was a critical ingredient in this unprecedented series of
frauds. Bringing together statistics from a variety of government
agencies, the authors provide a close reading of the track record
of prosecutions and sentencing and find that 'suite crime' receives
much more lenient treatment than 'street crime', despite its
significantly higher price tag. The book concludes with a number of
modest, but no less urgent, policy recommendations to counter the
current deregulatory trend and to avert a replay of the S&L
debacle in other financial sectors. From the book: 'We built thick
walls; we have cameras; we have time clocks on the vaults ...all
these controls were to protect against somebody stealing the cash.
Well, you can steal far more money, and take it out the back door.
The best way to rob a bank is to own one' - House Committee on
Government Operations, 1988.
Having gained unique access to California prisoners and corrections
officials and to thousands of prisoners' written grievances and
institutional responses, Kitty Calavita and Valerie Jenness take us
inside one of the most significant, yet largely invisible,
institutions in the United States. Drawing on sometimes startlingly
candid interviews with prisoners and prison staff, as well as on
official records, the authors walk us through the byzantine
grievance process, which begins with prisoners filing claims and
ends after four levels of review, with corrections officials
usually denying requests for remedies. Appealing to Justice is both
an unprecedented study of disputing in an extremely asymmetrical
setting and a rare glimpse of daily life inside this most closed of
institutions. Quoting extensively from their interviews with
prisoners and officials, the authors give voice to those who are
almost never heard from. These voices unsettle conventional wisdoms
within the sociological literature for example, about the
reluctance of vulnerable and/or stigmatized populations to name
injuries and file claims, and about the relentlessly adversarial
subjectivities of prisoners and correctional officials and they do
so with striking poignancy. Ultimately, Appealing to Justice
reveals a system fraught with impediments and dilemmas, which
delivers neither justice, nor efficiency, nor constitutional
conditions of confinement.
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