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This timely Research Handbook offers significant insights into an
understudied subject, bringing together a broad range of
socio-legal studies of medicine to help answer complex and
interdisciplinary questions about global health - a major challenge
of our time. Interdisciplinary chapters explore both how the
terrain of medicine can generate new questions about law,
regulation and the state, and how the law intersects with health
and medicine at every level. Bringing together leading
international scholars, the Research Handbook assembles concrete
case studies to suggest avenues for further research on socio-legal
inquiries, such as the construction of disorders by law, the
reparation of injuries, and how race and gender impact justice. The
Research Handbook for Socio-Legal Studies of Medicine and Health
will be an inspiring read for researchers, academics and graduate
students in the fields of health law, socio-legal studies, and
gender and sexuality. Contributors include: P. Arcidiacono, J.
Barbot, L. Barrera, E. Bernheim, E. Brennan, B. Can, E. Chiarello,
E. Cloatre, V. De Greef, N. Dodier, A. Doll, J. Edwards, A.-M.
Farrell, J.A. Hamilton, R. Harding, J. Harrington, H.R. Hlavka,
C.W.-L. Ho, K. Hoeyer, I. Iyioha, M.-A. Jacob, V. Karavas, A.
Kirkland, J. Metzl, D. Moore, C. Morrill, L. Mulcahy, S. Mulla, T.
Phillips, J. Piemonte, R. Singh, M. Suchman, M. Thomson, S.
Westwood
"Constructing Crime" examines the central question: Why do
we
define and enforce particular behaviours as crimes and target
particular individuals as criminals?
To answer this question, contributors interrogate notions of
crime,
processes of criminalization, and the deployment of the concept
of
crime in five radically different sites. Two studies of fraud
against
welfare recipients and physicians illustrate that uneven
enforcement of
the law can leave the privileged with a sense of entitlement and
the
marginalized with an imposed criminal self-concept. An examination
of
the enforcement of laws against Aboriginal harvesting practices
offers
yet another example of how the threat of prosecution can be used
to
criminalize cultural practices, while a study of public housing
reveals
that its form can influence how residents respond to disorder.
Lastly,
a case study on gambling reveals just how malleable the criminal
law
and definitions of crime can be.
By demonstrating that how crime is defined and enforced is
connected
to social location and status, these interdisciplinary cases and
an
afterword by Marie-Andree Bertrand challenge us to consider just
who is
rendered criminal and why. This timely volume will appeal to
policy
makers and students and practitioners of law, criminology,
and
sociology.
"
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