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Violence, Inequality, and Human Freedom is a sociological
introduction to the study of violence that looks at violence on
three different levels-structural, institutional, and
interpersonal. The third edition is updated throughout, including a
new chapter on educational violence and revised sections on
economic and international violence.
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State Crime - Current Perspectives (Hardcover, New)
Dawn Rothe, Christopher Mullins; Introduction by M.Cherif Bassiouni; Foreword by William Chambliss; Contributions by Gregg Barak, …
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There is no limit to the number of crimes--including acts of
genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, piracy, drug
smuggling, governmental corruption and illegal intelligence
gathering--committed by various national governments. In STATE
CRIME, the volume editors gather together some of the best new
research on state transgressions, in addition to asking senior
scholars to reflect on their past research and bring it up to
date.The first section of the book features a well-rounded set of
cases exemplifying state criminality, including an examination of
the Holocaust through a criminological framework, and a look at the
illegal aggressions committed by the US army in Iraq. The second
section of the book focuses on various methods for controlling
these governmental transgressions, including domestic legal
sanctions and also international enforcers such as the
International Court of Human Rights. Contributors to this section
of the book examine worldwide policies, such as the international
rule against the assassination of regime elites regardless of the
acts of aggression and criminality committed by them. The book taps
into a previously overloked area that is most relevant for
understanding what policies or responses to governmental crime
would be most effective in constraining the worst acts.
Contributors include leading scholars in criminology such as Ray
Michalowski, David Friedrichs, and Peter Iadicola.
Violence: The Enduring Problem, by Alex Alvarez and Ronet Bachman
*Paper, Sage 2007, $52.95, 360 pg. (9781412916851), 124 PA, 75 BS,
Pubtrack Spring & Summer 2007 -- Fall 2011: 1120 new units (714
used) *Focuses on violent crime, less discussion of international
or structural violence. Violence and Society, edited by Matthew
Silberman *Paper, Prentice Hall, 2002, $82.80, 364 pg.
(9780130967732), 27 PA, 57 BS, Pubtrack Spring & Summer 2007 --
Fall 2011: 272 new units (214 used) *A reader that looks at many
kinds of violence. Criminal Violence: Patterns, Causes, and
Prevention, by Marc Riedel and Wayne Welch *2nd edition, Paper,
Oxford, 2007, $49.95, 400 pg (9780195332483), 61 PA, 174 BS,
Pubtrack Spring & Summer 2007 -- Fall 2011: 1654 new units
(1086 used) *3rd edition, Oxford, 2011, $54.95, 384 pg.,
(978-0199738786). Pubtrack Fall 2010 -- Fall 2011: 507 new units
(153 used) *Only discusses criminal violence, not the full range of
individual and structural violence that our book includes. Violence
and Nonviolence: Pathways to Understanding, by Gregg Barak *Paper,
Sage, 2003, $69.9 5, 360 pg (9780761926962), 116 PA, 145 BS,
Pubtrack Spring & Summer 2007 -- Fall 2011: 276 new units (336
used) *We are publishing a second edition of this book in spring
2013. Promote together?
There is no limit to the number of crimes--including acts of
genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, piracy, drug
smuggling, governmental corruption and illegal intelligence
gathering--committed by various national governments. In STATE
CRIME, the volume editors gather together some of the best new
research on state transgressions, in addition to asking senior
scholars to reflect on their past research and bring it up to
date.The first section of the book features a well-rounded set of
cases exemplifying state criminality, including an examination of
the Holocaust through a criminological framework, and a look at the
illegal aggressions committed by the US army in Iraq. The second
section of the book focuses on various methods for controlling
these governmental transgressions, including domestic legal
sanctions and also international enforcers such as the
International Court of Human Rights. Contributors to this section
of the book examine worldwide policies, such as the international
rule against the assassination of regime elites regardless of the
acts of aggression and criminality committed by them. The book taps
into a previously overloked area that is most relevant for
understanding what policies or responses to governmental crime
would be most effective in constraining the worst acts.
Contributors include leading scholars in criminology such as Ray
Michalowski, David Friedrichs, and Peter Iadicola.
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