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The Routledge Handbook on Africana Criminologies plugs a gaping
hole in criminological literature, which remains dominated by work
on Europe and settler-colonial locations at the expense of
neocolonial locations and at a huge cost to the discipline that
remains relatively underdeveloped. It is well known that
criminology is thriving in Europe and settler-colonial locations
while people of African descent remain marginalized in the
discipline. This handbook therefore defines and explores this field
within criminology, moving away from the colonialist approach of
offering administrative criminology about policing, courts, and
prisons and making a case for decolonizing the wider discipline.
Arranged in five parts, it outlines Africana criminologies, maps
its emergence, and addresses key themes such as slavery,
colonialism, and apartheid as crimes against humanity; critiques of
imperialist reason; Africana cultural criminology; and theories of
law enforcement and Africana people. Coalescing a diverse range of
voices from Africa and the diaspora, the handbook explores outside
Eurocentric canons in order to learn from the experiences,
struggles, and contributions of people of African descent. Offering
innovative ways of theorizing and explaining the criminological
crises that face Africa and the entire world with the view of
contributing to a more humane world, this groundbreaking handbook
is essential reading for criminologists and sociologists worldwide,
as well as scholars of Africana studies and African studies.
Abolish Criminology presents critical scholarship on criminology
and criminal justice ideologies and practices, alongside emerging
freedom-driven visions and practices for new world formations. The
book introduces readers to a detailed history and analysis of crime
as a concept and its colonizing trajectories into existence and
enforcement. These significant contexts buried within peculiar
academic histories and classroom practices are often overlooked or
unknown outside academic and public discussions, causing the impact
of racializing-gendering-sexualizing histories to extend and grow
through criminology’s creation of crime, extending how the
concept is weaponized and enforced through the criminal legal
system. It offers written, visual, and poetic teachings from the
perspectives of students, professors, imprisoned and formerly
imprisoned persons, and artists. This allows readers to engage in
multi-sensory, inter-disciplinary, and multi-perspective teachings
on criminology’s often discussed but seldom interrogated
mythologies on violence and danger, and their wide-reaching
enforcements through the criminal legal system’s research,
theories, agencies, and dominant cultures. Abolish Criminology
serves the needs of undergraduate and graduate students and
educators in the social sciences, arts, and humanities. It will
also appeal to scholars, researchers, policy makers, activists,
community organizers, social movement builders, and various reading
groups in the general public who are grappling with increased
critical public discourse on policing and criminal legal reform or
abolition.
Abolish Criminology presents critical scholarship on criminology
and criminal justice ideologies and practices, alongside emerging
freedom-driven visions and practices for new world formations. The
book introduces readers to a detailed history and analysis of crime
as a concept and its colonizing trajectories into existence and
enforcement. These significant contexts buried within peculiar
academic histories and classroom practices are often overlooked or
unknown outside academic and public discussions, causing the impact
of racializing-gendering-sexualizing histories to extend and grow
through criminology’s creation of crime, extending how the
concept is weaponized and enforced through the criminal legal
system. It offers written, visual, and poetic teachings from the
perspectives of students, professors, imprisoned and formerly
imprisoned persons, and artists. This allows readers to engage in
multi-sensory, inter-disciplinary, and multi-perspective teachings
on criminology’s often discussed but seldom interrogated
mythologies on violence and danger, and their wide-reaching
enforcements through the criminal legal system’s research,
theories, agencies, and dominant cultures. Abolish Criminology
serves the needs of undergraduate and graduate students and
educators in the social sciences, arts, and humanities. It will
also appeal to scholars, researchers, policy makers, activists,
community organizers, social movement builders, and various reading
groups in the general public who are grappling with increased
critical public discourse on policing and criminal legal reform or
abolition.
The Routledge Handbook on Africana Criminologies plugs a gaping
hole in criminological literature, which remains dominated by work
on Europe and settler-colonial locations at the expense of
neocolonial locations and at a huge cost to the discipline that
remains relatively underdeveloped. It is well known that
criminology is thriving in Europe and settler-colonial locations
while people of African descent remain marginalized in the
discipline. This handbook therefore defines and explores this field
within criminology, moving away from the colonialist approach of
offering administrative criminology about policing, courts, and
prisons and making a case for decolonizing the wider discipline.
Arranged in five parts, it outlines Africana criminologies, maps
its emergence, and addresses key themes such as slavery,
colonialism, and apartheid as crimes against humanity; critiques of
imperialist reason; Africana cultural criminology; and theories of
law enforcement and Africana people. Coalescing a diverse range of
voices from Africa and the diaspora, the handbook explores outside
Eurocentric canons in order to learn from the experiences,
struggles, and contributions of people of African descent. Offering
innovative ways of theorizing and explaining the criminological
crises that face Africa and the entire world with the view of
contributing to a more humane world, this groundbreaking handbook
is essential reading for criminologists and sociologists worldwide,
as well as scholars of Africana studies and African studies.
A Special Issue of the Journal of Prisoners on Prisons dedicated to
the Political Prisoners of the Black Panther Party and the Black
Liberation Army, in the words of the political prisoners
themselves, along with those in exile and former political
prisoners. Despite the criminal justice system's attempts to thwart
the content of this publication, submissions were collected,
experiences were recorded, and events, experiences and thoughts
occurring over the 40 years that have passed since the forming of
the Black Panther Party have been addressed in this issue of the
JPP.
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