فهرست مطالب :
CONVICT CRIMINOLOGY\nContents\nAcknowledgments\nPreface\nForeword by Shadd Maruna\n In praise of an unusual and obvious idea\n1. A personal introduction\n Acquiring convictions and qualifications\n Troubling ‘the convict’: doubtful convictions, colonial misgivings\n Culture, conscience and convictions\n Troubling and staggering: the boom in criminology\n The journey into convict criminology\n Using our imagination\n2. Born in the USA: early origins of convict criminology\n A ‘Wobblie’ start – Frank Tannenbaum: agitator, convict and criminologist\n Suitable public enemies: fear of a red planet\n The failure to refuse\n Saul Alinsky: Community organising with convictions, criminology without conviction\n Declining to be house trained\n3. US convict criminology comes of age\n Robbery and reading in Los Angeles: John Irwin\n Similar convictions, deadly differences: George Jackson\n Ideal prisons in turmoil\n 1997: here come the cons…\n Convincing misfits or the new criminology?\n Exemplars and dilemmas of convict criminology\n Ex-cons and sex cons: solidarity, collusions and evasions\n Taking criticism, moving on\n4. European origins, perspectives and experiences of convict criminology\n Peter Kropotkin and the first work of convict criminology\n Political convictions, criminal distinctions: comrades and criminals in prison\n Revolutionary cons: Gramsci and Serge\n Post-modern cons: Negri and Stiegler\n Paris ’68, Foucault and Groupes D’Information sur Prisoners (GIP): convincing convictions\n Revolting British prisons: PROP not Profs\n Viva KROM: the unfinished in Norway\n The crimes and politics of criminology\n5. Indelible stains: convict criminology and criminal records\n Experiencing disqualification: how old convictions trump new qualifications\n Spent convictions? The sad story of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974\n Minting stigma and handing out certificates: the Criminal Records Bureau\n Overtaken by events: tragedy by television\n Collateral damage, toxic contamination\n Moving shadows subject to monitoring\n Conviction and surveillance: Criminal record vetting internationally\n Not condemned to be free but free to be condemned\n6. Race, class, gender: agitate, educate, organise\n Punishing differences, securing hierarchies\n Simple truths, complex unities: articulation of race and class\n Post-race or new ethnicities\n Racialisation and the epistemology of ignorance\n Developing anti-racism in convict criminology\n Can I get a whiteniss?\n7. Methodologies, epistemologies, ontologies\n Giving and getting: the inside story\n Reflexivity and convict criminology\n Authenticity, masculinity and prison life\n Being inside, being alone, being possessed – and other worries\n Men of state and the state of men\n Being inside: prison with Levinas and Buber\n8. Concluding with convictions!\n England’s dreaming: class, convictions, criminology\n The business of criminology as usual: fail better\n Predicaments of auto-ethnography\n Stepping up for, or coming out with, convict criminology?\n Adding to the treachery of criminology\n Convict criminology: for a gendered criminology\nReferences\nIndex