ABSTRACT

Featuring contributions from scholars from across the globe, Routledge Handbook of Public Criminologies is a comprehensive resource that addresses the challenges related to public conversations around crime and policy. In an era of fake news, misguided rhetoric about immigrants and refugees, and efforts to toughen criminal laws, criminologists seeking to engage publicly around crime and policy arguably face an uphill battle. This handbook outlines the foundations of and developments in public criminology, underscoring the need to not only understand earlier ideas and debates, but also how scholars pursue public-facing work through various approaches. The first of its kind, this collection captures diverse and critical perspectives on the practices and challenges of actually doing public criminology.

The book presents real-world examples that help readers better understand the nature of public criminological work, as well as the structural and institutional barriers and enablers of engaging wider audiences. Contributors address policies around crime and crime control, media landscapes, and changing political dynamics. In examining attempts to bridge the gaps between scholarship, activism, and outreach, the essays featured here capture important tensions related to inequality and social difference, including the ways in which criminology can be complicit in perpetuating inequitable practices and structures, and how public criminology aims—but sometimes fails—to address them.

The depth and breadth of material in the book will appeal to a wide range of academics, students, and practitioners. It is an important resource for early career researchers, more established scholars, and professionals, with accessible content that can also be used in upper-level undergraduate classes.

Chapter 5 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license. 

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Public Criminology Reconsidered—An Invitation

part I|64 pages

The Emergence of Public Criminologies

chapter 1|10 pages

Everything Still to Play for

Revisiting “Public Criminologies: Diverse Perspectives on Academia and Policy”

chapter 2|13 pages

Re-thinking Public Criminology

Politics, Paradoxes, and Challenges

chapter 3|15 pages

Where Is the Public in Public Criminology?

Towards a Participatory Public Criminology

chapter 4|10 pages

The Challenge of Transformative Justice

Insurgent Knowledge and Public Criminology

chapter 5|14 pages

Articulation of Liberation Criminologies and Public Criminologies

Advancing a Countersystem Approach and Decolonization Paradigm

part II|58 pages

Engaging Publics

chapter 6|12 pages

A Revolution in Prosecution

The Campaign to End Mass Incarceration in Philadelphia

chapter 8|12 pages

Engaging the Public

Access to Justice for Those Most Vulnerable

chapter 9|13 pages

Public Feminist Criminologies

Reflections on the Activist-Scholar in Violence against Women Policy

chapter 10|11 pages

Liberating Abortion Pills in Legally Restricted Settings1

Activism as Public Criminology

part III|60 pages

Barriers and Challenges

chapter 11|8 pages

Strangers Within

Carving Out a Role for Engaged Scholarship in the University Space

chapter 12|11 pages

The Push and Pull of Going “Public”

Barriers and Risks to Mobilizing Criminological Knowledge

chapter 13|11 pages

Public Criminologyin China

Neither Public nor Criminology

part IV|56 pages

Critiques and Critical Reflections

chapter 16|10 pages

You’re a Criminologist? What Can You Offer Us?

Interrogating Criminological Expertise in the Context of White Collar Crime

chapter 17|10 pages

Our North Is the South

Lessons from Researching Police-Community Encounters in São Paulo and Los Angeles

part V|64 pages

Future Trajectories

chapter 21|10 pages

Starting the Conversation in the Classroom

Pedagogy as Public Criminology

chapter 22|12 pages

You Are on Indigenous Land

Acknowledgment and Action in Criminology

chapter 23|15 pages

Time to Think about Patriarchy?

Public Criminology in an Era of Misogyny

chapter 24|13 pages

Value-Responsible Design and Sexual Violence Interventions

Engaging Value-Hypotheses in Making the Criminological Imagination

chapter 25|12 pages

Abolitionism as a Philosophy of Hope

“Inside-Outsiders” and the Reclaiming of Democracy