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Power, Crime and Mystification


Power, Crime and Mystification

Paperback by Box, Steven

Power, Crime and Mystification

£47.99

ISBN:
9780415045728
Publication Date:
24 Nov 1983
Language:
English
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:
Routledge
Pages:
272 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 7 May 2024
Power, Crime and Mystification

Description

Power, Crime, and Mystification is one of the classics of radical criminology -a compelling account of how power and powerlessness operate within the criminal justice system. Questioning the orthodox view that it is powerlessness that leads to serious criminal behaviour, Steven Box focuses on the serious crimes committed by those in positions of power and privilege, particularly in government agencies and multinational corporations. He also points out that some relatively powerless groups, such as women, hardly commit any serious crimes at all. He suggests that crime can be the extreme form of otherwise socially sanctioned behaviour and, in taking this approach, provides coherent answers to the questions How does a society define crime? and 'What is the difference between justice and social control?. A major implication of Steven Box's stimulating analysis is that definitions of serious crime, the criminal justice process, and government penal policies are all in need of review. So far these have been more concerned with regulating, controlling, and demoralizing relatively powerless groups than with tackling real crime.

Contents

Preface 1 Crime, power, and ideological mystification 2 Corporate crime 3 Police crime 4 Rape and sexual assaults on females 5 Powerlessness and crime-the case of female crime 6 Crime, power, and justice

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