The
Justice Juggernaut
Price: $21.95
Subtitle: Fighting Street Crime,
Controlling Citizens
Author: Diana R. Gordon
Subject: Criminology
Paper ISBN 0-8135-1478-9
Pages: 366 pp.
Description:
"Argues convincingly that the conditions that produce our
exceptionally high levels of crime are not, and cannot be,
significantly remedied by the machinery of surveillance, apprehension,
and punishment."--New York Times Book Review
"Gordon argues in her timely and interesting book that fear
of crime has become a central feature of our nation's symbolic
politics. . . . [Her] analysis is broadly historical and theoretical,
invoking Foucault and Durkheim and the social construction of
crime."--Contemporary Sociology
"A sophisticated analysis of recent government attempts to
control street crime."--Library Journal
"Gordon's well-researched and profoundly explicit work raises
some vexing ethical, legal, and public policy questions regarding the
so-called 'get tough' philosophy in criminal justice practice over the
past quarter century. . . . Should be required reading for students of
criminal justice and policymakers at all levels."--Choice
"This is an important and timely book. Professor Gordon
uncovers the symbolic power and substantive hollowness of today's 'get
tough' approaches to crime and charts the disturbing growth of
government surveillance."--Congressman Don Edwards
"Gordon ironically makes good use of one of the fruits of all
this troubling 'netwidening': detailed, recent, good-quality, and
usually national data on crime, offenders, and the activities of
various elements of the criminal justice system. She skillfully weaves
this data into descriptive portraits of the system in action."--Wesley
G. Skogan, Political Science Quarterly
Diana R. Gordon is an associate professor of political
science at City College, City University of New York, and a past
president of the National Council on Crime and Delinquency.
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Price: $21.95
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