Description
C. Wright Mills and the Criminological Imagination
Prospects for Creative Inquiry
Classical and Contemporary Social Theory Series
Author: Frauley Jon
Language: EnglishKeywords
sociological; critical; criminology; cheerful; robots; Frank P; Williams III; Eamonn Carrabine; Stephen Pfohl; Melanie White; Nicolas Carrier; David Scott; Alana Barton and; Howard Davis; Rob White; Stephanie Piamonte; David Nelken; Peacemaking Criminology; Criminological Imagination; UK Sociology; Sea Water; Williams III; Parsonian Grand Theory; Vice Versa; Sociological Imagination; Cheerful Robots; Justice Studies; Abstracted Empiricism; Dominant Institutional Orders; Prison Ethnography; State Corporate Crime; Mead's Social Psychology; Intellectual Craftsmanship; Modern Criminological Theory; Economic Institutional Orders; Righteous Slaughter; Capital Punishment; Major Institutional Orders; Neo-liberal Counter-revolution; Criminal Justice Studies; Comparative Criminology; Intergenerational Equity
Approximative price 164.74 €
In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).
Add to cart the book of Frauley JonPublication date: 11-2015
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Hardback
Approximative price 58.78 €
In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).
Add to cart the book of Frauley JonPublication date: 06-2017
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback
Description
/li>Contents
/li>Biography
/li>
Foreword, Elliott Currie; C. Wright Mills and the criminological imagination: introductory remarks, Jon Frauley. Part I C. Wright Mills, the Criminological Imagination and the Criminological Field: For a refractive criminology: against science machines and cheerful robots, Jon Frauley; The demise of the criminological imagination: thirty years later, Frank P. Williams III; Contemporary criminology and the sociological imagination, Eamonn Carrabine; The criminological imagination in an age of global cybernetic power, Stephen Pfohl. Part II The Criminological Imagination, Theoretical Insights, Empirical Implications: The implications of the sociology of C. Wright Mills for modern criminological theory revisited, Joseph A. Scimecca; Sympathy and the criminological imagination, Melanie White; Re-imagining social control: G.H. Mead, C. Wright Mills and beyond, Nicolas Carrier. Part III The Criminological Imagination, Empirical Insights, Theoretical Implications: Critical research values and C. Wright Mills’ Sociological Imagination: learning lessons from researching prison officers, David Scott; Neo-liberalism, higher education and anti-politics: the assault on the criminological imagination, Alana Barton and Howard Davis; Imagining the unthinkable: climate change, ecocide and children,Rob White; The criminological imagination and the promise of fiction, Stephanie Piamonte; Imagining transnational security projects, David Nelken