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Contemporary Intersectional Criminology in the UK: Examining the Boundaries of Intersectionality and Crime


ISBN13: 9781529215946
Published: July 2022
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £85.00
Paperback edition , ISBN13 9781529215953



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This is the first collection dedicated to the use of intersectionality as theory, framework and methodology in criminological research. It draws together comtemporary British research to demonstrate the value of intersectionality theory in both familiar and innovative applications, including race, gender, class, disability, sexual orientation and age. Experts explore a range of experiences relating to harm, hate crimes and offending, and demonstrate the impacts of oppression on complex personal identities that do not fit neatly in homogenised communites. Challenging conventional perspectives, it positions intersectionality firmly into the mainstream of criminology.

The is first edited collection to recognise the value of intersectionality as a framework for criminological research outside the traditional application of race, class and gender. The unique selling point of this edited collection is the innovative, and contemporary application of intersectional frameworks, theories and methodologies.

Subjects:
Criminology
Contents:
Introduction
Jane Healy and Ben Colliver
Theme 1: Examining the theoretical and conceptual contributions of intersectionality to criminology Intersectionality and Criminology: uncomfortable bedfellows?
Jane Healy
An exposition of British colonial rule on the development of slave societies in the Americas leading to the Windrush generation
Melsia Tomlin-Kraftner
Contemporary British intersectionality and its relationship to Criminology
Theme 2: Crime, Harm and Criminal Justice Systems: Intersectionality’s engagement with crime and deviance
Navigating Probation and Managing Substance Use: The role of Gender and Class in how Service Users Experience the Probation Service
Melindy Brown
Intersectionality and interrelating experiences of offending and victimization in the context of child criminal
exploitation
Hannah Marshall
‘My dad used to say it was African ways’: Exploring narratives of domestic abuse and gang involvement
Jade Levell
Healing from identity-based violence: an intersectional discussion
Anjana Raghavan and James Pickles
Intersectionality and Prisons Research
Theme 3: New frontiers in Hate Crime research
No Safe Space: The role of intersectionality in transgender people’s experiences of hate and discrimination
Ben Colliver
Hateful Subjects: Using intersectionality to inform a critical hate studies perspective
Katie McBride and Zoe James
‘Why do you hate me so much?’ Examining disability hate crime experiences through an intersectional lens
Jane Healy
A conceptual examination of the potential of intersectionality to analysing the connection between age and victimisation
Emma Finnegan
Intersectionality and sexuality research
Conclusion: From the margins to mainstream: Where next for intersectional criminology?
Jane Healy and Ben Colliver