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Where did critical criminology emerge from?
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- labelling theory- as well as bits and pieces of other good theories
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What did White, Haines, and Eisler argue?
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- that critical theories comprise of both structuralist and post-modern approaches- there are fundamental differences between these perspectives and others that examine capitalist exploitation and oppression
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What to Critical theories incorporate?
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- feminist and Marxist knowledge
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What is the hallmark of this period ?
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- rapid change- Ex. technological innovation (technological experts rising - we no longer live in a proletariat/bourgeoise society)- Ex. concentration of wealth (concentration is higher in the US)
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What are the 2 parts to critical theories?
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- Structuralism: Order and straightforward/organizeD- Postmodernism: Chaos and unorganized
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What is Structuralism?
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- examine the structure of exploitation and oppression- like Marxists, they maintain that capitalism is criminogenic - the exploitation of social groups includes the negative effects of labelling- oppression is experienced on the basis of: sex, race/ethnicity and social class
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Structuralism on the basis of SEX
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- Taylor, Walton, and Young's "The New Criminology" were devoted to female crime- Structural critical criminologists believe that women are more vulnerable to state oppression- women's work is less vulnerable, but women's crime is more fraudulent (causes an increase of property crime)- capitalism and patriarchy = controlling and oppressing women - women are more likely to be subject to comestic violence- Ex. girl gangs with pink glocks trying to convert people into lesbians- prisons for women are punitive -> there are high suicide rates, it was more for keeping them away than rehabilitating them
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Structuralism on the basis of RACE/ETHNICITY
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- the CJS is racialized - instead of taking drunk people to jail, they drive them to the outskirts and make them walk home (as a form of punishment - allows them to cool off and sober up)- higher rates of intersection (to generate higher probabilities of being sanctioned by the CJS)
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Structuralism on the basis of SOCIAL CLASS
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- state definitions of crime largely revolve around street crime rather than corporate or white-collar crime- Samuelson: white-collar crime is more costly in financial and physical terms than is street crime (ex. Ford Pinto case)
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What is Postmodernism?
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- a central fixture of the critical perspective - stresses the meaning of language - where language is also affected by your particular perspective
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What do postmodernists focus on?
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- meaning of words - social difference (social construction of other)- discourse analysis (uncovering the meanings/origins of words)- Deconstruction (of the meanings of words)
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When was postmodernism first introduced?
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1960s
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Neo-marxists
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- produced through material terms (inequality/social reality)- means that means, social groups are deprived in real terms - poverty is an objective reality
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Inequality is only partly based in material (fantasy world) reality for?
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Post modernists
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Who is Michelle Foucault?
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- most well post-modernist- gender inequalities are preserved in the future- socially constructed - opposite from Marx- that we have socially constructed stories and they live their life based on that- we ARE able to continue with femininity
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