Understanding Social Control: Crime and Social Order in Late Modernity

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McGraw-Hill Education (UK), 2003 M12 1 - 176 páginas
This book investigates how the concept of social control has been used to capture the ways in which individuals, communities and societies respond to a variety of forms of deviant behaviour. In so doing, the book demonstrates how an appreciation of the meanings of the concept of social control is vital to understanding the dynamics and trajectories of social order in contemporary late-modern societies.
 

Contenido

Chapter 01 The argument
1
Chapter 02 A history of the idea of social control
15
Chapter 03 A history of social control practices
32
Chapter 04 Everyday order
50
Chapter 05 Policing
63
Chapter 06 Punishing
80
Chapter 07 The architecture of social control
95
Chapter 08 Surveillance
112
Chapter 09 Risks regulations and audits
130
Chapter 10 Conclusion
143
References
157
Notes
171
Index
174
Back Cover
177
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Martin Innes is based at the University of Surrey, UK.

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