Theorizing Crime and Deviance
A New Perspective
- Steve Hall - Social Futures Institute, Teesside University
- Richard Hobbs, University of Essex
"Boldly tackles big questions that the discipline has lately been unable or unwilling to confront. Steve Hall's compelling and original book should help to restart a crucial discussion about the connections between crime and an increasingly volatile and predatory global social order."
- Elliott Currie, University of California, Irvine
"This erudite and original book synthesizes a dazzling array of thought and evidence to interrogate criminological theory's dominant conservative and liberal perspectives... This reviewer is left with a sense of criminological theory's tiredness of intellectual ambition and scope, while Hall's book leaves a sense of rejuvenation and excitement."
- Colin Webster, British Journal of Criminology
"A beautifully written, accessible and yet theoretically rigorous piece of writing that should be read by everyone interested in crime, law and social order. The book should be read with an open mind and as a genuine response to the suffocating inability of criminology to free itself from the century old slanging-match between its liberal and conservative wings."
- Simon Winlow, University of York
Steve Hall uses cutting-edge philosophy and social theory to analyse patterns of crime and harm and illuminate contemporary criminological issues. He provides a fresh, relevant critique of the philosophical and political underpinnings of criminological theory and the theoretical canon's development during the twentieth century, and applies new Continental philosophy to the criminological problem.
Unmatched in its sophistication yet written in a clear, accessible style, this dynamic and highly engaging book is essential reading for all students, researchers and academics working in criminology, sociology, social policy, politics and the social sciences in general.
A remarkable intellectual achievement, bringing to bear a grasp of contemporary social theory that is superbly sophisticated and up-to-date. It illuminates current trends and patterns in crime and criminal justice, as well as analysing how we got here historically. The book amounts to a highly original and stimulating theoretical perspective combining structural political economy, cultural appreciation, and a psychoanalytically informed analysis of subjectivity. It is bound to have a huge impact on the field
Robert Reiner
Professor of Criminology, London School of Economics and Political Science
An original, accessible and timely exposition of the current state of criminological theory; together with an inspirational programme for criminology's re-moralisation and regeneration it provides a cutting-edge critique of contemporary (and global) political and economic crimes and harms
Pat Carlen
Visiting Professor, Kent University
In Theorising Crime and Deviance, the most important voice in contemporary theoretical criminology speaks. Hall abstracts himself from the usual parameters of acceptable criminological knowledge and offers the discipline a progressive route away from its current intellectual impasse. Borrowing from history, philosophy, psychoanalysis, politics and economics, and with characteristic brilliance, Hall has succeeded in producing a beautifully written, accessible and yet theoretically rigorous piece of writing that should be read by everyone interested in crime, law and social order. The book should be read with an open mind and as a genuine response to the suffocating inability of criminology to free itself from the century old slanging-match between its liberal and conservative wings. Rather than reproducing yet another one of those anodyne theoretical textbooks that tacitly endorses liberalism and parliamentary capitalism, texts that refuse to stray too far from 60's left-liberalism, Hall has produced something of real value that will force readers to rethink the problem of crime and social order at this crucial stage in the discipline's history. Without question, Theorising Crime and Deviance is sure to be a landmark text in leftist criminological thought
Simon Winlow
University of York
In Theorizing Crime and Deviance, one of the most creative minds in contemporary criminology boldly tackles big questions that the discipline has lately been unable or unwilling to confront. Steve Hall's compelling and original book should help to restart a crucial discussion about the connections between crime and an increasingly volatile and predatory global social order. Above all, it is a persuasive case for bringing capitalism back into our understanding of why people are so willing to do harm to one another
Elliott Currie
Professor of Criminology, Law and Society, University of California, Irvine
Forget public criminology! What criminology needs today is a return to theory. Steve Hall's dissection of what he terms the 'pseudo pacification process' is an excellent place to begin. Written as an uncompromising challenge to mainstream criminology and its assumptions, Hall rocks the foundations of the discipline by revealing the 'heart of darkness' at the very centre of the 'civilising process'; and probes its unsettling implications for criminological thought and thinking
Professor Simon Hallsworth
London Metropolitan University
Anything that takes away from the terminally off key karaoke of so much that passes for theory in criminology is to be welcomed, and this is a fine effort to connect the study of crime and control to an innovative set of theoretical possibilities. A rip-roaring read that slaughters some sacred cows while throwing the odd baby out with the bath water
Richard Hobbs
University of Essex
This book is a remarkable achievement and is just what is needed to reinvigorate a critical perspective in criminology adequate to the present crisis
John Lea
Visiting Professor of Criminology, University of Brighton
Hall sucessfully demonstrates liberalism's difficulty with the problem of order under tensions and conditions of individualism and freedom... This erudite and original book synthesizes a dazzling array of thought and evidence to interrogate criminological theory's dominant conservative and liberal perspectives. This remarkable, controversial and, ultimately in my view, successful book will no doubt give rise to alternate intellectual judgments about its efficacy. This reviewer is left with a sense of criminological theory's tiredness of intellectual ambition and scope, while Hall's book leaves a sense of rejuvenation and excitement.
Colin Webster
British Journal of Criminology
"Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above."
A clear and precise explanation of the key issues in Crime and Devience which will enhance learners understanding of Unit 12 "Crime and its effects on Society"
A useful and accessible introduction on theories of deviance.