Modernity and the 'failure' of crime control


Autoria(s): Tait, Gordon
Contribuinte(s)

Hil, Richard

Tait, Gordon

Data(s)

2004

Resumo

Rather than understanding the recurrent failure of various attempts at crime control as unfortunate and undesirable aberrations, all too familiar glitches an otherwise uninterrupted teleological march to a better society, such failures are instead positioned as part of the fabric of late modernity itself. That is, society changes not according to a predetermined logic along neatly defined and clearly reasoned tracks, rather it hurtles from crisis to crisis, from failure to failure, and it is the regulation of that failure which produces new initiatives and new forms of governance. Utilising the example of the modern prison, this chapter contends that too great an emphasis upon this institution’s ‘failure’ results not only in a neglect of the many other functions that it serves in the regulation of difference, but also, and more generally, it results in an underestimation of the importance of failure in providing new impetus for social transformation.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/28797/

Publicador

Ashgate

Relação

http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calcTitle=1&title_id=3554&edition_id=4798

Tait, Gordon (2004) Modernity and the 'failure' of crime control. In Hil, Richard & Tait, Gordon (Eds.) Hard Lessons : Reflections on Governance and Crime Control in Late Modernity. Ashgate, Aldershot, pp. 18-32.

Direitos

Copyright 2004 Ashgate Publishing

Fonte

Office of Education Research; Faculty of Education; School of Cultural & Language Studies in Education

Palavras-Chave #160200 CRIMINOLOGY #Governance #Modernity #Prisons #crime control
Tipo

Book Chapter