Introduction Crime and American Governance
1. Power, Authority, and the Criminal Law:
2. "Prosecutor-in-chief": Executive Authority since the War on
Crime:
3. We the Victims: Featuring Crime and Making Law:
4. Judgement and Distrust: The Jurisprudence of Crime and the
Decline of Judicial Government:
5. Project Exile: Race, the War on Crime, and Mass
Imprisonment:
6. Crime Families: Governing Domestic Relations through Crime:
7. Safe Schools: Reforming Education through Crime:
8. Penalty Box: Victimization and Punishment in the Deregulated
Work Place:
9. Wars on Governance: From Cancer to Crime to Terror:
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Jonathan Simon is Associate Dean of Jurisprudence and Social Policy and Professor of Law at the University of California, Berkeley. Co-editor of the journal Punishment & Society, he is also the author of Poor Discipline: Parole and the Social Control of the Underclass, 1890-1990 and co-editor of two other volumes.
"Ambitious and carefully reasoned... thought-provoking... argues
that what sociologists are calling "mass imprisonment" (because
such a large portion of the population is now involved) signals not
only a new approach to managing crime, but to managing society...
The most innovative sections of his book, however, outline how an
increasingly insular, risk averse, and punitive social ethic has
reshaped not only how the other half lives but how the top half
does as
well."--Boston Review
"Every thoughtful citizen should confront the arguments that are so
lucidly presented in this book. Highly recommended." --CHOICE
"In Governing through Crime, Jonathan Simon powerfully and
persuasively argues that America's obsession with crime has
touched, indeed distorted, the fundamental building blocks of our
democratic society. According to this sweeping analysis, our
conception of the centrality of crime in American life has
redefined the powers of government, the role of families and
schools, and the place of the individual in society. This
disturbing and provocative
treatise should command the attention of scholars, opinion leaders,
and policymakers who aspire to create a more tolerant and open
future for this country."--Jeremy Travis, President, John Jay
College of Criminal
Justice
"For historians, this book will one day be a valuable primary
source."--Law and History Review
"Distinguished legal scholar Jonathan Simon here challenges us to
confront the consequences for liberal democracy of the move in the
U.S. towards the exercise of ever more executive authority--from
the presidency and the institutions of state through schools and
families. Governing through Crime, argues Simon with unrelenting
cogency, is a response to risk and fear spun out of control, a
response that erodes social trust and, with it, the very
scaffolding of a 'free' society. An invaluable addition to the
literature in critical criminology, this is a volume that ought to
be read by anyone who seeks to understand the present and future of
governance in the
USA--and elsewhere."--John Comaroff, Harold H. Swift Distinguished
Service Professor, University of Chicago
"Jonathan Simon has pioneered a new approach to the study of the
politics of crime control, and this book should confirm his place
as one of the outstanding criminologists of his generation.
Governing through Crime, is a major contribution and deserves to
make an impact throughout the social and political
sciences."--Nikolas Rose, Martin White Professor, London School of
Economics and Political Science
"This is an impressive work. The book's great strength is its
integration of a wide range of research on political science, law,
and sociology, with journalistic accounts of current and recent
politics. Topics from mass imprisonment, school "zero tolerance"
policies, and the shortcomings of the Supreme Court in achieving
the goals of Brown v. Board of Education have all been written
about extensively. But I know of no other work that so
effectively
uncovers ways that these issues are connected to a changing
relationship between citizens and their government."--The Law and
Politics Book Review
"What makes Simon's work stand out is his treatment of how the
government's configuration of the crime problem, with its strong
emphasis on 'personal responsibility and will over social context'
(p.25) and its penchant for punishment of individuals, has
penetrated other institutional spheres of American life, notably
work, school, and family life... His book stands out as the most
important and most readable treatment to date on the overreach of
crime and our
emergence, in part, as a society gripped by the language of crime
and the technologies of criminal justice."--Political Science
Quarterly
"Simon's main focus is diagnostic, not prescriptive. He does not
propose a detailed blueprint to end governing through crime, but
rather suggests some guideposts."--Law & Social Inquiry
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |