Crimimologia Cultural

Visualizações: 49

Autores

  • Dr. Salah Hassan Khaled Junior Universidade Federal do Rio Grande - FURG
  • Dr. Keith Hayward Universidade de Copenhagen - Dinamarca https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7135-9131
  • Dr. Jeff Ferrell Universidade de Kent - EUA
  • Dra. Michelle Brown University of Tennessee - USA

Palavras-chave:

Controle, Edgework, Etnografia, Significado, Transgressão, Poder

Resumo

A Criminologia Cultural está preocupada com a convergência dos processos culturais, criminais e de controle do crime; como tal, situa a criminalidade e seu controle no contexto da dinâmica cultural e da produção contestada de significado. Ela procura entender as realidades cotidianas de um mundo profundamente desigual e injusto, e destacar as maneiras pelas quais o poder é exercido e resistido em meio à interação de criação de regras, violação de regras e representação. As temáticas da Criminologia Cultural envolvem uma série de questões contemporâneas: a construção mediada e a mercantilização do crime, violência e punição; as práticas simbólicas daqueles envolvidos em atividades subculturais ou pós-subculturais ilícitas; as ansiedades existenciais e emoções situadas que animam o crime, a transgressão e a vitimização; os controles sociais e significados culturais que circulam dentro e entre arranjos espaciais; a interação entre controle estatal e resistência cultural; as culturas criminógenas geradas pelas economias de mercado; e uma série de outras instâncias em que o significado situado e simbólico está em jogo. Para realizar tais análises, a Criminologia Cultural abraça perspectivas interdisciplinares e métodos alternativos que regularmente a movem além dos limites da Criminologia convencional, extraindo da antropologia, estudos de mídia, estudos da juventude, estudos culturais, geografia cultural, sociologia, filosofia e outras disciplinas, e utilizando novas formas de etnografia, análise textual e produção visual. Em tudo isso, a Criminologia Cultural procura desafiar os parâmetros aceitos da análise criminológica e reorientar a criminologia para as condições sociais, culturais e econômicas contemporâneas.

Downloads

Não há dados estatísticos.

Biografia do Autor

Dr. Salah Hassan Khaled Junior, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande - FURG

É doutor e mestre em Ciências Criminais (PUCRS), mestre em História (UFRGS) e especialista em História do Brasil (FAPA). Possui graduação em Ciências Jurídicas e Sociais (PUCRS) e graduação em História (FAPA). Atualmente é professor associado da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande - FURG, ministrando as disciplinas de Direito Penal I, Criminologia, Sistemas Processuais Penais e História das Ideias Jurídicas. É professor permanente do PPG em Direito e Justiça Social - Mestrado da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande - FURG e ministra a disciplina Justiça Social e Sistema Penal. Tem pesquisado nos seguintes temas; Verdade, epistemologia e processo penal; subculturas, resistência e reação social; Fenomenologia da violência, primeiro plano do crime e ação-limítrofe; Pânico moral, criminalização da cultura e de movimentos sociais; Meios de comunicação e representação mediada da criminalidade; Crime, modernidade tardia e capitalismo global; Criminologia Cultural, guerra e terrorismo; Crime, cultura de consumo e comodificação da transgressão; Criminologia Cultural e estudos urbanos; Metodologias da Criminologia Cultural; Criminologia Cultural e estudos étnico-raciais; Criminologia Cultural e feminismos; Criminologia cultural, teorias queer e estudos de gênero; Criminologia Cultural e Criminologia Verde; Intersecções entre a Criminologia Cultural e a justiça social; Criminologia Cultural e Política Criminal; Inserção da Criminologia Cultural no campo teórico criminológico; Estudos psicanalíticos, violência urbana e psicologia social; Criminologia Cultural, transdisciplinaridade e arte; Criminologia Cultural e interdisciplinaridade; Hermenêutica decolonial e realismo marginal; Questões étnico-raciais, identitárias e narrativa nacional. É líder do grupo de pesquisa Hermenêutica e Ciências Criminais (FURG/CNPq) e autor dos livros "A Busca da Verdade no Processo Penal: Para Além da Ambição Inquisitorial" (Atlas/Letramento), "Videogame e violência: cruzadas morais contra os jogos eletrônicos no Brasil e no mundo" (Grupo Editorial Record/Civilização Brasileira), "Explorando a criminologia cultural" juntamente com Jeff Ferrell, Keith Hayward e Álvaro Oxley da Rocha (Letramento) e tradutor de" Criminologia cultural: um convite", de Ferrell, Hayward e Young. Autor de dezenas de livros de Direito Penal, Processual Penal, Criminologia e História, bem como de dezenas de artigos publicados em revistas científicas e capítulos de livros. Suas pesquisas foram retratadas em veículos de mídia como Estadão, IstoÉ, O Globo, Galileu e Revista Quatro Cinco Um. Participou na condição de especialista em audiências públicas na Câmara dos Deputados sobre o NCPP e sobre a relação entre mídia e violência e palestrou nos mais importantes eventos de Ciências Criminais do país, como o Seminário Internacional de Ciências Criminais (IBBCRIM) e o Congresso Internacional de Ciências Criminais (PUCRS). É fundador e presidente do Instituto Brasileiro de Criminologia Cultural.

Dr. Keith Hayward , Universidade de Copenhagen - Dinamarca

Professor de Criminologia na Faculdade de Direito da Universidade de Copenhagen. Doutor em Criminologia pela University of East London (2000). Mestre em Criminologia pela University of Cambridge (1996).

Dr. Jeff Ferrell , Universidade de Kent - EUA

Professor aposentado de Sociologia da Texas Christian University. Professor visitante na Universidade de Kent. Doutor e Mestre em Sociologia pela University of Texas.

Dra. Michelle Brown, University of Tennessee - USA

Professora de Sociologia na Professora de Sociologia na University of Tennessee. Doutora em Justiça Criminal e Estudos Americanos. Mestra em Justiça Criminal (Indiana University – 2003 e 1997).. Doutora em Justiça Criminal e Estudos Americanos. Mestra em Justiça Criminal (Indiana University – 2003 e 1997).

Referências

Aiello, M F (2014) ‘Policing the masculine frontier: cultural criminological analysis of the gendered performance of policing’, Crime, Media, Culture, 10(1)59-79.

Altheide, D (1996) Qualitative Media Analysis. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE.

Appadurai, A (1996) Modernity at Large, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press

Bailey, F. Y., & Hale, D. C. (1998). Popular culture, crime, and justice. Wadsworth Publishing Company.

Becker, H. (1963) Outsiders: Studies in the Sociology of Deviance, New York: Free Press

Brisman, A and South, N (2014) Green Cultural Criminology, London: Routledge.

Brotherton, D. (2004), ‘What happened to the pathological gang?’, J. Ferrell, et al (eds), Cultural Criminology Unleashed, London: GlassHouse

Brown, Michelle and Eamonn Carrabine, eds, (2017). The Routledge International Handbook of Visual Criminology. London: Routledge, forthcoming.

Burrows, Dan. (2013). ‘Framing the Iraq War’, PhD thesis, University of Kent.

Cunneen, Chris. (2010). ‘Framing the crimes of colonialism’, in Keith Hayward and Mikelex Presdee (eds) Framing Crime, London: Routledge.

Denzin, N. K. (1992) Symbolic Interaction and Cultural Studies: The Politics of Interpretation, Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.

Denzin, N. K. (1997) Interpretive Ethnography, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Dunier, M, (1999) Sidewalk, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Fenwick, M and Hayward, K.J (2000) ‘Youth crime, excitement and consumer culture’, in J. Pickford (ed.) Youth Justice, London: Cavendish.

Ferrell, J (1996) Crimes of Style. Boston: Northeastern University Press.

Ferrell, J (1997) ‘Criminological Verstehen: Inside the Immediacy of Crime’ Justice Quarterly 14(1) 3-23

Ferrell, J (1999), ‘Cultural Criminology’, Annual Review of Sociology, 25: 395–418.

Ferrell, J (2001) Tearing Down the Streets. New York: Palgrave/MacMillan.

Ferrell, Jeff. (2004b). ‘Speed kills’, in Ferrell, Jeff, Hayward, Keith Morrison, Wayne and Presdee, Mike (eds) Cultural Criminology Unleashed, London: GlassHouse.

Ferrell J (2006) Empire of Scrounge. New York: New York University Press.

Ferrell, Jeff. (2012a). ‘Outline of a Criminology of Drift’ in Steve Hall and Simon Winlow, editors, New Directions in Criminological Theory. London: Routledge/Wilan.

Ferrell, Jeff (2018) Drift, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, forthcoming.

Ferrell, J and Hamm, M, 1998, ‘True Confessions: Crime, Deviance and Field Research’, in J Ferrell and M Hamm (eds) Ethnography on the Edge. Boston: Northeastern University Press.

Ferrell J and M S Hamm, eds. (1998) Ethnography at the Edge. Boston: Northeastern University Press.

Ferrell, J. and Hayward, K (Eds.). (2011). Cultural Criminology: Theories of Crime. Ashgate.

Ferrell, Jeff, Keith Hayward, and Jock Young. (2008). Cultural Criminology: An Invitation. London: Sage.

Ferrell, Jeff, Keith Hayward, and Jock Young. (2015). Cultural Criminology: An Invitation, 2nd ed. London: Sage.

Ferrell, J Hayward, K, Morrison, W and Presdee, P, eds. (2004) Cultural Criminology Unleashed, London: GlassHouse

Ferrell, J., & Ilan, J. (2013). ‘Crime, culture, and everyday life’ in C. Hale, K. Hayward, A. Wahidin, and E. Wincup (eds) Criminology, Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Ferrell, J and Sanders, C. (eds) (1995), Cultural Criminology, Boston: Northeastern University Press.

Fonow, M. and Cook, J. (1991) Beyond Methodology: Feminist Scholarship as Lived Research, Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.

Garot, Robert. (2010). Who You Claim. New York: New York University Press.

Hall, Stuart, Chas Critcher, Tony Jefferson, John Clarke, and Brian Roberts. (2013). Policing the Crisis, 35th Anniversary Ed. London: Palgrave Macmillan.

Hamm, Mark. (2007). High crimes and misdemeanours: George W. Bush and the sins of Abu Ghraib’, Crime, Media, Culture, 3(3)259-84.

Hayward, Keith J. (2004). City Limits: Crime, Consumer Culture and the Urban Experience, London: GlassHouse.

Hayward, K (2011) ‘The critical terrorism studies: cultural criminology nexus’, Critical Studies on Terrorism, 4(1)57–73.

Hayward Keith J. (2012). Five spaces of cultural criminology. British Journal of Criminology 52(3): 441–462.

Hayward, K J (2017b) ‘Documentary criminology: a cultural criminological introduction’, in M. Brown and E. Carrabine (eds) The Routledge International Handbook of Visual Criminology. London: Routledge.

Hayward, K J (2017b) Cultural Criminology, Critical Concepts in Criminology, London: Routledge.

____ and Hobbs, D, (2007) ‘Beyond the binge in Booze Britain: market-led liminalization and the spectacle of binge drinking’ British Journal of Sociology 58: 3 437-456.

____ and and Kindynis, T (2013), ‘Crime-Consumerism nexus’, in J. Ross (ed.) Encyclopedia of Street Crime in America, Thousand Oaks: Sage.

____ and Presdee, M (2010) Framing Crime: Cultural Criminology and the Image, London: Routledge.

____ and Smith, O (2017 ) ‘Crime and consumer culture’ in A. Liebling, S. Maruna, and L. McAra (eds) The Oxford Handbook of Criminology, 6th Edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press.

____ and Yar, M (2006) ‘The ‘Chav’ phenomenon: consumption, media and the construction of a new underclass’, Crime, Media, Culture, 2: 1 pp 9-28.

—— and Young, J. (eds) (2004), Special Edition on Cultural Criminology, Theoretical Criminology, 8(3).

Ilan, Jonathan. (2011). ‘Reclaiming respectability?: the cross-cultural dynamics of crime, community and governance in inner-city Dublin’, Urban Studies, 48 1137-1155.

Ilan, J. (2015) Understanding Street Culture Poverty, Crime, Youth and Cool. Palgrave Macmillan.

Kane, S (2012) Where Rivers Meet the Sea, Philadelphia, Temple University Press.

Klein, Joshua. (2011). ‘Toward a cultural criminology of war’, Social Justice, 38(3) 86–103.

Jenkins, Phillip. (1999). ‘Fighting Terrorism as if Women Mattered,’ in Jeff Ferrell and Neil Websdale, eds., Making Trouble. New York: Aldine.Kane, S (2004) ‘The unconventional methods of cultural criminology’ Theoretical Criminology 8(3): 303-21.

Katz, J. (1988), Seductions of Crime, New York: Basic Books.

Kindynis, T (2014) ‘Ripping up the map: criminology and cartography revisited’, British Journal of Criminology, 54 (2) 222-243.

Kozinets, R. V (2010) Netnography, London: Sage

Kraska, Peter. (1998). ‘Enjoying militarism: Political/personal dilemmas in studying U.S. police paramilitary units. In: Ferrell, Jeff and Hamm, Mark (eds) Ethnography at the Edge. Boston, MA, Northeastern University Press.

Linnemann, Travis, Wall, Tyler, and Green, Edward. (2014). ‘The walking dead and the killing state: zombification and the normalization of police violence’, Theoretical Criminology, 18(4) 506-27.

Lyng, S. (1990), ‘Edgework: A Social Psychological Analysis of Voluntary Risk-Taking’, American Journal of Sociology, 95(4): 876–921.

Lyng, S. (Ed) (2005) Edgework. New York: Routledge.

Matallana-Villareal, J (2010) Equidad Espacial En El Acceso a La Educacion Inicial En Bogotá, Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes.

Mills, C W (1940) ‘Situated actions and vocabularies of motive’ American Sociological Review 5(6): 9004-13.

Miller, J (2008) Getting Played: African American Girls, Urban Inequality, and Gendered Violence, New York: New York University Press.

Morrison, Wayne. (2004). ‘Reflections with memories: everyday photography capturing genocide’, Theoretical Criminology, 8(3)341-58.

Morrison, Wayne. (2006). Criminology, Civilization and the New World Order, London: GlassHouse.

Muzzatti, S L (2010) “Consumer Culture, Criminology and the Politics of Exclusion” in M Maguire and D Okada (eds.) Critical Issues of Crime and Justice: Thought, Policy and Practice. Thousand Oaks: Sage. pp 119-131.

Naegler, L and Salman, S (2016) ‘Cultural criminology and gender consciousness’, Feminist Criminology, 11 (4) 354-374.

Nightingale, C (1993) On the Edge, New York: NY: Basic Books.

O’Malley, P., and Mugford, S. (1994), ‘Crime, excitement and modernity’, in G. Barak (ed.), Varieties of Criminology, Westport, Conn.: Praeger.

O’Neill, M, Woods, P. and Webster, M (2004) ‘New Arrivals: participatory action research, imagined communities and ‘visions of social justice’ Social Justice 32 (1) 75-89.

Polsky, N. (1969) Hustlers, Beats and Others, Garden City, NY: Anchor

Presdee, M. (2000), Cultural Criminology and the Carnival of Crime, London: Routledge.

Presdee, Mike. (2009). ‘Volume crime and everyday life’, in Hale, Chris, Hayward, Keith, Wahidin, Azrini and Wincup, Emma (eds) Criminology, Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Presser, L. (2009). The narratives of offenders. Theoretical Criminology, 13(2), 177-200.

Presser, L., & Sandberg, S. (Eds.). (2015). Narrative criminology: Understanding stories of crime. NYU Press.

Rajah, V (2007) ‘Resistance as edgework in violent intimate relationships of drug-involved women’, British Journal of Criminology, 47(2) 196-213.

Raymen, Thomas. (2016). ‘Designing-in crime by designing-out the social?: situational crime prevention and the intensification of harmful subjectivities’. British Journal of Criminology, Forthcoming.

Redmon, D (2015a) ‘Documentary criminology: expanding the criminological imagination with ‘Mardis Gras – Made in China’ as a case study’, Societies, 5 (2) 425-441.

Redmon, D (2015b) Beads, Bodies and Trash, London: Routledge.

Redmon, D (2016) ‘Documentary criminology: Girl Model as a case study’, Crime, Media, Culture, Forthcoming.

Root, C Ferrell, J and Palacious, W (2013) ‘Brutal serendipity: criminological verstehen and victimization’, Critical Criminology, 21(2)141-55.

Sandberg, S. (2010) ‘What can ‘lies’ tell us about life? Notes towards a framework of narrative criminology’, Journal of Criminal Justice Education. 21 (4) 447–465.

Sandberg, S. and Ugelvik, T (2016) ‘Why do offenders tape their crimes?: crime and punishment in the age of the selfie’, British Journal of Criminology, Forthcoming.

Schuurman, N (2009) ‘Metadata as a site for imbuing GIS with qualitative information’, in M. Cope and S. Elwood (eds) Qualitative GIS, London: Sage.

Smith, O and Raymen, T (2016) ‘Deviant leisure: a criminological perspective’, Theoretical Criminology, Forthcoming.

Wall, Tyler and Linnemann, Travis. (2014a). ‘Accumulating atrocities: capital, state killing and the cultural life of the dead’, in Dawn Roethe and Dave Kauzlarich (eds) Towards a Victimology of State Crime, New York: Routledge.

Wall, Tyler and Linnemann, Travis. (2014b). ‘Staring down the state: police power, visual economies, and the ‘War on Cameras’’, Crime, Media, Culture, 10(2) 133-49.

Wender, Jonathan. (2004). ‘Phenomenology, cultural criminology and the return to astonishment’, in Jeff Ferrell,Keith Hayward, Wayne, Morrison, and Mike Presdee (eds) Cultural Criminology Unleashed, London: Cavendish.

Wender, Jonathan. (2008). Policing and the Politics of Everyday Life, Champaign: University of Illinois Press.

Willis, P (1977) Learning to Labour, Aldershot: Gower

Young, Alison. (2004). Judging the Image, London: Routledge.

Young, A. (2009). The scene of violence: Cinema, crime, affect. Routledge.

Young, Alison. (2010). ‘The scene of the crime: is there such a thing as just looking?’ in Keith Hayward and Mike Presdee (eds) Framing Crime: Cultural Criminology and the Image, London: GlassHouse.

Young, J (2003) ‘Merton with energy, Katz with structure: the sociology of vindictiveness and the criminology of transgression’ Theoretical Criminology 7(3): 389-414.

Young, J (1999) The Exclusive Society. London: Sage.

Young, Jock. (2011). The Criminological Imagination. Cambridge: Polity.

Downloads

Publicado

2024-06-27

Como Citar

Hassan Khaled Junior, D. S. ., Hayward , D. K. ., Ferrell , D. J. ., & Brown, D. M. . . (2024). Crimimologia Cultural. Revista Brasileira De Ciências Criminais, 193(193), 37–65. Recuperado de https://publicacoes.ibccrim.org.br/index.php/RBCCRIM/article/view/225

Edição

Seção

Dossiê especial: Criminologia Cultural

Métricas

Artigos mais lidos pelo mesmo(s) autor(es)