Invisible Crimes and Social Harms. By Pamela Davies, Peter Francis and Tanya Wyatt (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, 280pp. £65.00 hb)
Invisible Crimes and Social Harms. By Pamela Davies, Peter Francis and Tanya Wyatt (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, 280pp. £65.00 hb)
Book review:
Cogently argued and expertly researched, presented and written Invisible Crimes and Social Harms is a timely and trenchant reminder that a plethora of deleterious yet ‘relatively invisible’ illegalities and harms continue to persist. Nevertheless they exist beyond the investigatory scope of much criminological scholarship. Accordingly, the book’s contribution towards illuminating the contours of invisibility by facilitating the advancement of new and progressive research capable of challenging popular conceptualizations of crime and harm is indeed a salient one. Drawing, to various degrees, upon the ‘seven features of invisibility’ first identified by Jupp et al. (1999) and organized around the conceptualized categories of the body, the home, the street, the suite, the environment, the virtual and the state—and their concomitant levels and sources of power—the book presents 13 enticing chapters.
818–820
Kotzé, Justin
c1aefd54-0149-428c-a45a-4d7591b4f9fc
Boukli, Avi
4a3963f7-7d82-485b-889b-a7cb7ae11888
1 July 2016
Kotzé, Justin
c1aefd54-0149-428c-a45a-4d7591b4f9fc
Boukli, Avi
4a3963f7-7d82-485b-889b-a7cb7ae11888
Kotzé, Justin and Boukli, Avi
(2016)
Invisible Crimes and Social Harms. By Pamela Davies, Peter Francis and Tanya Wyatt (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, 280pp. £65.00 hb).
British Journal of Criminology, 56 (4), .
(doi:10.1093/bjc/azv055).
Abstract
Book review:
Cogently argued and expertly researched, presented and written Invisible Crimes and Social Harms is a timely and trenchant reminder that a plethora of deleterious yet ‘relatively invisible’ illegalities and harms continue to persist. Nevertheless they exist beyond the investigatory scope of much criminological scholarship. Accordingly, the book’s contribution towards illuminating the contours of invisibility by facilitating the advancement of new and progressive research capable of challenging popular conceptualizations of crime and harm is indeed a salient one. Drawing, to various degrees, upon the ‘seven features of invisibility’ first identified by Jupp et al. (1999) and organized around the conceptualized categories of the body, the home, the street, the suite, the environment, the virtual and the state—and their concomitant levels and sources of power—the book presents 13 enticing chapters.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 9 June 2015
Published date: 1 July 2016
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 472043
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472043
ISSN: 0007-0955
PURE UUID: 9e66a8ab-fe99-4cda-a84f-5b6a186c1b82
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Date deposited: 24 Nov 2022 17:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:14
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Author:
Justin Kotzé
Author:
Avi Boukli
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