Zemiology and decoloniality: panoptification of victimhood and epistemic violence in anti-trafficking reporting
Zemiology and decoloniality: panoptification of victimhood and epistemic violence in anti-trafficking reporting
Zemiology is an evolving critical perspective that focuses on understanding and responding to social harm, particularly the ‘lawful but awful’ acts and/or omissions by powerful actors such as states, both locally and globally (e.g., Hillyard et al., 2004). Therefore, it challenges the doxas of mainstream criminology, which hold that legally defined crimes depict and address the most serious harms in each society. Zemiology underscores the socially constructed nature of ‘crime’, pointing to the importance of discourse and knowledge production in shaping public perceptions, reinforcing and reflecting power structures, dominant ideologies, and political interests, rather than an objective assessment of harm (see Copson et al., 2025). As such, zemiology explores both criminalised and non-criminalised harms with a particular focus on state and corporate power in legitimising, recognising, silencing, or ignoring particular harms.
Boukli, Avi
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Papanicolaou, Georgios
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Dimou, Eleni
06049c7f-c718-457f-a906-40d64f0ac85e
5 June 2026
Boukli, Avi
4a3963f7-7d82-485b-889b-a7cb7ae11888
Papanicolaou, Georgios
f26ecb15-a680-4214-89db-52fc18d485f5
Dimou, Eleni
06049c7f-c718-457f-a906-40d64f0ac85e
Boukli, Avi, Papanicolaou, Georgios and Dimou, Eleni
(2026)
Zemiology and decoloniality: panoptification of victimhood and epistemic violence in anti-trafficking reporting.
In,
Wright, Edward J., Heydon, James and Dertadian, George C.
(eds.)
Zemiology Beyond the Critique of Capitalism: Harm, Colonialism and Decolonisation.
1 ed.
Routledge.
(doi:10.4324/9781003603245).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
Zemiology is an evolving critical perspective that focuses on understanding and responding to social harm, particularly the ‘lawful but awful’ acts and/or omissions by powerful actors such as states, both locally and globally (e.g., Hillyard et al., 2004). Therefore, it challenges the doxas of mainstream criminology, which hold that legally defined crimes depict and address the most serious harms in each society. Zemiology underscores the socially constructed nature of ‘crime’, pointing to the importance of discourse and knowledge production in shaping public perceptions, reinforcing and reflecting power structures, dominant ideologies, and political interests, rather than an objective assessment of harm (see Copson et al., 2025). As such, zemiology explores both criminalised and non-criminalised harms with a particular focus on state and corporate power in legitimising, recognising, silencing, or ignoring particular harms.
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Accepted/In Press date: 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 May 2026
Published date: 5 June 2026
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 510622
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510622
PURE UUID: 5a6a003d-3413-438b-8826-4873cabc5f6e
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Date deposited: 14 Apr 2026 16:44
Last modified: 16 May 2026 02:07
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Contributors
Author:
Avi Boukli
Author:
Georgios Papanicolaou
Author:
Eleni Dimou
Editor:
Edward J. Wright
Editor:
James Heydon
Editor:
George C. Dertadian
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