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Queer criminology: the force of queer utopias, shame, and melancholia

Queer criminology: the force of queer utopias, shame, and melancholia
Queer criminology: the force of queer utopias, shame, and melancholia
This article reviews the emergence of queer criminological literature from 1998 to July 31, 2024, highlighting key contributions and guiding future theoretical and policy directions. It examines central themes and challenges in this field, identifying four main areas of focus: the ontological question of identity; the epistemological role of deconstruction; tensions with queer theory; and applications to criminal justice. Despite recent global policy setbacks, particularly affecting trans people and racialised migrants, in areas such as sex work, healthcare, asylum, and prison policy, queer criminology continues to grow. This persistence underscores its relevance in confronting global social and political injustices. Concepts rooted in queer theory, namely queer utopias, shame, and melancholia, function as a counter-disciplinary intervention that constitutes queer criminology as a distinct force, subverting criminological orthodoxies, challenging cisnormative and heteronormative biases, and extending the field’s epistemic and empirical scope beyond the Global North-South divide while drawing on histories of trauma and loss to imagine transformative possibilities.
queer criminology, queer theory, Utopia, Shame, melancholia
3033-3660
Boukli, Avi
4a3963f7-7d82-485b-889b-a7cb7ae11888
Giametta, Calogero
b6f3e6f5-a848-4e3e-86fd-5ac9c49a5f87
Boukli, Avi
4a3963f7-7d82-485b-889b-a7cb7ae11888
Giametta, Calogero
b6f3e6f5-a848-4e3e-86fd-5ac9c49a5f87

Boukli, Avi and Giametta, Calogero (2026) Queer criminology: the force of queer utopias, shame, and melancholia. Gender and Justice. (doi:10.1332/30333660Y2026D000000037).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article reviews the emergence of queer criminological literature from 1998 to July 31, 2024, highlighting key contributions and guiding future theoretical and policy directions. It examines central themes and challenges in this field, identifying four main areas of focus: the ontological question of identity; the epistemological role of deconstruction; tensions with queer theory; and applications to criminal justice. Despite recent global policy setbacks, particularly affecting trans people and racialised migrants, in areas such as sex work, healthcare, asylum, and prison policy, queer criminology continues to grow. This persistence underscores its relevance in confronting global social and political injustices. Concepts rooted in queer theory, namely queer utopias, shame, and melancholia, function as a counter-disciplinary intervention that constitutes queer criminology as a distinct force, subverting criminological orthodoxies, challenging cisnormative and heteronormative biases, and extending the field’s epistemic and empirical scope beyond the Global North-South divide while drawing on histories of trauma and loss to imagine transformative possibilities.

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Accepted/In Press date: 20 March 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 April 2026
Keywords: queer criminology, queer theory, Utopia, Shame, melancholia

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511215
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511215
ISSN: 3033-3660
PURE UUID: 5374d235-a955-46ba-9ad5-830c298e497f
ORCID for Avi Boukli: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4281-1664

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Date deposited: 08 May 2026 16:30
Last modified: 09 May 2026 02:22

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Contributors

Author: Avi Boukli ORCID iD
Author: Calogero Giametta

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