In spite of its widespread use within criminology, the term ’criminological imagination’, as derived from C. Wright Mills’ classic The Sociological Imagination, has yet to be fully developed and clarified as an analytic concept capable of guiding theorizing or empirical enquiry. This volume, with a preface by Elliot Currie, engages with and reflects on this concept, exploring C. Wright Mills’ work for criminological enquiry. Bringing together the latest work of leading scholars in the fields of criminology and sociology from around the world, C. Wright Mills and the Criminological Imagination investigates the emergence and lineage of a criminological concept indebted to Mills’ thought, adapting and applying it to a specifically criminological context. With attention to theoretical concerns and, as well as the application of the criminological imagination in concrete empirical research, this volume sheds new light on the methodological and analytical aspects of the criminological imagination as a multifaceted concept and explores the possibilities that it offers for the emergence of an imaginative criminological practice. As such, it will appeal to scholars across the social sciences with interests in sociology and social theory, criminology, criminal justice studies, law and research methods.
Author(s): Jon Frauley
Series: Classical and Contemporary Social Theory
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2015
Language: English
Pages: 298
City: London
Cover
Contents
Notes on Contributors
Foreword
Acknowledgements
C. Wright Mills and the Criminological Imagination: Introductory Remarks
Part I C. Wright Mills, the Criminological Imagination and the Criminological Field
1 For a Refractive Criminology: Against Science Machines and Cheerful Robots
2 The Demise of the Criminological Imagination: Thirty Years Later
3 Contemporary Criminology and the Sociological Imagination
4 The Criminological Imagination in an Age of Global Cybernetic Power
Part II The Criminological Imagination,Theoretical Insights, Empirical Implications
5 The Implications of the Sociology of C. Wright Mills for Modern Criminological Theory Revisited
6 Sympathy and the Criminological Imagination
7 Re-imagining Social Control: G.H. Mead, C. Wright Mills and Beyond
Part III The Criminological Imagination, Empirical Insights,Theoretical Implications
8 Critical Research Values and C. Wright Mills’ Sociological Imagination: Learning Lessons from Researching Prison Officers
9 Neo-liberalism, Higher Education and Anti-politics: The Assault on the Criminological Imagination
10 Imagining the Unthinkable: Climate Change, Ecocide and Children
11 The Criminological Imagination and the Promise of Fiction
12 Imagining Transnational Security Projects
Index