Acknowledgements. Foreword. Introduction: Recognizing and Transforming International Crime and Justice Studies Part I: Theory, Culture, and Society: The Narratives of Crime and Justice 1. Four Currents of Criminological Thought 2. Silence and the Criminalization of Victimization: On the Need for an International Feminist Criminology 3. The Radical Philosophy of Criminology Culturalized: Intellectual History and Ultramodern Developments Part II: The Industries of Crime and Justice: Systems of Policing 4. Global Non-state Auspices of Security Governance 5. Policing the Globe: International Trends and Issues in Policing Part III: The Industries of Crime and Justice: Systems of Law 6. The Politics of International Criminal Justice 7. The Challenges of International Criminal Law in Addressing Mass Atrocity 8. Crimes against Animality: Animal Cruelty and Criminal Justice in a Globalized World 9. Understanding the Intersection Between International Human Rights and Mental Disability Law: The Role of Dignity Part IV: The Industries of Crime and Justice: Systems of Corrections and Punishment 10. Isolative Confinement: Effective Method for Behavior Change or Punishment for Punishment's Sake? 11. Fabricated Selves and the Rehabilitative Machine: Toward a Phenomenology of the Social Construction of Offender Treatment 12. The Society-of-Captives Thesis and the Harm of Social Dis-ease: The Case of Guantanamo Bay Part V: The Criminal Enterprise: Types of Commerce, Consumerism, and Conspicuous Consumption 13. Global White-Collar Crime 14. A Suitable Amount of Street Crime and a Suitable Amount of White Collar Crime: Inconvenient Truths about Inequality, Crime and Criminal Justice Part VI: Global Technologies: From the Surveillance of Humans to the Management of Situations 15. Current and Emerging Technologies Employed to Abate Crime and to Promote Security 16. Technologies of Crime Control: International Developments and Contexts Part VII: Media, Crime, & Culture: Simulating Identities, Constructing Realities 17. Media, Entertainment, and Crime: Prospects and Concerns 18. Media, Crime, and Culture: Simulating Identities, Constructing Realities Part VIII: Green Criminology: Environmental Hazards, Natural Disasters, and Ecological Sustainability 19. Green Criminology and Green Victimization 20. What is to be Done about Environmental Crime? Part IX: Political and State Violence: Struggles, Conflicts, and Transitions 21. Redressing Violence in Sub-Sahara Africa 22. The Circle of State Violence and Harm 23. Fundamentalism, Extremism, Terrorism: Commonalities, Differences and Policy Implications of 'Blacklisting' Part X: Public Health Criminology: Global Risks and Transnational Responsibilities 24. HIV/AIDS at the Intersection of Public Health and Criminal Justice: Toward an Evidence-informed, Health and Human Rights-based Approach 25. Addressing the "Inherent" Philosophical and Operational Dichotomies of Corrections from an EpiCrim Approach Part XI: The Political Economy of Crime and Justice: The Trade in Colonialism, Nationalism, and Globalism 26. Crimmigration: Criminal Justice, Refugee Protection and the Securitisation of Migration 27. Personhood, Legal Judgement and Sovereignty at the Cape, 1793-1810