
Understanding Race and Crime
Colin Webster(Author)
Open University Press
Published on 16. July 2007
Book
Paperback/Softback
256 pages
978-0-335-20477-9 (ISBN)
Description
Why are some ethnic minorities associated with higher levels of offending? How can racist violence be explained? Are the police and criminal justice system racist? Are the reasons for offending and victimization among ethnic minorities different from those among ethnic majorities?
Understanding Race and Crime provides a comprehensive and critical introduction to the debates and controversies about race, crime and criminal justice. While focusing on Britain and America, it also takes a broader international perspective, with case studies including the historical legacy of lynching in the United States and racist state crime in the Nazi and Rwandan genocides.The book provides a conceptual framework in which racism, race and crime might be better understood. It traces the historical origins of how thinking about crime came to be associated with racism and how fears and anxieties about race and crime become rooted in places destabilized by rapid social change. The book questions whether race and ethnicity alone are significant enough factors to explain differing offending and victimization patterns between ethnic groups. Issues examined include:
Contact/conflict with the police Public disorder Involvement with the criminal justice system
Understanding Race and Crime is essential reading for students from a range of social science disciplines and for a variety of crime-related courses. It is also useful to practitioners in the criminal justice field and those interested in understanding the issues behind debates on 'race' and crime.
Understanding Race and Crime provides a comprehensive and critical introduction to the debates and controversies about race, crime and criminal justice. While focusing on Britain and America, it also takes a broader international perspective, with case studies including the historical legacy of lynching in the United States and racist state crime in the Nazi and Rwandan genocides.The book provides a conceptual framework in which racism, race and crime might be better understood. It traces the historical origins of how thinking about crime came to be associated with racism and how fears and anxieties about race and crime become rooted in places destabilized by rapid social change. The book questions whether race and ethnicity alone are significant enough factors to explain differing offending and victimization patterns between ethnic groups. Issues examined include:
Contact/conflict with the police Public disorder Involvement with the criminal justice system
Understanding Race and Crime is essential reading for students from a range of social science disciplines and for a variety of crime-related courses. It is also useful to practitioners in the criminal justice field and those interested in understanding the issues behind debates on 'race' and crime.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Milton Keynes
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 237 mm
Width: 170 mm
Thickness: 13 mm
Weight
424 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-335-20477-9 (9780335204779)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Colin Webster
Understanding Race And Crime
E-Book
07/2007
1st Edition
McGraw-Hill Education
€69.39
Available for download
Person
Colin Webster is Reader in Criminology at Leeds Metropolitan University, United Kingdom. He currently teaches criminology and a course on race and crime and previously taught at the Universities of Teesside and York, and has researched and written extensively on race, crime and social exclusion. His previously published works include Poor Transitions: Social Exclusion and Young Adults (2004), published by Policy Press.
Content
Series editor's foreword
AcknowledgementsConceptualising 'race' and crime: Racialisation and criminalisation
Origins: Criminology, eugenics and 'the criminal type'
Context: Race, place and fear of crime
Offending and victimisation
Racist violence
Race, policing and disorder
Race, criminal justice and penality
'Race', class, masculinities and crime: family, schooling and peer groups
The African-American 'underclass' and the American Dream
State crime: The racial state and genocide
Understanding race and crime: Some concluding thoughts
References
Index
AcknowledgementsConceptualising 'race' and crime: Racialisation and criminalisation
Origins: Criminology, eugenics and 'the criminal type'
Context: Race, place and fear of crime
Offending and victimisation
Racist violence
Race, policing and disorder
Race, criminal justice and penality
'Race', class, masculinities and crime: family, schooling and peer groups
The African-American 'underclass' and the American Dream
State crime: The racial state and genocide
Understanding race and crime: Some concluding thoughts
References
Index