
Fieldnotes on a Study of Young People's Perceptions of Crime and Justice
Description
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Focusing on the nine-to-ten-week long unpaid training program that the young people undergo prior to becoming RHYC members, this book offers a detailed description of young people's experiences learning about crime, delinquency, justice, and law. Combining moments of self-reflection and autobiographical elements into largely "uncooked" fieldnotes, the book seeks to demonstrate the hegemonic operations of a court (the Red Hook Community Justice Center (RHCJC)-a multi-jurisdictional problem-solving court and community center where the RHYC is housed), the processes in which it secures belief in formal justice and the rule of law, ensures consent to be governed, and reproduces existing social structures.
An accessible and compelling read, this book will appeal to students and scholars of criminology, law, sociology, and youth justice, as well as to those undertaking ethnographic research on young people, crime and justice.
Reviews / Votes
With Fieldnotes on a Study of Young People's Perceptions of Crime and Justice, Avi Brisman provides us an in-depth, close-up and invaluable look at the raw material and initial insights that ethnographic accounts are built upon. Weaving moments of self-reflection and biographical tidbits into raw fieldnotes, this book lifts the veil on the research and idea-building process. This rich, novel and highly readable contribution may help to catalyze the next wave of qualitative studies of crime and justice - and it will be particularly valuable and energizing to those heading out into the field for the first time.Randy Myers, University of Washington, Tacoma
The poet Walt Whitman wrote, "I am large, I contain multitudes." Scaffolding as Structure is large, too, as measured not by word count but by the multitude of intellectual endeavors it contains. In it Avi Brisman ruminates on crime and criminology, sustains an engaged conversation with the young people and staff members he studies, and constructs an innovative text that is both prequel and sequel to his existing scholarship. Interwoven with all this are a backstage autoethnography of the research process and a rich account of its day-to-day particulars - and beyond that, a multitude of insights that escape the boundaries of conventional criminological writing.
Jeff Ferrell, Texas Christan University, Texas With Fieldnotes on a Study of Young People's Perceptions of Crime and Justice, Avi Brisman provides us an in-depth, close-up and invaluable look at the raw material and initial insights that ethnographic accounts are built upon. Weaving moments of self-reflection and biographical tidbits into raw fieldnotes, this book lifts the veil on the research and idea-building process. This rich, novel and highly readable contribution may help to catalyze the next wave of qualitative studies of crime and justice - and it will be particularly valuable and energizing to those heading out into the field for the first time.
Randy Myers, University of Washington, Tacoma
The poet Walt Whitman wrote, "I am large, I contain multitudes." Fieldnotes on a Study of Young People's Perceptions of Crime and Justice is large, too, as measured not by word count but by the multitude of intellectual endeavors it contains. In it Avi Brisman ruminates on crime and criminology, sustains an engaged conversation with the young people and staff members he studies, and constructs an innovative text that is both prequel and sequel to his existing scholarship. Interwoven with all this are a backstage autoethnography of the research process and a rich account of its day-to-day particulars - and beyond that, a multitude of insights that escape the boundaries of conventional criminological writing.
Jeff Ferrell, author of Drift: Illicit Mobility and Uncertain Knowledge
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