--Mike Connelly
We praise Rutgers’ great website on books in criminal law and justice as much as we can, but it’s not enough. The site has grown in recent versions, indicating it’s catching on with its academic audience as well as the rest of us in Corrections Sentencing following along at this blog. Their most recent set of review is up right now, with three that we plan a couple of our review of reviews around soon. But you don’t have to wait for the reviews themselves or the other books on non-Corr Sent but otherwise valuable topics either. We’ll link you up to them below and you check them out as your interests and time allow. Don’t worry about the “work” thing. They’re all work-related!!! (Plus, play a really cool game of guessing which ones we’re gunna pick for discussion here, it’ll be really fun, and you can impress your . . . what? No, there aren’t any prizes . . . . oh, okay, never mind.)
Crime, History, and Hollywood: Learning Criminal Justice History Through Major Motion Pictures
Criminology Goes to the Movies: Crime Theory and Popular Culture
The Harm in Hate Speech
Shooting to Kill: Socio-Legal Perspectives on the Use of Lethal Force
The Sparking Discipline of Criminology: John Braithwaite and the Construction of Critical Social Science and Social Justice
Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Criminal Law
Crime-Terror Alliances and the State: Ethnonationalist and Islamic Challenges to Regional Security
Cape Town After Apartheid: Crime and Governance in the Divided City
Cyberthreats and International Law
Lush Life: Constructing Organized Crime in the UK
Sex Work: Labour, Mobility, and Sexual Services
Offender Rehabilitation and Therapeutic Communities: Enabling Change the TC Way
Animal Harm: Perspectives on Why People Harm and Kill Animals
Corrections: A Critical Approach. 3rd Ed.
Posted on
Wed, June 5, 2013
by Mike Connelly
filed under