Buch, Englisch, 268 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 242 mm, Gewicht: 650 g
Control, Vulnerability and Risk-Taking
Buch, Englisch, 268 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 242 mm, Gewicht: 650 g
ISBN: 978-1-4724-1013-9
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Over recent decades criminological research has changed from a gender-blind discipline which equated crime with men and thus ignored questions about gender, to an approach that studied gender by showing statistical differences between men and women, and then finally to a more inclusive and elaborate gender-theoretical approach to crime and crime control. However, despite this development, research on gender - and in particular research on gendered norms and the construction and enactment of masculinities - within the criminological field has been unable to keep up with developments in gender research. Since 1990, only a few anthologies with a gender-theoretical orientation focusing on masculinities within the criminological research field have been published. Many of the theoretical developments in gender research still have difficulties in reaching into mainstream criminology, partly because such developments are often published in feminist and/or gender theoretical journals. This volume both problematizes and renders visible conceptions and norms regarding male behaviour and masculinities and shows how these affect the criminological field through providing a theoretically sound and clear gender perspective to this field of research. With sections based around the following three themes: negotiations of masculinity in institutional settings, vulnerable masculinities and risk-taking and masculinities, this volume will be of interest to scholars of criminology, sociology, social work and gender studies, as well as policy-makers, and law enforcement professionals.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction, Ingrid Lander, Signe Ravn, Nina Jon; Part I Negotiating Masculinities in Institutional Settings; Chapter 1 Transforming Cowboy Masculinity into Appropriate Masculinity, Nina Jon; Chapter 2 Doing Masculinity in Youth Institutions, Tove Pettersson; Chapter 3 ‘Be a Man. Not a Bitch.’ Snitching, the Inmate Code and the Narrative Reconstruction of Masculinity in a Norwegian Prison, Thomas Ugelvik; Chapter 4 Doing the Right Masculinities Right, Ingrid Lander; Chapter 5 The Construction of an Accepted Masculinity, Eivind Myhre, Øyvind Thomassen; Part II Vulnerable Masculinities; Chapter 6 Masculinity and Victimization, Veronika Burcar; Chapter 7 Armoured Toughness? Multicultural Group Relationships and Crime among Young Men, Päivi Honkatukia, Leena Suurpää; Chapter 8 The Narrative of Masculinity in False Reports of Rape, Marie Bruvik Heinskou; Chapter 9 Sexualized War Violence, Anette Bringedal Houge; Part III On the Edge of Control: Risk Taking and Masculinities; Chapter 10 The Dangerous Other? Towards a Contextual Approach to Men’s Risk-Taking with Motor Vehicles, Dag Balkmar, Tanja Joelsson; Chapter 11 Virtuous Fighting in Poker Gambling, Simon Simonsen; Chapter 12 Along the Lines of Boys and Girls, Sidsel Kirstine Harder, Signe Ravn; Chapter 13 Sex, Drugs and Masculinities, Lotta Pettersson, Christoffer Carlsson;