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The Handbook of Social Control offers a comprehensive review of the concepts of social control in today's environment and focuses on the most relevant theories associated with social control. With contributions from noted experts in the field across 32 chapters, the depth and scope of the Handbook reflects the theoretical and methodological diversity that exists within the study of social control. Chapters explore various topics including: theoretical perspectives; institutions and organizations; law enforcement; criminal justice agencies; punishment and incarceration; surveillance; and global developments. This Handbook explores a variety of issues and themes on social control as being a central theme of criminological reflection. The text clearly demonstrates the rich heritage of the major relevant perspectives of social control and provides an overview of the most important theories and dimensions of social control today. Written for academics, undergraduate, and graduate students in the fields of criminology, criminal justice, and sociology, The Handbook of Social Control is an indispensable resource that explores a contemporary view of the concept of social control.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2019
Cover
Introduction
Perspectives of Social Control
An Overview of the Chapters
Objectives
References
Part I: Theories and Perspectives
1 Social Control: History of the Concept
Ross and Early American Sociology
Durkheim and Weber
Talcott Parsons: Functionalism and Control
From Four to Three Forms of Social Control
Norms and Sanctions
Medical Control
Conclusion
References
2 Deviance, Social Control, and Criminalization
Durkheim’s Legacy
The Nature of Social Deviance
A Note on Criminal Sanctions
The Definition of Deviance
Social Control
Social into Legal Norms
Conclusion
References
3 Law as Social Control
Four Dichotomies
Designating the Legal
Legal Social Control in Relation to Other Forms of Social Control
The Goals of Legal Social Control
References
4 Social Geometry and Social Control
Variation in Social Control
Variation in Social Geometry
Geometry and Form
Geometry and Style
Geometry and Quantity
Multidimensional Geometry
Changing Geometry
Conclusion
References
5 Discipline and Governmentality
On Governmentality
Governmental Analytics
Governmentality vs. Social Control
Genealogy
On Discipline
“Freedom,” Social Control, and Strategic Knowledge
References
Part II: Institutions and Organizations
6 Social Control in Organizations
Defining the Concept and Scope of Social Control in Organizations
Social Control as an Independent Variable in Organizations
Social Control as a Dependent Variable in Organizations
Social Control as a Constitutive Dynamic in Organizations
Conclusion
References
7 Psychiatric Control
Solitary Confinement
Civil Commitment
Juvenile Waiver
Psychiatric Control: Radical Criticisms and Future Directions
Conclusion
References
Cases Cited
8 Juvenile Justice
History of the Juvenile Justice System
The Invention of the Juvenile Court and Children as Adolescents
Early Juvenile Institutions
The Juvenile Court in Question
The Juvenile Crime Boom
Introduction of Blended Sentencing Laws
Post‐Juvenile Crime Boom
Introduction of Intermediate Sanctions
From Punitive to Lenient, and Back Again?
Looking Toward the Future
References
Cases Cited
9 Social Movements and Social Control
Analytical Plan for the Literature Review
Inventory of Social Control Tactics Employed by the State
Analyzing Social‐Control Tactics by the State
Toward a Power Framework for Analyzing Social Control
References
Part III: Criminal Justice
10 Race and the Criminal Justice System
Initial Contact
Case Processing
Punishment and Collateral Consequences
Developing Areas of Research
Conclusion
References
Cases Cited
11 Gun Control
Varieties of Gun‐Control Policies
How Gun Control Might Affect Violence: The Links between Firearms and Violence
Public Opinion on Gun Control in the United States and Policy Implementation
The Effectiveness of Gun‐Control Policies in Reducing Violence
Gun‐Control Laws
Policy Implications
References
Cases Cited
12 Restorative Justice
Restorative Justice versus Criminal Justice
Theoretical Framework
Restorative‐Justice Programming
Literature Review
Conclusion
References
13 Crime Prevention
Criminal‐Justice Crime Prevention
Developmental Crime Prevention
Community Crime Prevention
Situational Crime Prevention
Crime Prevention and Displacement
Conclusion
References
14 Actuarial Justice
Actuarial Justice at a Quarter Century
Actuarialism in the 20th Century
Actuarialism in the Age of Mass Incarceration
Actuarial Justice and the Crisis of Mass Incarceration
Beyond Actuarialism: Algorithmic Justice
References
Cases Cited
Part IV: Law Enforcement and Policing
15 History of Policing
Policing before the Institutionalization of Public Police
The Birth of the Modern Public Police Forces
Policing Today: The Rise of Private Policing
Conclusion
References
16 Police Technology
Social Control and Police Technology
The Effects of Information and Surveillance Technologies on Police Performance
The Effects of Technology on Police Organization Structures and Practices
Theories of Technology and Organizational Change
Conclusion
References
17 Policing Terrorism
Counterterrorism Policing in the United States
Counterterrorism Policing around the World
International Police Organizations
Conclusion
References
18 Police and Radicalization
Academic Discourses of Radicalization
Historical Antecedents of Radicalization Policing
Police and Radicalization
Embedding Preemption in Everyday Life
The Future of Research on Radicalization Policing
References
19 Police Accountability and Ethics
Police Ethics
Police Accountability
Police Accountability in the 21st Century
Conclusion
References
Part V: Punishment and Prison
20 History of the Prison
The Prehistory of the Prison: Toward a Template
The Birth of the Prison after the Revolution: The First Templates
The Modern Prison in the Antebellum Era: Competing Templates
The Post‐Civil War Proliferation of New Prison Templates
Serial Prison Templates of the 20th Century
Late 20th‐Century Prisons: A Dominant Template and its Offspring
Conclusion
References
21 Prison Culture
Early Scholarship
The Contemporary Prisoner Code
Areas for Future Research
Conclusion
References
22 Mass Incarceration
Types of Justice
Early Prison History
Prison Population Policy Options
The Data
The Future
References
23 Abolitionism and Decarceration
Prison, Penal, and Carceral Abolitionism
Abolitionist Problematizations of Liberal Decarceration
Usual (and Less Usual) Questions Asked to Abolitionists
Conclusion
References
24 The Death Penalty
A Comparative View of the Death Penalty
Death Penalty USA
Purposes of Capital Punishment
Empirical Facts about the Death Penalty
The Diminishing Death Penalty
Recent and Future Developments
References
Cases Cited
Part VI: Surveillance
25 Technologies of Surveillance
Technical Trends
Social and Political Trends
Countersurveillance in the City of Glass
References
26 Surveillance and Public Space
The End of Public Space?
Shopping Malls as a New Public Space
Ease of Community or Freedom of Society?
Conclusion
References
Case Cited
27 Countersurveillance
The Rise of Countersurveillance
Citizens as Surveillors
Limitations and Ambiguities
Conclusion
References
28 Surveillance in Popular Culture
Surveillance in Visual Media
Surveillance in Popular Music
A Society of Voyeurs?
Conclusion
References
Part VII: Globalization
29 Border Control as a Technology of Social Control
Borders, Territoriality, and Sovereignty
Theorizing Borders as Technologies of Social Control
Bordering, Territoriality, and Ideologies of Social Control
Confronting Reductionism of the Border Binary
Conclusion
References
30 Immigration Policies
Themes and Issues Associated with Migration
Controlling Europe: The European Union
US Immigration Policy
21st‐Century Globalization: Immigration Challenges and Opportunities
References
31 International Policing and Peacekeeping
Police Cooperation in Developing and Conflict‐Affected Countries
Current Conditions and Democratic Expectations
Peace Operations and Peacekeeping
Policing in the Three Phases of Peace Operations
Capacity‐Building and Reform
Lessons Learned: The Doctrines of Peace Operations
References
32 Human Rights and Social Control
Human Rights and the Criminalization of Offenses: Origins and Conditions
Conditions for the Functioning of Control Institutions
Alternatives and Supplements to Criminal Justice Intervention
Potentials for Informal Social Control
Conclusion
References
Index
End User License Agreement
Chapter 02
Table 2.1 The Four Kinds of Sanction
Chapter 09
Table 9.1 Collection of Social‐Control Tactics from the Literature
Table 9.2 Power Framework: The Social Control of Political Movements
Chapter 27
Table 27.1 Forms of Countersurveillance
Chapter 31
Table 31.1 Top Ten Contributors of Police to UN Peacekeeping Operations.
Cover
Table of Contents
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Series Editor: Charles F. Wellford, University of Maryland College Park.
The handbooks in this series will be comprehensive, academic reference works on leading topics in criminology and criminal justice.
The Handbook of Law and SocietyEdited by Austin Sarat and Patricia Ewick
The Handbook of Juvenile Delinquency and Juvenile JusticeEdited by Marvin D. Krohn and Jodi Lane
The Handbook of DevianceEdited by Erich Goode
The Handbook of GangsEdited by Scott H. Decker and David C. Pyrooz
The Handbook of Criminological TheoryEdited by Alex R. Piquero
The Handbook of Drugs and SocietyEdited by Henry H. Brownstein
The Handbook of Social ControlEdited by Mathieu Deflem
Edited by
Mathieu Deflem
This edition first published 2019© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
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Library of Congress Cataloging‐in‐Publication Data
Names: Deflem, Mathieu, editor.Title: The handbook of social control / edited by Mathieu Deflem.Description: First Edition. | Hoboken : Wiley, [2018] | Series: Wiley handbooks in criminology and criminal justice | Includes bibliographical references and index. |Identifiers: LCCN 2018027361 (print) | LCCN 2018027938 (ebook) | ISBN 9781119372370 (Adobe PDF) | ISBN 9781119372349 (ePub) | ISBN 9781119372356 (hardcover)Subjects: LCSH: Social control. | Justice, Administration of.Classification: LCC HM661 (ebook) | LCC HM661 .H366 2018 (print) | DDC 303.3/3–dc23LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018027361
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Kiyoshi Abe received his Ph.D. from the University of Tokyo. He is a professor in the Graduate School of Sociology at Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan. He has published widely on surveillance and policing. His work has appeared in English, including an article in the journal Theory, Culture & Society (2009) and a chapter in the edited volume Surveilling and Securing the Olympics: From Tokyo 1960 to London 2012 (Palgrave, 2016).
Bruce A. Arrigo is Professor of Criminology, Law, and Society in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology and Professor of Public Policy at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. His scholarship examines several human‐justice controversies and social‐welfare issues at the intersection of law, health, and politics; theory, culture, and society; and disorder, crime, and punishment. He is an elected fellow of both the American Psychological Association and the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences.
Brittany Arsiniega holds a J.D. from the School of Law and is a Ph.D. student in the Jurisprudence and Social Policy program at the University of California, Berkeley. Her research explores the intersection of criminal law and immigration, examining the role that local law‐enforcement actors play in enforcing federal immigration law. She is currently conducting dissertation fieldwork on the policing of undocumented persons in rural areas.
Heather Y. Bersot is an Adjunct Lecturer in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Her areas of research include ethics and the law, correctional mental health, and solitary confinement. Her peer‐reviewed articles have appeared in journals including the Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Criminology and Critical Criminology: An International Journal.
Kristie R. Blevins is a Professor in the School of Justice Studies at Eastern Kentucky University. She received her Ph.D. in Criminal Justice from the University of Cincinnati. Her research interests include crime prevention, corrections, and the occupational reactions of criminal justice employees. Her recent work can be found in outlets such as the Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, Criminal Justice Policy Review, American Journal of Criminal Justice, Deviant Behavior, and International Journal of Police Science and Management.
Sherry Cable is Professor of Sociology at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Her primary interests are environmental conflicts and environmental inequalities. She is the author of Sustainable Failures: Environmental Policy and Democracy in a Petro‐Dependent World (Temple University Press, 2012). Her recent articles include “Risk Society and Contested Illness: The Case of Nuclear Weapons Workers,” with Tom Shriver and Tamara Mix, in the American Sociological Review, for which they received the 2011 Allan Schnaiberg Outstanding Publication Award from the American Sociological Association.
Bradley Campbell is an associate professor in the Sociology Department at California State University, Los Angeles. He is the author of a number of works dealing with moral conflict, including The Geometry of Genocide (University of Virginia Press, 2015) and The Rise of Victimhood Culture (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), coauthored with Jason Manning.
Nicolas Carrier is Associate Professor of Criminology, Sociology and Legal Studies at Carleton University.
John Casey is a professor in the Marxe School of Public and International Affairs at Baruch College, City University of New York. From 1999 to 2008, he was a senior lecturer at the Australian Graduate School of Policing. Prior to his academic career, he held executive positions in government and nonprofits in Australia, Spain, and the USA. He is the author of The Nonprofit World: Civil Society and Rise of the Nonprofit Sector (Lynne Rienner, 2016).
Brooke B. Chambers is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Sociology at the University of Minnesota. Her research addresses the aftermath of genocide. She has visited Rwanda twice to engage in ethnographic research and conduct in‐depth interviews. Her dissertation addresses the intergenerational transmission of knowledge about and memory of the genocide, especially the engagement of young Rwandans with memorial sites and commemorative events. She has interned at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Stephen Chicoine is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Sociology at the University of South Carolina. He teaches Introduction to Sociology, Deviant Behavior, and Collective Behavior. His main research interests include subcultures, terrorism, and the social implications of the Internet. His doctoral dissertation involves a sociological study of terrorist subcultures.
James J. Chriss is a professor in the Department of Criminology, Anthropology, and Sociology at Cleveland State University. He received his Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1994. His most recent books are Social Control: An Introduction, 2nd edn. (Polity, 2013), Beyond Community Policing: From Early American Beginnings to the 21st Century (Routledge, 2013), Confronting Gouldner: Sociology and Political Activism (Haymarket, 2017), and Law and Society: A Sociological Approach (Sage, forthcoming).
Toycia Collins is a doctoral student at Sam Houston State University. She received her M.S. in criminal justice from Wayne State University. Her research interests include police organizational structure, police practices to prevent and reduce crime, and crime analysis in the Caribbean.
Robert D. Crutchfield is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Sociology at the University of Washington. His research is on labor markets and crime, and race, ethnicity, and the criminal justice system. He is a fellow of the American Society of Criminology and a winner of the University of Washington Distinguished Teaching Award.
Mathieu Deflem is Professor of Sociology at the University of South Carolina. His research and teaching interests concern a variety of aspects and dimensions of social control, including international police cooperation, surveillance, censorship, and law. He has authored four books, including The Policing of Terrorism (Routledge, 2010) and Sociology of Law (Cambridge, 2008).
Alexander C. Diener is an Associate Professor of Geography at the University of Kansas. His research engages geopolitics, borders, mobility, and urban landscape change. He has authored several books, including One Homeland or Two? (Stanford University Press, 2009), and co‐edited several more, including From Socialist to Post‐Socialist Cities: Cultural Politics of Architecture, Urban Planning, and Identity in Eurasia (Routledge, 2014). He has held research fellowships at the Woodrow Wilson Center, George Washington University, and Harvard University.
April D. Fernandes is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at North Carolina State University. Her research focuses on the employment, health, and housing consequences of misdemeanor criminal‐justice contact, with an eye toward the racial and ethnic disparities that exist within these systems of control.
Joshua Hagen is Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Northern State University. His research includes borders, geopolitics, and nationalism, most notably in the coauthored books Borders: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2012) and Borderlines and Borderlands: Political Oddities at the Edge of the Nation‐State (Rowman & Littlefield, 2010). He has received awards from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Fulbright Scholar Program, German Academic Exchange Service, Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation, and Gerda Henkel Foundation.
Samantha Hauptman is Department Chair and Associate Professor of Criminal Justice in the Department of Sociology, Criminal Justice, and Women’s Studies at the University of South Carolina Upstate. She teaches a broad range of classes and has a variety of research interests, including immigration, criminal/social deviance, social control, and globalization. In addition to publishing several book chapters and articles, she is the author of The Criminalization of Immigration: The Post 9/11 Moral Panic (LFB Scholarly Publishing, 2013).
Steven Hutchinson teaches in the Department of Criminology and the Department of Law at Birkbeck College, University of London. His research deploys Foucauldian epistemologies and covers areas including policing, intelligence, risk, and security. He recently co‐edited a special issue of the British Journal of Criminology, which explored interdisciplinary approaches to the study of security.
Roy F. Janisch was born and raised on the Lake Traverse Reservation in South Dakota. He attended the University of South Dakota, obtaining a B.S. in Criminal Justice/Psychology, then a Master of Public Administration. He has worked as a law‐enforcement specialist, management analyst, and federal criminal investigator. He obtained his Ph.D. from Arizona State University, and is currently Associate Professor/Coordinator of Justice Studies at Pittsburg State University. In 2016–17, he was a Fulbright Scholar at Vancouver Island University.
Michael J. Jenkins is an Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Scranton. He is coauthor with John Casey and Harry Dammer of the 2nd edition of Policing the World: The Practice of International and Transnational Policing (Carolina Academic Press, 2018). He has also authored Police Leaders in the New Community Problem‐Solving Era (Carolina Academic Press, 2014).
Paul Kaplan is an Associate Professor of Criminal Justice in the School of Public Affairs at San Diego State University and the former President of the Western Society of Criminology (2013–14). He received his PhD in Criminology, Law, and Society from the University of California, Irvine in 2007. Prior to entering academics, Dr. Kaplan worked as a mitigation investigator on capital cases. His primary research areas are capital punishment and cultural criminology, but he also works on projects involving socio‐legal theory and comparative law. His work has appeared in journals such as the Law & Society Review, Theoretical Criminology, and Law & Social Inquiry, and he is the author of Murder Stories: Ideological Narratives in Capital Punishment (Lexington Books, 2012). He is the co‐creator of the Art | Crime Archive: www.artcrimearchive.net.
Charles F. Klahm IV is an Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at Wayne State University. He received a Ph.D. in Criminal Justice from the University of Cincinnati.
Gary Kleck is the Emeritus David J. Bordua Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Florida State University. His research has focused on the topics of the impact of firearms and gun control on violence, deterrence, crime control, and violence. He has served on National Research Council committees and the US Sentencing Commission’s Drugs‐Violence Task Force, and has advised the National Academy of Sciences Panel on the Understanding and Prevention of Violence.
Johann Koehler is a student in the J.D./Ph.D. program in Jurisprudence and Social Policy at the University of California, Berkeley. He draws on the sociology of knowledge, critical criminology, and law and society to explore the origins, applications, and limitations of evidence‐based criminology. Selected recent work appears in Criminology, the Journal of Experimental Criminology, and Psychology, Crime, and Law. He received the 2016 Young Scholar Award from the European Society of Criminology.
Stéphane Leman‐Langlois is Professor of Criminology at Laval University in Quebec City, Canada. He holds the Canada Research Chair on Surveillance and the Social Construction of Risk. He is Director of the Terrorism and Counterterrorism Research Group and of the Centre on International Security at Laval University. He is also co‐investigator on the Big Data Surveillance Project at Queen’s University in Kingston, Canada. He edited Technocrime: Policing and Surveillance (Routledge, 2012).
Jason Manning is an associate professor at West Virginia University’s Department of Sociology and Anthropology. His work focuses on moral conflict, and he has published several papers on suicide as a way of handling conflict, as well as articles examining changing moral cultures on college campuses. The Rise of Victimhood Culture (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), which he coauthored with Bradley Campbell, deals with this latter topic.
Laura McKendy is a Ph.D. candidate at Carleton University. Her doctoral research explores the experiences of provincially incarcerated men and women in the Ontario context, with a particular focus on the pains of jail imprisonment, the collective and individual ways prisoners adapt to and resist the qualities of institutional life, and the sociological factors that mediate jail experiences.
Robert F. Meier is a professor at the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Nebraska Omaha. He is the author or editor of 24 books (both original and revised editions) and over 80 articles appearing in professional journals, book chapters, and technical reports. He is a consultant for the National Science Foundation, National Research Council, and National Institute of Justice. He was elected Vice President of the American Society of Criminology in 2004–05.
Holly Ventura Miller is an Associate Professor of Criminology at the University of North Florida, a former National Institute of Justice W.E.B. DuBois Fellow, and Past President of the Southern Criminal Justice Association. Her research interests include correctional policy, immigration and crime, and program evaluation. She has had recent articles in the Journal of Criminal Justice, Prison Journal, and Criminology & Public Policy. She is editor, along with Anthony Peguero, of the Routledge Handbook on Immigration and Crime (Routledge, 2018).
Calvin Morrill is Stephan A. Riesenfeld Professor of Law, Professor of Sociology, and Associate Dean for Jurisprudence and Social Policy/Legal Studies in the School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of The Executive Way: Conflict Management in Corporations (University of Chicago Press, 1995) and coauthor of Navigating Conflict: How Youth Handle Trouble in a High‐Poverty School (University of Chicago Press, 2018). His current research explores the interplay of law, economic and social entrepreneurship, and civic engagement across the life course in marginalized populations.
Massimiliano Mulone is an associate professor at the School of Criminology, University of Montreal, and a researcher at the International Center of Comparative Criminology. Working in the field of policing and security studies, his main research focus is the commodification of security – how policing and security are progressively being transformed into a consumer good – and its consequences for the governance of security. Other topics of interest include the policing of protest and the control of police deviance.
Pat O’Malley is Distinguished Professor in the College of Arts and Social Sciences at the Australian National University. Since the early 1990s, most of his research has focused on risk as a framework for governance, especially in relation to criminal justice, insurance, and illicit drug use. Over the past decade, the pivotal place of money sanctions in civil and criminal justice has become another major focus.
Justin Piché is an associate professor in the Department of Criminology at the University of Ottawa and co‐editor of the Journal of Prisoners on Prisons (www.jpp.org).
Rose Ricciardelli is a professor at Memorial University of Newfoundland. She is Associate Director of the Canadian Institute for Public Safety Research and Treatment, leading research on institutional and community corrections. Her research centers on penal living and community re‐entry for federally incarcerated men in Canada, evolving understandings of gender, vulnerabilities, risk, and experiences and issues within different facets of the criminal justice system.
Anna S. Rogers is a doctoral student in the Department of Sociology at the University of South Carolina. She teaches courses in Introductory Sociology and Visual Sociology. Writing her dissertation on the stigmatization and control of self‐professed “witches” in contemporary culture, she specializes in sociological questions of deviance and social control, popular culture, and gender.
Rachel Rogers is a graduate student in the M.S.C.J. program at the University of North Florida in Jacksonville. Currently, she serves as a graduate research assistant in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice. Her research interests include immigration policy, interactions of marginalized populations with the criminal justice system, and how stigmatization affects these groups post‐exposure. She hopes to pursue her Ph.D. in Criminology in order to further her research experiences with marginalized populations both within and outwith the criminal justice system.
Gil Rothschild‐Elyassi is a Ph.D. student in Jurisprudence and Social Policy at UC Berkeley, with a designated emphasis in critical theory. He holds an LL.M. from New York University and an LL.B. from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His work, which draws on sociological and critical theory, explores penal practice in the age of data analytics, as well as noncustodial penal strategies for governing communities afflicted by legacies of racial violence.
Ashley T. Rubin is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto. She holds a Ph.D. in Jurisprudence and Social Policy, and specializes in analyzing punishment from historical and sociological perspectives. She is currently completing a book manuscript examining why Eastern State Penitentiary alone retained the Pennsylvania System of long‐term solitary confinement despite extensive criticism and great personal cost to the prison’s administrators.
Joachim J. Savelsberg is Professor of Sociology and Law and Arsham and Charlotte Ohanessian Chair at the University of Minnesota. His books include Representing Mass Violence: Conflicting Responses to Human Rights Violations in Darfur (University of California Press, 2015), Crime and Human Rights: Criminology of Genocide and Atrocities (Sage, 2010), and, with Ryan D. King, American Memories: Atrocities and the Law (Russell Sage Foundation, 2011),.
Shelly S. Schaefer is an associate professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Forensic Science at Hamline University. She received her Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Minnesota. Her research and prior publications focus on juvenile justice policy, the transition to adulthood, and community re‐entry after a period of confinement.
Derek M. D. Silva is Assistant Professor of Criminology in the Department of Sociology at King’s University College at Western University. He holds a Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of South Carolina. His research examines practices of policing terrorism and radicalization, anti‐terrorism law in the West, and political and media rhetoric in the so‐called “War on Terror.”
Jonathan Simon is Adrian A. Kragen Professor of Law at UC Berkeley. His work includes Poor Discipline: Parole and the Social Control of the Underclass (University of Chicago Press, 1993), Governing through Crime: How the War on Crime Transformed American Democracy and Created a Culture of Fear (Oxford University Press, 2009), Mass Incarceration on Trial: A Remarkable Court Decision and the Future of Prisons in America (The New Press, 2016), and, with Richard Sparks, The SAGE Handbook of Punishment and Society (SAGE Publications, 2012).
A. Javier Treviño is Professor of Sociology at Wheaton College. He is the author and editor of several books, including The Sociology of Law: Classical and Contemporary Perspectives (St. Martin’s Press, 1996), Talcott Parsons on Law and the Legal System (Cambridge Scholars Press, 2008), and C. Wright Mills and the Cuban Revolution: An Exercise in the Art of Sociological Imagination (University of North Carolina Press, 2017). He is also Visiting Professor at the University of Innsbruck, Austria.
Kevin Walby is Associate Professor and Chancellor’s Research Chair, Department of Criminal Justice, University of Winnipeg. He is co‐editor of the Journal of Prisoners on Prisons (www.jpp.org).
James P. Walsh is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Social Science and Humanities at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology. In addition to surveillance, his research focuses on crime and media, globalization, and border security and migration policing.
James J. Willis is Associate Professor of Criminology, Law, and Society at George Mason University. His interests include police technology, organizational reform, and street‐level decision‐making. His current research focuses on the effects of different technologies on police organization structure and practice. Along with his coauthors, in 2008 he was awarded the Law and Society Association’s article prize for research using different theoretical perspectives to explain Compstat’s implementation in three police departments.
Mathieu Deflem
The concept of social control has a long history in the social sciences, dating back to the very earliest days of the institutionalization of the discipline of sociology. In an earlier volume of this series of Wiley handbooks that concerned the concept and area of deviance (Goode, 2015), I provided a comprehensive overview of social control, along with a review of its main theoretical perspectives and areas of empirical research (Deflem, 2015). It will suffice in this Introduction to first briefly summarize from that work. I will then, more importantly, situate the chapters of this handbook in that context to provide a general overview to this volume as a more or less coherent collective.
When the concept of social control was introduced in the late 19th century, it was defined in terms of the whole of institutions that provided the foundations of social order in modern societies characterized by increasing levels of individualism and diversity (Carrier, 2006; Deflem, 2015; Martindale, 1978; Meier, 1982). This notion of social control as the foundation of social order in modern societies was most famously developed from an institutional viewpoint by Edward A. Ross (1926), and found a micro‐theoretical expression in the work of George H. Mead (1934). Since those early days, however, social control has come to be conceived more specifically in terms of the control of norm violations, including informal norms in relatively small social settings, as well as more and more highly formalized norms in large‐scale societies. To this day, the term “social control” has multiple connotations, ranging from very broad concepts of social order (Gibbs, 1994; Janowitz, 1975) to very specific understandings within a particular theoretical tradition (Black, 1997; Cohen, 1985). Yet, for the purposes of this volume, the chapters will show, the emphasis is primarily on social control in relation to deviance and/or crime. Such a criminological understanding, however, does not prevent an informed perspective of social control within a broader – both social and sociological – context.
In view of the theoretical differentiation in sociological thinking, it is instructive to distinguish between at least three relevant conceptions of social control in terms of deviance and/or crime (Deflem, 2015). First, in sociological crime‐causation theories, primary attention goes to the causes of crime, with a related focus on social control as a functional response to crime. Second, crime‐construction theories devote central attention to social control as criminalization in a broader process of the labeling of deviance. Third, conflict‐sociological perspectives build on the constructionist viewpoint to articulate social control as part of a broader study (and critique) of society. From these various theoretical perspectives, social control provides a central framework from which social scientists, especially in criminology and sociology, can study institutions and practices involved with the control of crime and/or deviance (Chriss, 2013; Cohen, 1985; Garland, 2001; Melossi, 1990; Pfohl, 2009).
The delineated understanding of social control in terms of crime and/or deviance is by far the most widespread manner in which the concept is used today. On occasion, the term is also applied to other social behavior of a more or less problematic quality, such as illness and poverty, in order to contemplate on the social‐control functions of institutions such as medicine and charity (van Leeuwen, 2000). Yet, the center of attention in studies of social control mostly rests with the control of crime and deviance at multiple levels of analysis, ranging from the level of the interaction order to the macro‐level of multiple institutions involved with the administration of law, policing, and punishment. Recently, the sociological study of social control has especially focused on the influence of technological advances in crime control, typically under the heading of a new field of so‐called “surveillance studies,” and has additionally centered attention on the influence of processes of globalization, such as the response to international terrorism. It is within this intellectual tradition that the chapters in this volume demonstrate the rich heritage of the major relevant perspectives of social control to provide an overview of the most important theories and dimensions of social control today.
Within the suggested context, the present Handbook of Social Control provides an overview and discussion of selected perspectives and dimensions of social control today. The volume includes 32 chapters on various aspects of social control, divided over seven thematic parts: Theories and Perspectives; Institutions and Organizations; Criminal Justice; Law Enforcement and Policing; Punishment and Prison; Surveillance; and Globalization. The chapters reflect the theoretical and methodological diversity that exists in the study of social control, and are thematically diverse within the scope of the volume.
Part I, Theories and Perspectives, contains several chapters clarifying the most salient theoretical and conceptual issues involved with the social‐scientific study of social control. These chapters trace the development of the concept and its place in sociology and criminology, and devote attention to specific conceptualizations and perspectives of social control from a variety of approaches and theoretical frameworks. James J. Chriss does a great job of tracing the intellectual journey of the concept in American sociology, while Robert Meier unravels the connections between deviance, social control, and criminalization. Expanding on the notion of social control in more specific theoretical contexts, Javier Treviño elucidates the conception of law as social control since E. A. Ross, while Bradley Campbell and Jason Manning explain the more contemporary understanding of social control from the viewpoint of (Donald Black’s) pure sociology, and Steven Hutchinson and Pat O’Malley do the same in terms of (Michel Foucault’s) twin notions of discipline and governmentality.
Part II, Institutions and Organizations, considers the various societal organizations and agencies that, at multiple levels of governance, are involved with the planning and execution of social‐control mechanisms for a variety of objectives. At the upper level of societal organization, the modern state takes a central place, but at lower levels, a host of intermediate institutions engage in social‐control practices as well. This part focuses on multiple contexts among them, including organizations, psychiatric‐care institutions, juvenile justice, and social movements. Focusing on social control in organizations, Calvin Morrill and Brittany Arsiniega show the role of social control as both a dependent and an independent variable in organizational research. Focusing on two special domains in which control is exercised, Bruce Arrigo and Heather Bersot unravel some of the dynamics of psychiatric control, while Shelly Shaefer untangles the web of juvenile justice. Sherry Cable offers a useful concluding reflection to this part by focusing on the role of social control in relation and, usually, in opposition to social movements of various kinds.
It is important that this handbook is conceived as a social‐science work on social control, rather than a criminal justice administration book focused on technical issues of professional expertise. But it would be absurd to leave out relevant contemplations on the role of criminal justice in society. Rather than merely describing systems of criminal justice, however, Part III, Criminal Justice, focuses on analyzing the patterns and dynamics of criminal justice practices and mechanisms, such as the relevance of race, gun control, crime prevention, and the development of restorative justice. There is no getting around some very definite and oftentimes problematic characteristics of criminal justice. In the United States, in particular, but elsewhere as well, one cannot be blind to the relevance of race and the role of guns – aspects tackled in the respective chapters of April D. Fernandes and Robert D. Crutchfield and of Gary Kleck. Broader trends of criminal justice today must also involve consideration of restorative justice, addressed in the chapter by Rachel Rogers and Holly Ventura Miller, and of the role of risk and prediction – which, from rather different angles, are explored in the chapters on crime prevention by Kristie Blevins and on actuarial justice by Gil Rothschild‐Elyassi, Johann Koehler, and Jonathan Simon.
Ever since Max Weber first proposed his theory of the state, the institutions of police and military have been central topics of reflection as among the most critical means of coercion. The transformation of policing in terms of crime control and order maintenance, as well as its professionalization, stands among the most relevant dynamics. Part IV, Law Enforcement and Policing, addresses various issues concerning the function, organization, and practice of policing. Among the topics presented are the history of the police function, the role of technology in policing, counterterrorism policing, and police ethics. Massimiliano Mulone starts off this part, as one must, by tracing the historical origins of the institution and practices of policing, while James Willis’s chapter, with similar necessity, discusses the role of technology in policework. At least since September 11, likewise, it would be unwise to not consider the role of policing in counterterrorism, which I and co‐author Stephen Chicoine explore in institutional terms on a national and global level, and which Derek Silva analyzes with regard to radicalization as a new central framework of counterterrorism. Finally, the chapter on police accountability and ethics by Toycia Collins and Charles F. Klahm serves a more than useful role in this handbook, given current discussions of police violence and police legitimacy.
Part V, Punishment and Prisons, considers another critical aspect of the criminal justice system within the broader constellation of social control. At least since the seminal work of Emile Durkheim, social scientists have rightly contemplated the transformation of punishment toward less severe but more manipulative forms, as well as toward the generalization of the deprivation of liberty in the form of the modern prison system. This part of the handbook devotes chapters to the most important components of these dynamics, including the history of incarceration, the dynamics of prison culture, the problem of mass incarceration, the resistance of abolitionism, and the death penalty. Ashley Rubin traces the history of the prison as a series of overlapping periods in which new templates of imprisonment diffuse. Next, Laura McKendy and Rose Ricciardelli discuss prison culture in terms of the tensions between collectivism and individualism. Roy Janisch looks at the important problem of mass incarceration, while Nicolas Carrier, Justin Piché, and Kevin Walby consider the altogether different but highly related problem of abolitionism and decarceration policies and programs. Paul Kaplan, finally, examines the death penalty from an informed social‐science viewpoint that is intent on analyzing the facts of the case of this most peculiar form of social control.
Technology plays a central role in our daily lives and in many facets of the social order, including indeed social control. In recent years, much work has been conducted in this area under the heading of “surveillance” and a new field of surveillance studies. The chapters in Part VI, Surveillance, analyze relevant aspects of what is often called the surveillance society. Stéphane Leman‐Langlois starts off the discussion, appropriately, by focusing on the role of technology. Kiyoshi Abe next analyzes the shifting boundaries of surveillance in its manifestation in public spaces. Turning to the limits of surveillance, James Walsh discusses the potentials and restrictions of countersurveillance strategies, while Anna Rogers discusses the more or less playful and critical ways in which surveillance is treated in various forms of popular culture.
It has been a truism for quite some years now to observe that the world is getting smaller as its varied localized events become more and more interconnected. The world of social control has not remained unaffected by these globalizing trends. Certain developments of an international and transnational character in matters of social control have intensified, and others have changed qualitatively. Part VII of this handbook, Globalization, focuses on such border‐transcending – yet also border‐affirming – phenomena associated with social control. Indicating the continued relevance of national borders, the chapters by Alexander Diener and Joshua Hagen and by Samantha Hauptman discuss the dynamics of border control and immigration policies, respectively. Turning to dimensions of global social control closely related to political affairs of violence and war, Michael Jenkins and John Casey discuss the major forms of international peacekeeping, while Joachim Savelsberg and Brooke Chambers bring our handbook to a close by providing an informed analysis of more and less formal dimensions of social control designed and enacted in terms of violations of human rights.
This Handbook of Social Control may be justified both because of its academic usefulness and because of its pedagogical value. Indeed, existing edited volumes that explicitly deal with social control from a criminological and sociological viewpoint are by now several years old. Among them, for instance, are the collections of articles and chapters on social control edited by Jack Gibbs (1982), Donald Black (1984), and Stanley Cohen and Andrew Scull (1985), all of which were published some 3 decades ago. A similar edited volume, on social control and political order, is now more than 20 years old (Bergalli & Sumner, 1997).
More contemporary edited volumes on social control are available, yet they either address a wide and rather incoherent variety of different components of control (Chriss, 2010; Downes et al., 2008) or are, instead, focused on more specific aspects, such as punishment (Blomberg & Cohen, 2012; Deflem, 2014; Simon & Sparks, 2012), policing (Deflem, 2016), and surveillance (Ball et al., 2014; Deflem, 2008; Norris & Wilson, 2006). Likewise, many of the existing handbooks and encyclopedias in the area of social control are very broad in scope, dealing with a wide variety of aspects and approaches to the study of crime and/or deviance and its control (Albanese, 2014; Bruinsma & Weisburd, 2014; Inderbitzin et al., 2015; Tonry, 2013), while others are more specialized, focusing on such issues as policing and punishment (Reisig & Kane, 2014; Tonry, 2000).
Therefore, because of its distinct focus on the concept of and theories associated with social control, this handbook fills a void that scholars of crime, deviance, criminal justice, and related areas and issues should appreciate. It also fits well with the related handbooks published by Wiley‐Blackwell, such as the volumes edited by Erich Goode (2015) on deviance, by Alex Piquero (2015) on criminological theory, and by Austin Sarat and Patricia Ewick (2015) on law and society. Pedagogically, as well as academically, our Handbook of Social Control hopes to fulfill a distinct and unique – yet complementary – role.
The preparatory and editorial work involved in bringing this handbook to fruition has a history too long and unnecessary to be recounted here in any detail. Suffice it to say that the economics of academic publishing are presently undergoing rather drastic changes. Originally conceived as an encyclopedia, the volume was redesigned as a handbook following a series of events far beyond the realms of intellectual consideration. Eventually, these revisions and delays were most fortuitous, as they enabled this handbook to appear in the series of Handbooks in Criminology and Criminal Justice that is so ably edited by Charles Wellford. From submission of a proposal to the final review of this handbook’s chapters some 1,129 emails later, I am grateful to Dr. Wellford for his graciousness in evaluating the idea of the volume on nothing but sound academic grounds. As this project moved to completion, I also thank the many fine folks at Wiley who oversaw its production. Finally, of course, I am grateful to the invited authors for writing their chapters and to the reader who will enjoy the fruits of their labor.
Albanese, J. S. (Ed.). (2014).
The encyclopedia of criminology and criminal justice
. Malden, MA: Wiley‐Blackwell.
Ball, K., Haggerty, K., & Lyon, D. (Eds.). (2014).
Routledge handbook of surveillance studies
. London: Routledge.
Bergalli, R. & Sumner, C. (Eds.) (1997).
Social control and political order
. London: Sage.
Black, D. (Ed.). (1984).
Toward a general theory of social control
. New York: Academic Press.
Black, D. (1997).
The social structure of right and wrong
. New York: Academic Press.
Blomberg, T. G. & Cohen S. (Eds.). (2012).
Punishment and social control
, 2nd edn. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
Bruinsma, G. & Weisburd, D. (Eds.). (2014).
The encyclopedia of criminology and criminal justice
. Berlin: Springer.
Carrier, N. (2006). La dépression problématique du concept de contrôle social.
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Chriss, J. J. (Ed.) (2010).
Social control: Informal, legal and medical
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Chriss, J. J. (2013).
Social control: An introduction
, 2nd edn. London: Polity Press.
Cohen, S. (1985).
Visions of social control
. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Cohen, S. & Scull, A. T. (Eds.). (1985).
Social control and the state: Historical and comparative essays
. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Deflem, M. (Ed.). (2008).
Surveillance and governance: Crime control and beyond
. Bingley: Emerald.
Deflem, M. (Ed.). (2014).
Punishment and incarceration: A global perspective
. Bingley: Emerald.
Deflem, M. (2015). Deviance and social control. In E. Goode (Ed.),
The handbook of deviance
(pp. 33–40). Malden, MA: Wiley‐Blackwell.
Deflem, M. (Ed.). (2016).
The politics of policing: Between force and legitimacy
. Bingley: Emerald.
Downes, D., Rock, P., Chinkin, C., & C. Gearty (Eds.). (2008).
Crime, social control and human rights: From moral panics to states of denial
. London: Routledge.
Garland, D. (2001).
The culture of control
. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
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Social control: Views from the social sciences
. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.
Gibbs, J. (1994).
A theory about control
. Boulder, CO: Westview.
Goode, E. (Ed.). (2015).
The handbook of deviance
. Malden, MA: Wiley‐Blackwell.
Inderbitzin, M., Bates, K., & Gainey, R. (2015).
Perspectives on deviance and social control
. Los Angeles, CA: Sage.
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(1), 82–108.
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(pp. 46–58). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
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The state of social control: A sociological study of concepts of state and social control in the making of democracy
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Surveillance, crime, and social control
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Images of deviance and social control
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The handbook of criminological theory
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The Oxford handbook of police and policing
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James J. Chriss
This chapter provides an overview of the concept of social control in the history of sociology. Social control emerged in the late nineteenth century at roughly the same time as the establishment of American sociology, with Edward A. Ross being the main innovator of the concept. A parallel movement in Europe (represented in the thought of Emile Durkheim and Max Weber) focused on the larger problem of social order rather than social control per se. By the 1950s, Talcott Parsons sought to bring into alignment the broader concept of social order with the narrower one of social control by way of the development of a general theory of social systems that specified four functions operating across all levels of human reality. The analytical requirement of four functions implied that social control appeared concretely as four basic types: informal, legal, medical, and religious. By the 1980s, the consensus within sociology saw a further simplification of the Parsons schema into three basic types of social control: informal, legal, and medical (with religious control now being subsumed under informal). The trend over time has been that the most ancient and fundamental system of control – informal control – has waned and become somewhat imperiled in the face of the growth of both legal and medical control.
During the 1960s, the criminologist Travis Hirschi was a graduate student at the University of California at Berkeley. Early in his doctoral training, Hirschi took a deviance course from Erving Goffman, in which the latter provided an overview of the history and current status of social control. It was Goffman’s opinion that the reason social control was on the decline (circa the early 1960s) was that it had become synonymous with sociology. As Hirschi explained, “There was nothing you could not study under the rubric of social control” (quoted in Laub, 2011:300).
According to Hirschi, Goffman traced this view of social control as a broad and unmanageable mélange of sociological topics to Edward A. Ross, who had published a series of articles on social control in the American Journal of Sociology beginning in 1896. Ross later collected this series and included them in the first book ever published on the topic of social control, Social Control: A Survey of the Foundations of Order (Ross, 1901a). The complexity and diffuseness of Ross’s pioneering conceptualization is readily evident in a paper he published titled “The Radiant Points of Social Control” (Ross, 1900).
Specifically, Ross (1900) argued that social control radiates from multiple points, which flow ultimately from power. Yet, power becomes more focused and nuanced as it is coupled with prestige, and the power–prestige system gives rise to 10 radiant points of social control:
Numbers:
the crowd;
Age:
the elders;
Prowess:
the military;
Sanctity:
the priests;
Inspiration:
the prophet;
Place:
officialdom (or the state, claiming control of a sovereign territory);
Money:
the capitalists;
Ideas:
the elite;
Learning:
the mandarins; and
Individual strength
(even with lack of prestige in any of the preceding areas): the individual.
This was around the same time that American sociology was founded as an academic discipline, initiated largely as a result of the publication in 1883 of Lester F. Ward’s two‐volume Dynamic Sociology (Ward, 1883). (Indeed, Ross dedicated Social Control to Ward, and later married his niece and named his third son Lester Ward Ross.) Ward and the other founders of American sociology – William Graham Sumner, Albion Small, Franklin Giddings, and Charles H. Cooley being the most prominent – were equally concerned with social control, although they utilized different terminology and concepts, such as telesis, psychic factors of civilization, regulation, social organization, consciousness of kind, folkways and mores, social bonds, assimilation, adaptation and aggregation, cooperation, human association, primary and secondary groups, and – influenced most directly by Gabriel Tarde (1903) – imitation.
Why did social control emerge as an overriding concern in early American sociology? A standard explanation is that American society was born into conflict, which created a tapestry of recurring challenges to the social order (Meier, 1982