Skip to main content Site map

Black Men, Invisibility and Crime: Towards a Critical Race Theory of Desistance


Black Men, Invisibility and Crime: Towards a Critical Race Theory of Desistance

Paperback by Glynn, Martin

Black Men, Invisibility and Crime: Towards a Critical Race Theory of Desistance

WAS £36.99   SAVE £5.55

£31.44

ISBN:
9781138933675
Publication Date:
26 Aug 2015
Language:
English
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:
Routledge
Pages:
186 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 27 May - 1 Jun 2024
Black Men, Invisibility and Crime: Towards a Critical Race Theory of Desistance

Description

Past studies have suggested that offenders desist from crime due to a range of factors, such as familial pressures, faith based interventions or financial incentives. To date, little has been written about the relationship between desistance and racialisation. This book seeks to bring much needed attention to this under-researched area of criminological inquiry. Martin Glynn builds on recent empirical research in the UK and the USA and uses Critical Race Theory as a framework for developing a fresh perspective about black men's desistance. This book posits that the voices and collective narrative of black men offers a unique opportunity to refine current understandings of desistance. It also demonstrates how new insights can be gained by studying the ways in which elements of the desistance trajectory are racialised. This book will be of interest both to criminologists and sociologists engaged with race, racialisation, ethnicity, and criminal justice.

Contents

1. Introduction, 2. Racialisation and criminalisation, 3. Approaching black men's desistance, 4. Developing a black criminology of desistance, 5. Black men and the barriers towards desistance, 6. Black men, therapeutic interventions and desistance, 7. African American men and their desistance, 8. A theoretical framework of masculinities in relation to black men's desistance, 9. A critical race theory of desistance, 10. New directions for black male desistance.

Back

Middlesex University logo