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`Governmentality' and the Problem of Crime:

605

Citations

24

References

1997

Year

TLDR

The article surveys key themes of Foucault‑derived governmentality, including the social as a realm of government, statistics, biopower, actuarial reasoning, and government‑at‑a‑distance. It demonstrates the criminological relevance of these ideas by analyzing emerging governmental rationalities and technologies in crime control, while also highlighting limitations of the governmentality literature. The analysis focuses on economic reasoning about crime, the construction of the criminogenic situation as a governable object, and the application of technologies of the self in penal settings. The study concludes that governmentality raises sociological questions, aligns with certain sociological analyses, and that a historical account of the present in crime control is best achieved by integrating these approaches.

Abstract

The article traces the main themes of the `governmentality' literature, as developed by Michel Foucault and subsequent writers, and outlines a series of related ideas about `the social' as a realm of government; statistics and bio-power; actuarial forms of reasoning; and government-at-a-distance. It goes on to illustrate the criminological value of these ideas by means of an analysis of some of the governmental rationalities and technologies that are currently emerging in the field of crime control. These include `economic' forms of reasoning about crime and its control, the emergence of `the criminogenic situation' as a practicable object of government and the use of `technologies of the self' in penal settings. The final part of the article identifies some of the limitations and problems of the `governmentality' literature. It argues that studies of governmentality beg certain sociological questions; that the governmentality analytic is quite compatible with certain forms of sociological analysis; and that the project of writing a history of the present is best pursued — in the field of crime control at least — by combining these forms of enquiry.

References

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