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Pre-crime and post-criminology?

556

Citations

48

References

2007

Year

Abstract

Conventionally, crime is regarded principally as harm or wrong and the dominant ordering practices arise post hoc. In the emerging pre-crime society, crime is conceived essentially as risk or potential loss, ordering practices are pre-emptive and security is a commodity sold for profit. Though this dichotomy oversimplifies a more complex set of changes, it captures an important temporal shift. As the intellectual offspring of the post-crime society, criminology must adapt to meet the challenges of pre-crime and security. This article examines the key features a theory of security needs to encompass. It explores the immanent capacities of criminology for change and suggests exterior intellectual resources upon which it might draw. It concludes that the pre-crime society need not be a post-criminological one.

References

YearCitations

1968

13.1K

2002

3.6K

1975

3.3K

2001

2.4K

2001

1.1K

1995

994

1974

887

1992

710

1991

632

1996

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