Punishment and Society
@pun_soc
The official Twitter account for Punishment & Society, a peer-reviewed, multi-disciplinary journal.
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https://journals.sagepub.com/home/pun 16-11-2019 00:47:25
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I curated this VSI on borders and punishment, based on the wealth of critical work published in Punishment and Society now made OA. @jelmerbrouwer Federico Abiuso @konradfranco Mieke Kox @ClaudiaMcHardy Magdalena Tomaszewska Milena Tripkovic @johnjtodd @SL_Turnbull 🐦 Bird on the Wire (aka Leanne Weber) @mfbosworth krimrsos
My review of Hans Boutellier's 'A #criminology of moral order' Bristol Uni Press has now been published in the January 2023 issue of Punishment and Society👇 journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.117…
Punishment and Society are seeking a new book review editor – any Qs ask Dr. Ashley T. Rubin! Apply by Feb 1, 2023 by emailing Alessandro De Giorgi & Prof Vanessa Barker (@ Stockholm) Details here: journals.sagepub.com/pb-assets/cmsc…
New article from Lauren O'Connell (Griffith College) and Deirdre Healy (UCD Criminology), 'Beyond rhetoric: Emplotting the life course of criminal justice narratives', out now in Punishment and Society: journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.117…
Happy to share my new and 1st first-author publication, written with Roni Factor and Daniel Ohana. We used Natl. Registry of Exonerations data to examine racial disparities in the exoneration process of wrongful convicts. Now available in Punishment and Society. journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/14…
My article on citizenship revocation has come out in the latest issue of Punishment and Society It argues that the practice cannot be understood merely as a matter of racism, but is rather the result of mutually reinforcing exclusionary tendencies of both communitarianism and liberalism.
A new study in Israel with formerly incarcerated people explores how sentenced people engage with the written remarks of the sentencing judge. Published in Punishment & Society (Punishment and Society)
Fascinating analysis of 36 years of US presidential clemency statements by @eri_canossini. The narratives challenge punitiveness by calling for reform and moderation, but the way they do so often reinforces dominant punitive narratives. New in Punishment and Society. journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/14…
Prison often enters fathers into financial debt. A forthcoming article of mine in Punishment & Society CRN describes “temporal debt,” an inevitable collateral consequence of incarceration where fathers are forced to make temporal withdrawals from family and prohibited from making deposits
Check out Susila Gurusami's review here: journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.117…
Finally got one of my favorite pieces in print Punishment and Society! Research highlights the financial debt fathers are subjected to through justice involvement. This article uses qual data to detail the *temporal debt* fathers inherently enter through incarceration. journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/14…