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Talking criminal justice: language and the just society

Part of the Routledge Studies in Crime and Society series
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The words we use to talk about justice have an enormous impact on our everyday lives. As the first in-depth, ethnographic study of language, Talking Criminal Justiceexamines the speech of moral entrepreneurs to illustrate how our justice language encourages social control and punishment.

This book highlights how public discourse leaders (from both conservative and liberal sides) guide us toward justice solutions that do not align with our collectively professed value of "equal justice for all" through their language habits. This contextualized study of our justice language demonstrates the concealment of intentions with clever language use which mask justice ideologies that differ greatly from our widely espoused justice values.

By the evidence of our own words Talking Criminal Justice shows that we consistently permit and encourage the construction of people in ways which attribute motives that elicit and empower social control and punishment responses, and that make punitive public policy options acceptable.This book will be of interest to academics, students and professionals concerned with social and criminal justice, language, rhetoric and critical criminology.

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£160.00
Product Details
Routledge
1136184775 / 9781136184772
eBook (EPUB)
364.014
28/10/2013
England
English
176 pages
Copy: 30%; print: 30%
Reprint. Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed. Originally published: 2013.