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Book Cover
E-book
Author Schwendinger, Herman

Title Who Killed the Berkeley School? Struggles Over Radical Criminology Herman & Julia Schwendinger
Published Brooklyn, NY : Thought | Crimes, 2014
Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 0000
2014

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Description 1 online resource (vi, 219 pages)
Series Book collections on Project MUSE
Contents Foreword: "Radical criminology lives" / Jeff Shantz -- Introduction: Dejà vu -- Gilbert Geis' autopsy -- How does it really add up? -- Fighting "friendly fascists" -- "Pigs off campus" -- The counter-reformists -- Moving in for the kill -- Platt denied tenure -- The legitimacy crisis -- "Reading" the text -- Schwendinger denied tenure -- Round up the usual suspects!
Summary "The Berkeley School of Criminology stands, to this day, as one of the most significant developments in criminological thought and action. Its diverse participants, students and faculty, were true innovators, producing radical social analyses (getting to the roots causes) of institutions of criminal justice as part of broader relations of inequality, injustice, exploitation, patriarchy, and white supremacy within capitalist societies. Even more they situated criminology as an active part of opposition to these social institutions and the relations of harm they uphold. Their criminology was directly engaged in, and connected with, the struggles of resistance that emerged in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Not surprisingly perhaps, they became a target of regressive and reactionary forces that sought to quiet those struggles. Notably the Berkeley School of Criminology was targeted by key players in the US military-industrial complex such as Ronald Reagan himself, then Governor of California and Regent of UC-Berkeley.Who Killed the Berkeley School? by Julia and Herman Schwendinger, key players in the Berkeley School, is the first full-length, in-depth analysis, of the Berkeley School of Criminology, its participants, and the attack against it. It tells the story of an important infrastructure of resistance, a resource of struggle, and how it was dismantled. It lays bare the role not only of conservatives but of liberal academics and false critical theorists, who failed to stand up in defense of the School and its work when called upon.This is a story with profound lessons in the current period of corporatization of campuses, neoliberal education, and market-driven curricula. It will be of interest to anyone concerned with developing resistance to the corporate campus and seeking critical alternatives. It also stands as a challenge to social science disciplines, including criminology, to develop a practice that identifies the roots of social injustice and organizes to confront it."
Analysis criminology
military-industrial complex
neoliberalism
social struggle
radical politics
Notes Description based on print version record
Subject University of California, Berkeley. School of Criminology -- Sociological aspects
University of California, Berkeley. School of Criminology -- History
SUBJECT University of California, Berkeley. School of Criminology fast
Subject Social justice -- California -- Berkeley
Crime -- California -- Berkeley -- Sociological aspects
Critical criminology -- California -- Berkeley
Social justice
Critical criminology
Crime -- Sociological aspects
California -- Berkeley
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Schwendinger, Julia R
Project Muse. distributor.
ISBN 9780615990934
0615990932