Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/8108
Title: Review of 'Fear of Crime - Critical Voices in an Age of Anxiety', edited by Murray Lee and Stephen Farrall: Routledge-Cavendish, 2009 (ISBN 978-0-415-43692-2, 217)
Contributor(s): Hogg, Russell G  (author)
Publication Date: 2009
Handle Link: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/8108
Abstract: There is an old Woody Allen gag from his stand up days in which he describes how he was failed in his philosophy exam for cheating: by looking into the soul of the student sitting next to him. As discussed in the contributions of Dennis Loo and Murray Lee to 'Fear of Crime - Critical Voices in an Age of Anxiety', since the 1960s, a similar although grander endeavour has proliferated around knowledge of what Robbie Sutton and Stephen Farrall call the 'interior landscapes' of citizens. In what has become a formidable branch of the general crime control industry, the everyday fears of citizens are regularly surveyed, catalogued, monitored, enumerated, quantified, managed, assuaged, circulated, stimulated, and catered for by the market; in short, these fears are entered into discourse in general and particularly into quantitative discourse. Yet, mainstream fear of crime research has generally betrayed little appreciation of the 'thorny problems' involved in such social inquiry, let alone the wider political ramifications of it. It has preferred instead to see itself as a technical, neutral exercise in a manner perhaps redolent of Michel Foucault's rather withering general observation about criminology: 'that it is of such utility, is needed so urgently and rendered so vital for the working of the system, that it does not even need to seek a theoretical justification for itself, or even simply a coherent framework' (Foucault 1980:47). Once established with solid institutional supports, something that fear of crime managed fairly quickly, any sense of its own history and contingency, of what it does culturally and politically, or even what fear of crime means, is banished from the mind of the researcher and the research establishment.
Publication Type: Review
Source of Publication: Current Issues in Criminal Justice, 21(2), p. 333-336
Publisher: University of Sydney, Sydney Institute of Criminology
Place of Publication: Australia
ISSN: 2206-9542
1034-5329
Fields of Research (FoR) 2008: 160299 Criminology not elsewhere classified
189999 Law and Legal Studies not elsewhere classified
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2008: 949999 Law, Politics and Community Services not elsewhere classified
HERDC Category Description: D3 Review of Single Work
Publisher/associated links: http://sydney.edu.au/law/criminology/journal/21_02.shtml
Appears in Collections:Review

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