City of Disorder: How the Quality of Life Campaign Transformed New York PoliticsNYU Press, 2008年4月1日 - 252 頁 2009 Association of American University Presses Award for Jacket Design |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 26 筆
... criminal justice issue and not a social services by framing the issue in terms of “quality of life,” one. He switched the focus of urban social policy from improving housing, employment, social services, and fighting poverty, to using ...
... criminal justice administration developed in response to popular calls for enhanced security. In the other discourse, urbanists debate whether or not quality-of-life politics developed as a response to a decline in public civility or ...
... criminal justice policies would become more restitutive and reintegrative rather than punitive and exclusionary ... criminals or deviants turned them into criminals or deviants; and the positing of solutions such as mental hospitals ...
... criminal justice system, and the commercialization of crime control. Some of these changes predate many aspects of the new quality-of-life movement and therefore represent a national punitive context for the changes in urban areas ...
... criminals. As Young argues, What I am suggesting is that both the causes of criminal violence and the punitive response towards it spring from the same source. The obsessive violence of the macho street gang and the punitive obsession ...
內容
1 | |
15 | |
29 | |
Defining Urban Liberalism | 54 |
The Rise of Disorder | 70 |
Globalization and the Urban Crisis | 93 |
The Transformation of Policing | 115 |
The Community Backlash | 144 |
Conclusion | 183 |
Notes | 195 |
Bibliography | 215 |
Index | 223 |
About the Author | 231 |