148 research outputs found

    In plain sight - Examining the harms of professional wrestling as state-corporate crime

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    Purpose – To explore critically the potentially harmful business of professional wrestling in the United States as state-corporate crime. Design/methodology/approach – This paper comprises desk-based research of secondary sources. The lack of official data on the harms experienced by professional wrestlers means that much of the data regarding this is derived from quantitative and qualitative accounts from Internet sites dedicated to this issue. Findings – A major finding is that with regard to the work-related harms experienced by professional wrestlers, the business may not be wholly to blame, but nor is it entirely blame-free. It proposes that one way the work-related harms can be understood is via an examination of the political economic context of neo-liberalism from the 1980s onwards and subsequent state-corporate actions and inactions. Practical implications – The paper raises questions about the regulation of the professional wrestling industry together with the misclassification of wrestlers’ worker status (also known as wage theft and tax fraud) and the potential role they play in the harms incurred in this industry. Social implications – The potential wider social implications of the misclassification of workers are raised. Originality/value – The originality and value of this paper is the examination of work-related harms within the professional wrestling industry through the lens of state-corporate crime. Key words Professional Wrestling, Work-related Harms, Worker Misclassification, State-Corporate Crime Paper type Case stud

    Activation and performance : an analysis in terms of a two dimensional activation theory

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    A critical criminology of professional wrestling and sports entertainment

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    A Criminal Injustice System? Sex Offender Suspects and Defendants

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    The crux of this paper is that sex offender suspects and defendants potentially find themselves in a criminal injustice system. Whilst the focus is predominantly on ‘victims’ (usually female) and people suspected or charged with sexual offending (usually male) within the criminal justice system in England and Wales the concerns articulated here are not confined to this context. For example such concerns are echoed in relation to the potential injustices occurring on American campuses. This domestic and international situation has to be contextualised with regard to public, media and official attitudes and approaches to ‘victims’, suspects, defendants, sex, and sexual consent, and a subsequent shift from the presumption of innocence to a presumption of guilt. The safeguard of the presumption of innocence is under threat and the result is miscarriages of justice and wrongful convictions. This is exacerbated by the assumptions embodied within the victim personal statement which weaken the principle and practice of the presumption of innocence

    Localization of NG2 immunoreactive neuroglia cells in the rat locus coeruleus and their plasticity in response to stress

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    The locus coeruleus (LC) nucleus modulates adaptive behavioural responses to stress and dysregulation of LC neuronal activity is implicated in stress-induced mental illnesses. The LC is composed primarily of noradrenergic neurons together with various glial populations. A neuroglia cell-type largely unexplored within the LC is the NG2 cell. NG2 cells serve primarily as oligodendrocyte precursor cells throughout the brain. However, some NG2 cells are in synaptic contact with neurons suggesting a role in information processing. The aim of this study was to neurochemically and anatomically characterise NG2 cells within the rat LC. Furthermore, since NG2 cells have been shown to proliferate in response to traumatic brain injury, we investigated whether such NG2 cells plasticity also occurs in response to emotive insults such as stress. Immunohistochemistry and confocal microscopy revealed that NG2 cells were enriched within the pontine region occupied by the LC. Close inspection revealed that a sub-population of NG2 cells were located within unique indentations of LC noradrenergic somata and were immunoreactive for the neuronal marker NeuN whilst NG2 cell processes formed close appositions with clusters immunoreactive for the inhibitory synaptic marker proteins gephyrin and the GABA-A receptor alpha3-subunit, on noradrenergic dendrites. In addition, LC NG2 cell processes were decorated with vesicular glutamate transporter 2 immunoreactive puncta. Finally, ten days of repeated restraint stress significantly increased the density of NG2 cells within the LC. The study demonstrates that NG2 IR cells are integral components of the LC cellular network and they exhibit plasticity as a result of emotive challenges

    ‘Standing by’: disability hate crime and the police in England

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    This article discusses the Don’t Stand By: Hate Crime Research Report (DSB) (Mencap, 2011), which documents failings in policing practices related to reporting and responding to disability hate crime. Such failings, we argue, constitute not so much direct discrimination but acts of ‘normalcy’. Normalcy is the process whereby taken for granted ideas about what is normal become naturalised; in this respect being non-disabled is seen as normal. Acts of normalcy, whilst less tangible, are by no means less violent or harmful than acts of ‘real discrimination’ or ‘real violence’ (Goodley and Rumswick-Cole, 2011). Systemic and cultural normalcy within the police is not new, as can be seen in the case of Stephen Lawrence

    Service user suicides and coroner's inquests

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    This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Criminal Justice Matters on 22nd May 2013, available online: DOI:10.1080/09627251.2013.805375The expansion of victimology in the 1980s produced a more nuanced understanding of victims and victimisation. Yet responses of government, criminal justice agencies, media and general public to victims are predictably and predominantly focused on victims of ‘conventional crime’. We challenge this perspective, thus widening the victimological lens. We discuss the impact of self-inflicted deaths and subsequent coronial inquests on practitioners working on behalf of the state

    Novel in-situ real-time line scan optical monitoring of wear and surface damage initiation in a laboratory twin disc test

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    A new optical monitoring system has been developed to photograph in-situ in real time the initiation of damage on the running surface of a rail steel twin-disc sample undergoing wear testing. The line-scan camera system has been demonstrated on the Sheffield University ROlling Sliding 2 (SUROS2) twin-disc machine. The results show the system can continuously track the development of wear flakes, with wear flake initiation and stabilisation of wear flake size observed without test interruption for the first time. Image analysis to quantify the total wear flake shadow pixel count showed a good correlation with the mass loss results, indicating the potential for the optical data to quantify rail steel wear without interruption to testing. Furthermore, in a water-lubricated test the new system enables observation of rolling contact fatigue (RCF) crack initiation through a water layer present on the specimens, without requiring test interruption. The improving knowledge of the wear and RCF performance of rail steels available from the new observation method can help improve understanding of steel performance and support to the selection of rail steel grades according to their performance
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