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New Foundations: Pseudo-pacification and special liberty as potential cornerstones of a multi-level theory of homicide and serial murder
Authors
Akers RL
Atkinson R
+57 more
Barclay G
Bauman Z
Bollas C
Breggin PR
Brookman F
Cloward R
Coleman R
Connell R
Currie E
Currie E
David Wilson
Dickens P
Dorling D
Duclos
D’Cruze S
Elias N
Fish S
Fox J
Hall S
Hall S
Hall S
Hayward K
Hickey EW
Hobbs D
Holmes R
Holmes R
Honneth A
Lafree G
Leyton E
Lilly JR
Monkonnen E
Monkonnen E
Monkonnen E
Myers WC
Owen T
Papastergiadis N
Parker KF
Reiner R
Roth R
Seltzer M
Stein
Steve Hall
Stiegler
Taylor PA
Veblen T
Verkko V
Ward-Perkins B
Weiviorka M
Weiviorka M
Wilkinson R
Wilson D
Wilson D
Winlow S
Winlow S
Yar M
Žižek S
Žižek S
Publication date
1 January 2014
Publisher
'SAGE Publications'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Over the past 30 years the industrialized West has witnessed a move towards space, heterogeneity and subjectivity in the criminological study of violence and homicide. Although large-scale quantitative studies of the temporal and spatial distribution of homicide continue to provide a broad empirical context, aetiological explanations tend to be based on analyses of the heterogeneous psychological interactions and experiences of individual subjects at the micro-level. However, mid-range studies of the temporal and spatial distribution of perpetrators and victims of homicide between unrelated adults have provided a useful link between the micro- and macro-levels. Focusing primarily on British homicide and serial murder, this article attempts to strengthen this link by combining contemporary micro-analyses of the subjective motives of perpetrators with mid-range analyses of space, which can therefore be seen as part of the structural tradition of theorizing about homicide and serial murder. Placing these analyses in a broad underlying context constituted by major historical shifts in political economy and the cultural forms of ‘pseudo-pacification’ and ‘special liberty’ will lay the initial cornerstones for an integrated multi-level theory. © The Author(s) 2014
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