Gratisversand in ganz Deutschland!
Bookbot

Rys Farthing

    States of Violence and the Civilising Process
    The Precarious Generation
    • The Precarious Generation

      A Political Economy of Young People

      • 238 Seiten
      • 9 Lesestunden

      Focusing on the voices of disadvantaged youth born since the early 1980s, the book documents their struggles with rising unemployment and inequality. It examines how public policies in the USA, UK, France, Spain, and Australia have contributed to this generational disadvantage, providing a critical analysis of the socio-economic challenges faced by these young individuals.

      The Precarious Generation
    • This book offers a distinctive and novel approach to state-sponsored violence, one of the major problems facing humanity in the previous and now the twenty-first century. It addresses the question: how is it possible that large numbers of ordinary men and women are able to do the killing, torturing and violence that defines crimes against humanity? In his striking analysis, Rob Watts shows how and why states, of all political persuasions, engage in crimes against humanity, including: genocide, homicide, torture, kidnapping, illegal surveillance and detention. This book advances a new interpretive frame. It argues against the 'civilizing process' model, showing how both states and social sciences like sociology and criminology have been complicit in splitting 'the social' from 'the ethical' while accepting too complacently that modern states are the exemplars of morality and rationality. The book makes the case that it is possible to bring together in the one interpretative frame, our understanding of social action involving personal motivation and ethical responsibility and patterns of collective social action operating in terms of the agencies of 'the State'. Rob Watts identifies and charts the pathways of action and 'practical' (i.e. ethical) judgements which the perpetrators of these crimes against humanity constructed for themselves to make sense of what they were doing. At once challenging and highly accessible, the book reveals the policy-making processes that produce state crime as well as showing how ordinary people do the state's dirty work

      States of Violence and the Civilising Process