Behaving Badly: Social Panic and Moral Outrage - Victorian and Modern Parallels

Behaving Badly: Social Panic and Moral Outrage - Victorian and Modern Parallels

by Judith Rowbotham (Author), Kim Stevenson (Author)

Synopsis

Both the Victorian age and the late twentieth century are often characterised by contemporaries as times of apparent economic affluence and stability. They are often depicted as periods that shared a conviction that the stability of society, including its affluence, was threatened by the activities of social deviants. These essays aim to examine crime of a socially visible nature, in the context of social panic and moral outrage in both the Victorian period and the late twentieth century. Through a series of interconnected case studies, exploring the social and legal responses to such offences and their public presentation through popular reporting and the court system, a series of apparent continuities as well as discontinuities are highlighted in the making of legislation. The innovative approach taken by the editors and contributors to concepts of crime and bad behaviour, make this essential reading for academics and practitioners. The interdisciplinary focus of the book allows it to locate the legal processes and system firmly within the socio-cultural context, instead of examining it as a discrete area of individual study, making this text central to work in law, criminology and social policy, and history.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 272
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 28 Oct 2003

ISBN 10: 0754609650
ISBN 13: 9780754609650

Author Bio
Judith Rowbotham, Nottingham Trent University, UK and Kim Stevenson, Nottingham Trent University, UK Contributors: Judith Rowbotham, Kim Stevenson, David Bentley, Tom Williamson, Roger Hopkins Burke, Kiron Reid, Sarah Wilson, David Nash, Mike Ahearne, Tom Lewis, Gavin Sutter, Susan Edwards, Judith Knelman, M.E. Rodgers, Richard Stone.