Marxism and Criminology: a History of Criminal Selectivity

Valeria Vegh Weis

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Publish Date
2018-07-31
Subtitle
A History of Criminal Selectivity
Book Type
Paperback
Number of Pages
368
Publisher Name
Haymarket Books
ISBN-10
1608469301
ISBN-13
9781608469307
citemno
271360
Author
Valeria Vegh Weis
Edition
Reprint
SKU
9781608469307

Description

Winner of the 2019 Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Outstanding Book Award
In recent years the very idea of criminal justice has come under increasing scrutiny by academics, activists, and even casual observers. From the rash of extra-judicial killings by police and other officers of the law, to the manifest inequalities of the system of mass incarceration, hardly a week goes by without some new headline pointing to injustices in the way our society executes its ‘tough on crime’ ethos.
In Marxism and Criminology, Valeria Vegh Weis argues that far from being mere excesses, things like racial profiling, prosecutorial discretion, and other expressions of what the author terms over-criminalization have been constitutive features of capitalist society from its beginning. To that end, Weis sets out to rehabilitate the contributions and methodology of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels to analyze crime and punishment through the historical development of capitalism in Europe and in the United States. She invites us to revisit their contributions to identify socio-economic and historic patterns of crime and punishment in order to foster transformative changes to our approach to criminal justice.