This article argues that police studies should draw on the sociology of punishment to better understand state pain-delivery. Whereas penal theorists commonly assess the pain and punishment of inmates in relation to wider social sentiments, police theory has yet to regard police violence and harm in the same fashion. As a result, police scholars
often fail to address why the damage caused by public constabularies, even when widely publicized, is accommodated and accepted. Adapting the idea of ‘punitiveness’ from penal theory allows some explanation of how the public views injury and suffering caused by the police by illuminating the emotions and sentiments their actions generate.
History
Volume
3
Chapter number
34
Pagination
43-58
ISBN-13
9781138827967
ISBN-10
1138827967
Language
eng
Publication classification
B Book chapter, B1 Book chapter
Copyright notice
2016, The Author
Extent
52
Editor/Contributor(s)
Bosworth M
Publisher
Routledge
Place of publication
Abingdon, Eng.
Title of book
Theoretical criminology: critical concepts in criminology