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The Abolitionist Case: Alternative Crime Policies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 February 2016
Extract
We are inclined to consider “criminal events” as exceptional, events which differ to an important extent from other events which are not defined as criminal. In the conventional view, criminal conduct is considered to be the most important cause of these events. Criminals are — in this view — a special category of people, and the exceptional nature of criminal conduct, and/or the criminal, justify the special nature of the reaction against it.
People who are involved in “criminal” events, however, do not in themselves appear to form a special category. Those who are officially recorded as “criminal” constitute only a small part of those involved in events that legally permit criminalisation. Among them, young men from the most disadvantaged sections of the population are heavily overrepresented.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press and The Faculty of Law, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1991
References
1 For recent literature on the abolitionist perspective in the English language see: (1986) 10 Contemporary Crisis 3–106CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bianchi, H. and van Swaaningen, R., ed., Abolitionism, Towards a Non-repressive Approach to Crime (Amsterdam, Free University Press, 1986)Google Scholar; Blad, J. R., van Mastrigt, H., and Uildriks, N., eds., The Criminal Justice System as a Social Problem: An Abolitionist Perspective (Rotterdam, Mededelingen van het Juridisch Instituut van de Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam, nr. 36, 1987)Google Scholar; Blad, J. R., van Mastrigt, H., and Uldriks, N., eds., Social Problems and Criminal Justice (Rotterdam, Mededelingen van het Juridisch Instituut van de Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam, nr. 37, 1987)Google Scholarde Haan, W., The Politics of Redress: Crime, Punishment and Penal Abolition (London, Uriwin Hyman, 1990)Google Scholar.
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