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Book Chapter

Against Hibernian Exceptionalism

Details

Citation

Brangan L (2021) Against Hibernian Exceptionalism. In: Black L, Brangan L & Healy D (eds.) Histories of Punishment and Social Control in Ireland: Perspectives from a periphery. Perspectives on Crime, Law and Justice in the Global South. London: Emerald. https://books.emeraldinsight.com/page/detail/histories-of-punishment-and-social-control-in-ireland/?k=9781800436077

Abstract
First paragraph: During the early stages of my PhD at the University of Edinburgh, in a moment of flippant chit chat, I suggested to a fellow student that I was toying with the idea of writing my entire dissertation on comparative sociology of punishment without reference to David Garland. This obviously sounds like the ludicrous or crude act of a provocateur. My friend was reasonably alarmed – not least because writing a thesis situated within the sociology of punishment that didn’t acknowledge, let alone mention, David Garland defied the basic logic of a literature review. Embarrassed, I desperately tried to clarify, though not successfully, that I was speaking in jest, but that there was a serious note underlying this statement. I had been wondering how one would write and think about punishment and penal politics in my two comparator states of Ireland and Scotland if David Garland’s theses on penal-welfarism and the culture of control had not become so landmark. How differently would we perceive penality in those places?

Notes
Output Status: Forthcoming

StatusIn Press
Title of seriesPerspectives on Crime, Law and Justice in the Global South
URL
PublisherEmerald
Publisher URL
Place of publicationLondon
ISBN 9781800436077

People (1)

Dr Louise Brangan

Dr Louise Brangan

Lecturer in Criminology, Faculty of Social Sciences

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