Description

Book Synopsis
A fascinating insider's look at the motivations, costs and consequences of deliberately violating the law as a strategy of social change

Trade Review
This book gives an account of people who 'deliberately and publicly violate the law as expressions of protest against perceived racial, economic, or social injustice' (p. viii). The accounts are generated primarily through interviews with 21 activists who have transgressed the law. They are used to illuminate both the personal and social consequences of dissent and provide a particular insight into the workings of the United States police and justice systems. -- Bruce Curtis * Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology *
Crimes of Dissent will immediately engage students and activists alike. Using clear and concise first-person narratives, the book explains why and how people engage in civil disobedience and the ways that law enforcement responds. The reader stands to learn important concepts and ideas regarding political dissent, its long history, and the theory behind it. -- Luis A. Fernandez,author of Policing Dissent: Social Control and the Anti-Globalization Movement
Civil disobedience is the voice of our consciences, the courage which mocks our fear of authority, the point where right defies rules. This book wisely and elegantly charts the methods and philosophy of dissent, it is a must read and a good read for anyone concerned with the injustices of our times. -- Jock Young,author of The Vertigo of Late Modernity
This book is a timely reminder of the long history of the criminalization of dissent and civil disobedience that from time to time gets buried under the mass of numbers and figures so loved by many criminologists. Here we get the real story of dissent as narrated by dissenters themselves and the effects of the criminalization process on the everyday lives of both their families and themselves. -- Mike Presdee,author of Cultural Criminology and the Carnival of Crime
is a highly engaging examination of contemporary forms and meanings of political activism in the United States. Written from the perspective of the scholar activist, the book is one part promotion of law violating forms of political action - & crimes of dissent - and one part handbook on civil disobedience. * Socialist Studies: the Journal of the Society for Socialist Studies *
As a window into the contemporary American subculture of dissent, Crimes of Dissent is a fascinating read. The current American microcosm of dissentwhich is at turns strange and familiar, idealistic and pragmatic, ludicrous and lucidis revealed in full glory. * Law and Politics Book Review *

Table of Contents
Preface Acknowledgments 1 Crime and Dissent 2 Society and Its Discontents 3 Dissent as "Pure" Crime 4 Policing Dissent 5 Working the System 6 The Impact of Dissent Appendix: Activist Profiles Notes Index About the Author

Crimes of Dissent

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    A Paperback / softback by Jarret S. Lovell

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      Publisher: New York University Press
      Publication Date: 01/07/2009
      ISBN13: 9780814752272, 978-0814752272
      ISBN10: 0814752276

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A fascinating insider's look at the motivations, costs and consequences of deliberately violating the law as a strategy of social change

      Trade Review
      This book gives an account of people who 'deliberately and publicly violate the law as expressions of protest against perceived racial, economic, or social injustice' (p. viii). The accounts are generated primarily through interviews with 21 activists who have transgressed the law. They are used to illuminate both the personal and social consequences of dissent and provide a particular insight into the workings of the United States police and justice systems. -- Bruce Curtis * Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology *
      Crimes of Dissent will immediately engage students and activists alike. Using clear and concise first-person narratives, the book explains why and how people engage in civil disobedience and the ways that law enforcement responds. The reader stands to learn important concepts and ideas regarding political dissent, its long history, and the theory behind it. -- Luis A. Fernandez,author of Policing Dissent: Social Control and the Anti-Globalization Movement
      Civil disobedience is the voice of our consciences, the courage which mocks our fear of authority, the point where right defies rules. This book wisely and elegantly charts the methods and philosophy of dissent, it is a must read and a good read for anyone concerned with the injustices of our times. -- Jock Young,author of The Vertigo of Late Modernity
      This book is a timely reminder of the long history of the criminalization of dissent and civil disobedience that from time to time gets buried under the mass of numbers and figures so loved by many criminologists. Here we get the real story of dissent as narrated by dissenters themselves and the effects of the criminalization process on the everyday lives of both their families and themselves. -- Mike Presdee,author of Cultural Criminology and the Carnival of Crime
      is a highly engaging examination of contemporary forms and meanings of political activism in the United States. Written from the perspective of the scholar activist, the book is one part promotion of law violating forms of political action - & crimes of dissent - and one part handbook on civil disobedience. * Socialist Studies: the Journal of the Society for Socialist Studies *
      As a window into the contemporary American subculture of dissent, Crimes of Dissent is a fascinating read. The current American microcosm of dissentwhich is at turns strange and familiar, idealistic and pragmatic, ludicrous and lucidis revealed in full glory. * Law and Politics Book Review *

      Table of Contents
      Preface Acknowledgments 1 Crime and Dissent 2 Society and Its Discontents 3 Dissent as "Pure" Crime 4 Policing Dissent 5 Working the System 6 The Impact of Dissent Appendix: Activist Profiles Notes Index About the Author

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