Promoting the Theory and Practice of Criminology: The Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology and Its Founding Moment
Author(s) -
Mark Finnane
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
australian and new zealand journal of criminology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.627
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 1837-9273
pISSN - 0004-8658
DOI - 10.1375/acri.41.2.199
Subject(s) - criminology , context (archaeology) , sociology , criminal justice , cultural criminology , discipline , antipodes , political science , law , social science , history , geography , archaeology , geodesy
The Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology was an initiative of Australia's first criminology department, at Melbourne, from where the proposal to establish a journal also evolved. The society was of its time, its priorities reflecting above all the negligible research knowledge of crime and criminal justice in the antipodes. But local initiative had a regional (Asia-Pacific) and international (disciplinary as well as geo - graphical) context. In this article I explore some of this context, consider the ways in which it delayed the establishment of the almost contemporaneous Australian Institute of Criminology, and discuss the potential of a regional engagement that was only partly fulfilled in subsequent years. In doing so I also ask how adequate are interpretations of criminology's mid-century history as above all conservative, pragmatic, technocratic and administrative.Arts, Education & Law Group, School of Humanities, Languages and Social SciencesFull Tex
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