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Crisis Transition (or Post-Modernisation), Crime and Structural Violence-Criminological Aspects

NCJ Number
230908
Journal
Revija za Kriminalistiko in Kriminologijo Volume: 1 Issue: 61 Dated: 2010 Pages: 51-63
Author(s)
Zoran Kanduc
Date Published
2010
Length
13 pages
Annotation
The word "transition" denotes transition from the "socialist" system to a market capitalist social formation (and in broader terms also the democratization of non-socialist regimes, for instance in South Africa and in former Latin America dictatorships). This designation often refers also to the transformation of modern industrial capitalist societies, i.e., to complex processes described - by the lack of a more inventive label - by the attribute "post-modern." The central focus of the paper is the current post-socialist transformation (of institutions and people), that could be (at least retrospectively and partly metaphorically) interpreted as collective and, above all, complex (self-) sanctioning of revolutionary and "totalitarian" Evil.
Abstract
The transition most often appears in the criminal logical perspective as a historical period marked by a substantial increase in criminal (and in general illegal) behavior (especially of more or less "conventional" historical period marked by a substantial increase in criminal (and in general illegal) behavior (especially of more or less "conventional" - or "socially normal" - actors); this turbulent period is, on the other hand, characterized by a progressive crisis of the criminal justice system (which drifts, it seems, in a kind of a "floating" state, without any clear "working philosophy" and solid support of social cultural-moral value "substance" and the informal control mechanisms connected with it). In dealing with crime (and, of course, with the considerably weakened mechanisms of formal control), it must not however be overlooked that one of the most important features of transition societies is a rise of "structural violence," manifested by an extensive and intensive expansion of workload, intimidation, extortion, and exploitation of the sellers of "labor"' socio-economic instability (or insecurity), various forms of legalized and (ideologically) normalized theft or deception, unjust or ethically unacceptable (re)distribution of material wealth and incomes, media (and often also school) encouragement of stupidity, the shrinking of the "public sphere" and also the "sphere of privacy." (Published Abstract)

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