Lexington Books
Pages: 140
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-2957-9 • Hardback • December 2010 • $101.00 • (£78.00)
978-0-7391-5110-5 • eBook • December 2010 • $96.00 • (£74.00)
Saran Ghatak is assistant professor of sociology at Keene State College
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Chapter 1: Science and Criminal Danger in the Nineteenth Century
Chapter 3 Chapter 2: Eugenics and Hereditarianism in the United States
Chapter 4 Chapter 3: Origin of the Psychopathology of Crime
Chapter 5 Chapter 4: The Advent of Actuarial Justice
Chapter 6 Chapter Five: Policing of Political Dissent
Chapter 7 Chapter 6: "Risk Wars": The Campaign against Terrorism
Chapter 8 Conclusion: The Vigilant New World: Science, Law and the Policing of Threats
Ghatak provides a most lucid addition to the literature on the governance of risk in modern America. He masterfully traces the historical roots of new forms of scientific and legal categories and knowledge about perceived dangerousness and risk, from the `psychopathic` criminal, to new ways of constructing the problems of immigration and terrorism. He adds vital new concepts which help us understand and perhaps moderate the tensions between anticipating risk and danger before it engulfs us and holding to the democratic processes and values that most of us hold dear.
— Kevin Stenson, University of Kent, UK
Threat Perceptions recovers for us the the complex mix of political, legal and scientific events in the 19th and 20th centuries, behind the present techniques of risk surveillance and control. Ghatak shows us that while these techniques are vulnerable in their dependence on the shifting grounds of law, politics, and science, they are remarkably robust in their ability to recirculate and reappear. This book will be of great value to anyone studying or worrying about our increasingly intrusive security state.
— Jonathan Simon, Lance Robbins Professor of Criminal Justice Law, University of California at Berkeley (author of Governing through Crime)