Thank you for your support to Social Justice! We are proud to be an independent journal that for forty years has provided critical thinkers inside and outside the academia with progressive and radical analyses of crime and social control, global … Continue reading →
by Oscar Fabian Soto This blog piece is extracted from a longer article, “On the Outs: Global Capitalism and Transcarceration”, published in Vol. 48-1 of Social Justice. On a cold April night back in 2008, I was arrested and charged with two … Continue reading →
by Laurie Coyle* * This is the first in a series of dispatches by filmmaker Laurie Coyle and Chicana activist and former political prisoner Olga Talamante documenting their current trip to Argentina. The occasion is the November 28, 2013, premiere … Continue reading →
by Clifford Welch* The front-runner in Brazil’s upcoming presidential election refuses to debate his opponent. He prefers to generate and reproduce disinformation about his opponent without ever issuing an apology or correction. Sounds familiar? In fact, front-runner Jair Bolsonaro looks … Continue reading →
by Anastasia Powell* Most of the time victims of sexual violence are silenced, their experiences minimized, or their realities ignored entirely. Perhaps that is why the victim’s impact statement in the high-profile Stanford case has been so widely shared in … Continue reading →
(Click on any author’s name to download the pdf) 1984–1980 (Nos. 21–13) 2015– | 2014–2010 | 2009–2005 | 2004–2000 | 1999–1995 | 1994–1990 | 1989–1985 | 1979–1974 Nos. 21-22 (1984) International Lawlessness and the Search for Justice Anthony M. Platt and Gregory Shank, Editorial: … Continue reading →
2017 Subscription Rates for Social Justice ISSN: 1043-1578 * Federal I.D.: 94-2438499 Click here to download a pdf version Social Justice: A Journal of Crime, Conflict, and World Order is a quarterly journal, with issues scheduled to appear in April, … Continue reading →
by Bronwyn Dobchuk-Land and Kevin Walby* Image by DANIEL ARAUZ via FLICKR. CC BY 2.0. Criminology and criminal justice studies have too often failed to incorporate lessons from the front lines of struggles for radical changes to the criminal … Continue reading →
Please review our guidelines before you submit your manuscript. Then click on the button below to upload your documents to our system (you may be asked to create an account on Scholastica). There are no fees to submit a manuscript to … Continue reading →
by Gwyn Kirk* Military tensions between the United States and North Korea have intensified to alarming levels in recent months. Trump has threatened to “totally destroy” this isolated nation of 25 million people, and to “unleash fire and fury like … Continue reading →