2023
DOI: 10.1007/s10612-022-09682-5
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Decolonizing Zemiology: Outlining and Remedying the Blindness to (Post)colonialism Within the Study of Social Harm

Abstract: This paper hosts the first meaningful dialogue between two important epistemic movements for criminology: zemiology and decolonisation. I identify that zemiology has a disciplinary blindness to colonialism and explain this using Gurminder K. Bhambra’s scholarship—and cognate scholarship—as a frame. Three cases—Pemberton’s Harmful Societies, Grenfell, and Border Zemiology—are selected for their critical importance within zemiology. They are used to argue that zemiology works within a standard narrative of moder… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…3 We also see this in the colonialist perception of the problem as disconnected from what one may perceive as global problems (e.g. Wright 2023). Instead it features as a localized problem, high in the Andes, contaminating a contained locale and adjacent communities.…”
Section: Transversal Harm At the 'Extractive Frontier'mentioning
confidence: 92%
“…3 We also see this in the colonialist perception of the problem as disconnected from what one may perceive as global problems (e.g. Wright 2023). Instead it features as a localized problem, high in the Andes, contaminating a contained locale and adjacent communities.…”
Section: Transversal Harm At the 'Extractive Frontier'mentioning
confidence: 92%