Voices of Crime: Constructing and Contesting Social Control in Modern Latin America
ISBN: 9780816534647
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / University of Arizona Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Crime -- Latin America -- History; Justice Administration of -- Social aspects -- Latin America -- History;

Crime exists in every society, revealing not only the way in which societies function but also exposing the standards that society holds about what is harmful and punishable. Criminalizing individuals and actions is not the exclusive domain of the state; it emerges from the collective consciousness--the judgments of individuals and groups who represent societal thinking and values. Studying how these individuals and groups construct, represent, perpetrate, and contest crime reveals how their message reinforces and also challenges historical and culturally specific notions of race, class, and gender.

Voices of Crime examines these official and unofficial perceptions of deviancy, justice, and social control in modern Latin America. As a collection of essays exploring histories of crime and justice, the book focuses on both cultural and social history and the interactions among state institutions, the press, and a variety of elite and non-elite social groups. Arguing that crime in Latin America is best understood as a product of ongoing negotiation between "top-down" and "bottom up" ideas (not just as the exercise of power from the state), the authors seek to document and illustrate the everyday experiences of crime in particular settings, emphasizing underresearched historical actors such as criminals, victims, and police officers.

The book examines how these social groups constructed, contested, navigated, and negotiated notions of crime, criminality, and justice. This reorientation--in contrast to much of the existing historical literature that focuses on elite and state actors--prompts the authors to critically examine the very definition of crime and its perpetrators, suggesting that "not only the actions of the poor and racial others but also the state can be termed as criminal."


Luz E. Huertas is a lecturer and coordinator of the Latin American Studies Minor at Fairleigh Dickinson University. She is also an associate researcher and member of the Editorial Committee of the Museo Regional de Atacama in Chile. Her work appears in in the journals Perspectivas Latinoamericas (Japan) and Cuadernos Interculturales (Chile).

Bonnie A. Lucero is an assistant professor in the Department of History at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. Her work appears in the journals Atlantic Studies: Global Currents , Journal of Transnational American Studies , and in the edited volume Human Rights, Race, and Resistance in Africa and the African Diaspora . She is a past Bill Gates Millennium Scholar.

Gregory J. Swedberg is an associate professor of Latin American history at Manhattanville College in New York. His work appears in the Latin Americanist and Journal of Family History , and in the edited volume Latin America in the World: An Introduction . He is a former Fulbright Hays Scholar.
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