71
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

The Neoliberal Penality Thesis in China: When Western Theory Meets Chinese Reality

References

  • Allen F, Qian J and Qian M (2005) ‘Law, Finance and Economic Growth in China’, Journal of Financial Economics 77(1), 57–116
  • Bakken B (2004) ‘Moral Panics, Crime Rates and Harsh Punishment in China’, Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 37(1), 67–89
  • Bakken B (2005) ‘Comparative Perspectives on Crime in China’ in Bakken B (ed), Crime, Punishment, and Policing in China, Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, 65–7
  • Bakken B (2011) ‘China, A Punitive Society?’, Asian Journal of Criminology 6, 33–50
  • Bell E (2011) Criminal Justice and Neoliberalism, Palgrave Macmillan, London
  • Biddulph S (2007) Legal Reform and Administrative Detention Powers in China, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK
  • Brown D (2011) ‘Neoliberalism as a Criminological Subject’, Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology 44(1), 129–42
  • Cai F (2010) ‘Demographic Transition, Demographic Dividend, and Lewis Turning Point in China’, China Economic Journal 3(2), 107–19
  • Cao LQ (2007) ‘Returning to Normality Anomie and Crime in China’, International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 51(1), 40–51
  • Cavadino M and Dignan J (2006) Penal Systems: A Comparative Approach, SAGE Publications, London
  • Chen JF (2008) Chinese Law: Context and Transformation, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Leiden
  • Cohen J (1968) The Criminal Process in the People's Republic of China 1949–1963: An Introduction, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, US
  • Cohen S (1994) ‘Social Control and the Politics of Reconstruction’ in Nelken D (ed), The Futures of Criminology, Sage Publications, London, 63–88
  • Crouch C (1999) Social Change in Western Europe, Oxford University Press, Oxford
  • Curren DJ (1998) ‘Economic Reform, the Floating Population, and the Crime: The Transformation of Social Control in China’, Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice 14(3), 262–80
  • De Giorgi A (2006), Re-thinking the Political Economy of Punishment: Perspectives on Post-Fordism and Penal Politics, Ashgate, Hampshire
  • Deng XP (1994), Selected Works of Deng Xiaoping (Volume II), The People's Press, Beijing
  • Durkheim E (1933) The Division of Labour in Society, Macmillan, New York
  • Dutton M (2005) Policing Chinese Politics: A History, Duke University Press, London
  • Feeley M and Simon J (1992) ‘The New Penology: Notes on the Emerging Strategy of Corrections and Its Implications’, Criminology 39, 449–74
  • Fu HL (2005) ‘Re-education through Labour in Historical Perspective’, The China Quarterly 184, 811–30
  • Garland D (1996) ‘The Limits of Sovereignty State: Strategies of Crime Control in Contemporary Society’, British Journal of Criminology 36(4), 445–61
  • Garland D (2001) The Culture of Control: Crime and Social Order in Contemporary Society, Oxford University Press, Oxford
  • Harvey D (2005) A Brief History of Neoliberalism, Oxford University Press, Oxford
  • Hinds L (2005) ‘Crime Control in Western Countries, 1970 to 2000’ in Pratt J, Brown D, Brown M, Hallsworth S and Morrison W (eds), The New Punitiveness, Willan Publishing, Cullompton, 47–65
  • Hoffman M (2006) ‘Autonomous Choices and Patriotic Professionalism: On Governmentality in Late-Socialist China’, Economy and Society 35(4), 550–70
  • Human Rights Watch (2010) Where Darkness Knows No Limits, Human Rights Watch Press, New York
  • Jiang Z (2006) Selected Works of Jiang Zemin, The People's Press, Beijing
  • Jou S and Hebenton B (2011) ‘Researching and Explaining the Punitive: Lessons and Reflections from a Comparative Empirical Study of Taiwan and England and Wales’, International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice 39, 12–36
  • Lacey N (2008) The Prisoners' Dilemma: Political Economy and Punishment in Contemporary Democracies, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK
  • Lacey N (2013) ‘Punishment (Neo)liberalism and Social Democracy’ in Simon J and Sparks R (eds), The SAGE handbook of punishment and society, SAGE Publications, London, 261–80
  • Leng SC and Chiu H (1985) Criminal Justice in Post-Mao China: Analysis and Documents, The State University of New York Press, Albany
  • Lewis JW and Xue LT (2003) ‘Social Change and Political Reform in China: Meeting the Challenge of Success’, The China Quarterly 176, 925–42
  • Li ES (2010) ‘Prisonization or Socialization? Social Factors Associated with Chinese Administrative Offences’, UCLA Pacific Basin Law Journal 27(2), 302–47
  • Li ES (2012) ‘Between Idea and Reality: Is the Socialization of Administrative Offenders Realizable?’, Asian-Pacific Law & Policy Journal 13(2), 164–209
  • Liang B (2005) ‘Severe Strike Campaign in Transitional China’, Journal of Criminal Justice 33(4), 387–99
  • Liew LH (2005) ‘China's Engagement with Neo-liberalism: Path Dependency, Geography, and Party Self- Reinvention’, The Journal of Development Studies 41(2), 331–5
  • Liu JH (2005) ‘Crime Patterns during the Market Transition in China’, British Journal of Criminology 45(5), 613–33
  • Liu JH and Messner S (2001) ‘Modernization and Crime Trends in China's Reform Era’ in Liu JH, Zhang LN and Messner S (eds), Crime and Social Control in a Changing China, Greenwood Press, Westport, 3–22
  • Lo TW and Jiang G (2006) ‘Inequality, Crime and Floating Population in China’ Asian Journal of Criminology 1, 103–18
  • Lubman S (1999) Bird in a Cage: Legal Reform in China after Mao, Stanford University Press, Stanford
  • Ma GA (2001) ‘Population Migration and Crime in Beijing, China’ in Liu JH, Zhang LN and Messner S (eds), Crime and Social Control in a Changing China, Greenwood Press, Westport, 65–72
  • Macfarquhar R and Schoenhals M (2006) Mao's Last Revolution, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, US
  • Mao Z (1957) ‘On the Correct Handling of Contradictions among the People’, Speech among the senior Communist Party members, Beijing, 27 February 1957
  • Mao ZD (1971) ‘On the Correct Handling of Contradictions among the People’ in Mao ZD (ed), Selected Readings from the Works of Mao Tsetung, Foreign Language Press, Beijing
  • Matthew R (2005) ‘The Myth of Punitiveness’, Theoretical Criminology 9(2), 175–201
  • Messner S and Rosenfeld (2000) ‘Market Dominance, Crime and Globalization’ in Karstedt S and Bussmann K (eds), Social Dynamics of Crime and Control: New Theories for a World in Transition, Hart Publishing, Oxford, 13–26
  • Moore D and Hannah-Moffat K (2005) ‘The Liberal Veil: Revisiting Canadian Penalty’ in Pratt J, Brown D, Brown M, Hallsworth S and Morrison W (eds), The New Punitiveness, Willan Publishing, Cullompton, 85–100
  • Mühlhahn K (2009) Criminal Justice in China, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, US
  • Nelken D (2009) ‘Comparative Criminal Justice: Making Sense of Difference’, European Journal of Criminology 6(4), 291–431
  • Nonini M (2008) ‘Is China Becoming Neoliberal?’, Critique of Anthropology 28(2), 145–76
  • O'Malley P (2004) ‘Globalizing Risk? Distinguishing Styles of ‘Neoliberal’ Criminal Justice in Australia and the USA’ in Newburn T and Sparks R (eds), Criminal Justice and Political Cultures: National and International Dimensions of Crime Control, Willan Publishing, Cullompton, 30–48
  • Ong A (2007) ‘Neoliberalism as a Mobile Technology’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 32(1), 3–8
  • Peerenboom R (2002) China's Long March toward Rule of Law, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK
  • Peerenboom R (2003) ‘Out of the Pan and into the Fire: Well-Intended but Misguided Recommendations to Eliminate All Forms of Administrative Detention in China’, Northwestern University Law Review 98(3), 991–1104
  • Reiner R (2007) Law and Order: An Honest Citizen's Guide to Crime and Control, Polity Press, Cambridge, UK
  • Shaw V (1998) ‘Productive Labour and Thought Reform in Chinese Corrections: A Historical and Comparative Analysis’, The Prison Journal 78(2), 186–211
  • Simon J (2007) Governing through Crime: How the War on Crime Transformed American Democracy and Created a Culture of Fear, Oxford University Press, New York
  • Simon J and Feeley M (2003) ‘The Form and Limits of the New Penology’ in Blomberg T and Cohen S (eds), Punishment and Social Control, Aldine De Gruyter, New York, 75–116
  • Swyngedouw E, Moulaert F and Rodriguez A (2002) ‘Neoliberal Urbanization in Europe: Large-scale Urban Development and Projects and the New Urban Policy’, Antipode 34(3), 542–77
  • Tanner MS (2005) ‘Campaign-Style Policing in China and Its Critics’ in Bakken B (ed), Crime, Punishment, and Policing in China, Rowman & Littlefield Publisher, Lanham, 171–88
  • Trevaskes S (2003) ‘Public Sentencing Rallies in China: The Symbolizing of Punishment and Justice in a Socialist State’, Crime, Law and Social Change 39, 359–82
  • Trevaskes S (2007) ‘Severe and Swift Justice in China’, British Journal of Criminology 47(1), 23–41
  • Wacquant L (2009) Punishing the Poor: The Neoliberal Government of Social Insecurity, Duke University Press, Durham
  • Yan H (2003) ‘Neoliberal Governmentaliby and Neohumanism: Organizing Suzhi/Value Flow through Labour Recruitment Networks’, Cultural Anthropology 18(4), 439–523
  • Yao SJ (1999) ‘Economic Growth, Income Inequality and Poverty in China under Economic Reforms’, The Journal of Development Studies 35(6), 104–30
  • Zhang N (2005) ‘The Debate over the Death Penalty in China’, China Perspectives 62, 2–12
  • Zhang XB and Kanbur R (2005) ‘Fifty Years of Regional inequality in China: A Journal through Central Planning, Reform and Openness’, Review of Development Economics 9(1), 87–106

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.