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History as activism: critical uses of history at the Berkeley School of Criminology in the 1970s

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posted on 2025-11-24, 05:09 authored by Roberto Catello
Works of historical criminology do not have to be disinterested studies of past crime-related phenomena. Instead, they can represent practical attempts to intervene in the politics of crime and justice in the present. This article takes this claim to a critical conclusion; historical research in criminology can function as a weapon in contemporary political struggles and a way of injecting radical politics into criminological studies. To demonstrate this point, the article scrutinises the ways in which early critical criminologists in the US engaged in historical research as a way of doing politics and activism. To such criminologists, doing historical research was a form of praxis. Focusing on the works produced at the Berkeley School of Criminology in the 1970s, the article shows that the nurture of a historical interest was deemed to be a vital step in the development of a critical paradigm within American criminology.

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Preferred citation

Catello, R. (2023). History as activism: critical uses of history at the Berkeley School of Criminology in the 1970s. Justice, Power and Resistance, 6(2), 229-245. https://doi.org/10.1332/ydxv1897

Journal title

Justice, Power and Resistance

Volume

6

Issue

2

Publication date

2023-06-01

Pagination

229-245

Publisher

Bristol University Press

Publication status

Published

ISSN

2398-2764

eISSN

2635-2338

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