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Agnotology and the Criminological Imagination
White, Holly ; Barton, Alana ; Davis, Howard
White, Holly
Barton, Alana
Davis, Howard
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2018-11-08
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Abstract
In this chapter we reflect upon the concept of ‘agnotology’ and its usefulness for the expansion of a zemiological criminology. Initially presented as an analytical tool in the fields of science and medicine, agnotology explores the social and political underpinnings of forms of ignorance and their role in both generating and securing acquiescence in mass harms and crimes of the powerful. Typically originating within state-corporate symbioses of ideology, policy and practice, ‘crimes of the powerful’ include harms inflicted through health and safety violations, ‘security’, criminal justice, social and economic policies, war, disaster and environmental destruction. In each case real harms are obscured, denied or otherwise neutralised. Two cases of mass harm are presented here as examples. First, we discuss corporate constructed agnosis over the use of asbestos that has allowed corporations to kill hundreds of thousands yet avoid criminal justice. Second, we reflect on the Holocaust and the role of agnosis in this most extreme form of state-generated harm. Despite its scale, and in contrast with the attention from other disciplines, criminology has remained remarkably taciturn about this crime. We conclude that the central zemiological purpose of an imaginative criminology—the understanding of and struggle against major harm—cannot be undertaken without systematic and rigorous attention to ignorance.
Citation
Barton, A., Davis, H. & White, H. (2018). Agnotology and the Criminological Imagination. In Barton, A. & Davis, H (Eds.), Ignorance, Power and Harm: Agnotology and the Criminological Imagination (Critical Criminological Perspectives). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan
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Palgrave Macmillan
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Book chapter
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en
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9783319973425
