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679 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 8 (2018)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0679 and id is 1 raw text is: Regulating
Crime: The
New
Criminology of
Crime Control

By
JOSHUA D. FREILICH
and
GRAEME R. NEWMAN

Keywords: regulating crime; social control; crime
control
Regulation of individual and organizational
behavior has increased over the last several
decades in the United States and elsewhere.
The rise of regulation, well demonstrated by
Guraskeya and Nalla (this volume), raises the
question of whether controlling criminal behav-
ior might better be accomplished by regulation
instead of by punishment. The assumption that
punishment is tightly bound to crime control
(and hence to justice) has been largely unques-
tioned in public policy, and embedded in this
assumption are the cherished ideas of guilt
and innocence that drive the public (and
media) image of crime. This assumption also
reinforces the notion among practitioners at
every stage of the criminal justice process that
Joshua D. Freilich is a member of the Criminal
Justice Department at John Jay College and the chair
(2017-19) of the American Society of Criminology's
Division on Terrorism and Bias Crimes. His research
focuses on the causes of and responses to terrorism,
and environmental criminology and situational crime
prevention. Freilich's research has been funded by the
Department of Homeland Security and the National
Institute of Justice.
Graeme K Newman is a distinguished professor emeritus
at the School of Criminal Justice, University at Albany.
His major works include The Punishment Response
(Transaction Publishers 2008), Comparative Deviance
(Transaction Publisher 2009), Super Highway Robbeiy
(with Ronald V Clarke; Routledge 2003), and Outsmarting
the Terrorists (with Ronald V Clarke; Praeger 2006). He
has published articles in many leading journals and has
written books for the trade market, including three novels,
9/11 TWO (2016), The Tommie Felon Show (2017) and
Miscarriages (2018) published by Harrow and Heston,
under the pen name of Colin Heston.
Correspondence: jfreilich@jjay.cuny.edu
DOI: 10.1177/0002716218784853

ANNALS, AAPSS, 679, September 2018

8

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