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25 Aust. & N.Z. J. Criminology 1 (1992)

handle is hein.journals/anzjc25 and id is 1 raw text is: 







AUST  & NZ JOURNAL  OF  CRIMINOLOGY   (March 1992) 25 (1-10)


                  REDUCING THE CRIME PROBLEM:
                  A  NOT   SO   DISMAL CRIMINOLOGY*
                                John  Braithwaitet
A normative criminology is possible which offers guidance on the types of crimes we should struggle
to reduce and how. An aplanatory criminology is possible that suggests which practical strategies
may work in reducing these types of crimes. These possibilities have eluded us, however, because of
the ecessive emphasis on state policies within prevailing theoretical traditions. A theoretical
revolution in criminology is needed to cause us to look in the right places for practical stnggles that
might bear fuit. Republican criminology is advanced as one theoretical alternative. Republicanism
causes us to see that those crime problems which are our most serious are actually problems
on which we may be making some progress. A theoretical reorientation might help us grasp the
sources of our contemporary successes in crime control so that we might apply ourselves to
reinforcing them.
Criminologists are  pessimists and cynics. There seem  good  reasons for this. Our
science has largely failed to deliver criminal justice policies that will prevent crime.
The   grand  19th  century   utilitarian doctrines -   deterrence,  incapacitation,
rehabilitation - are manifest failures. The return to classicism in criminology - the
just deserts movement   -  has been worse  than a failure. It has been a disastrous
step backwards.
   My own  view is that we need a theoretical revolution in criminology to extricate us
from  our  contemporary   nihilism. In this lecture, I will argue for a theoretical
revolution that causes us to look at the crime problem in a decisively changed way. It
replaces pessimism  that nothing works in reducing crime with  an optimistic vision.
The   theory enables  us  to see  that: (1) the most   serious crime  problems   in
contemporary  societies are precisely the crime problems we are in the best position
to reduce; and  (2) the changes  needed  to effect these reductions have  gathered
significant momentum   in Australia since the mid-1970s.
  To  find the  foundations  for the  theory that will ultimately  lead us  to this
conclusion, we need to go back beyond the failed 19th century theories of liberalism,
Marxism   and utilitarism to the political theory which was  dominant   for several
centuries up to the 18th century. That political theory is republicanism. This does
not mean   that I advocate creating Montesquieu's   or Machiavelli's or Jefferson's
republic in 21st  century Melbourne.   The  intellectual challenge before us  is to
construct models  of contemporary  urban republics, practical strategies for injecting
republican elements  into liberal urban life. So what are the lights on the republican
hill that we might reformulate in a contemporarily relevant way?
  Cass  Sunstein  (1988) advances  four  commitments   as basic  to republicanism:
(1) deliberation  in governance  which  shapes  as well  as balances  interests (as
opposed  to simply doing deals between pre-political interests); (2) political equality;
(3) universality, or debate to reconcile competing views, as a regulative ideal; and
(4) citizenship, community   participation in public life. It will perhaps already
be  obvious to  you how   these republican  values underwrite  the  importance  of
community   policing as a practical strategy.
  I will be as brief as I can on the philosophy of republicanism as a foundation for
criminal justice policy. These foundations are discussed at length in my book with

* The Eighteenth Annual John Barry Memorial Lcture, delivered at University of Melbourne on
2  October 1991.
t PhD, FASSA, Professorial Fellow, Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University.

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