亚历山德罗·德·乔治

 

亚历山德罗·德·乔治

教授

Department of Justice Studies

亚历山德罗.degiorgi@hpchina360.com



关键字
Critical Criminology; Political Economy; Imprisonment; Urban Ethnography; Marxist Theory; Critical Theory; Immigration.

Current Research Activities

My current research agenda is focused on two main areas: (1) A theoretical critique of the political and economic processes underlying mass incarceration in the United States, with particular reference to the impact of racial and class inequalities on punishment; and (2) An qualitative/ethnographic understanding of the lived experience of incarceration and post-prison "reentry" among underprivileged urban communities in the United States, with particular reference to the struggles formerly incarcerated people face as they return to their communities after incarceration. 这两种情况 areas, my creative activities have resulted in conference presentations, peer-reviewed publications, and public interventions aimed at a larger non-specialist audience.   

Research 连接s to Current 事件

The main focus of my research activities—i.e., the relationships between social inequality and the disproportionate exposure to policing and imprisonment among racialized poor communities—has clear connections with current  developments in the United States. Over the past few years, mass incarceration and the related "correctional crisis" in the United States has finally gained some centrality in political debates, both under the Obama presidency, and—although in the opposite direction—under the Trump 政府. In particular, recent (and ongoing) instances of racialized police brutality have prompted a broader conversation about forms of structural/institutional racism pervading the US criminal legal system at all levels—from school discipline to policing, from imprisonment to community corrections. In this regard, my research activities are driven by an urgency to better understand these structures of social inequality in view of the possibility to develop alternative, more just and humane policies and institutions.     

Personal 连接s to Research

This has been my 场 of research (and teaching) since I started my academic career. I have always been convinced that how a society treats its criminalized populations (and the extent to which it resorts to the penal system to "discipline" its marginalized groups) is a significant indicator of its level of social justice or injustice. I have always been shocked both by the sheer dimension and by the racial and class selectivity of the US criminal legal system, and this has inspired much of my research in the 场. When it comes to inspirational authors, I would definitely mention the works by Karl Marx, Michel Foucault, Frantz Fanon and, more recently, Angela Davis and Ruth 吉尔摩. One experience I have found particularly inspiring has been to conduct 场work among formerly incarcerated people in Oakland, as this has exposed me to the unthinkable levels of social suffering, civic disenfranchisement, and  existential insecurity experienced by criminalized populations in the US inner city.

社交媒体

LinkedIn 

谷歌学者

其他语言

意大利、西班牙