Susanne Karstedt

Publication List Details

Period

2001 - 2009

Number

9

Co-Authors

Introduction: Is There a General Theory of Violence Possible? (2009)

Susanne Karstedt, Manuel Eisner

“There once was a man who aspired to be the author of the general theory of holes. When asked ‘What kind of hole—holes dug by children in the sand for amusement, holes dug by gardeners to plant...

The Moral Economy of Everyday Crime: Markets, Consumers and Citizens (2006)

Karstedt, Susanne, Farrall, Stephen

Between the crimes in the suites and the crimes in the streets lies the mostly unexplored terrain within which we find crimes of ‘everyday life’. Not all of these are formally illegal, but all...

The Moral Economy of Everyday Crime: Markets, Consumers and Citizens (2006)

Karstedt, Susanne, Farrall, Stephen

Between the crimes in the suites and the crimes in the streets lies the mostly unexplored terrain within which we find crimes of ‘everyday life’. Not all of these are formally illegal, but all...

Explaining Gendered Sentencing Patterns for Violent Men and Women in the Late-Victorian and Edwardian Period (2005)

Godfrey, Barry S., Farrall, Stephen, Karstedt, Susanne

Contemporary studies of disparities in the sentencing of male and female offenders claim that the differences found are caused by gender-related contextual factors, but not by a gender bias. In...

Explaining Gendered Sentencing Patterns for Violent Men and Women in the Late-Victorian and Edwardian Period (2005)

Godfrey, Barry S., Farrall, Stephen, Karstedt, Susanne

Contemporary studies of disparities in the sentencing of male and female offenders claim that the differences found are caused by gender-related contextual factors, but not by a gender bias. In...

Explaining Gendered Sentencing Patterns for Violent Men and Women in the Late-Victorian and Edwardian Period (2005)

Godfrey, Barry S., Farrall, Stephen, Karstedt, Susanne

Contemporary studies of disparities in the sentencing of male and female offenders claim that the differences found are caused by gender-related contextual factors, but not by a gender bias. In...