The problem of order in changing societies : essays on crime and policing in Argentina and Uruguay / edited by Lyman L. Johnson.
Tipo de material: TextoDetalles de publicación: Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press, c1990.Descripción: xx, 161 p. : il., fot., tablas ; 23 cmISBN:- 0826311814
Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Signatura | Estado | Notas | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Libros de Préstamo en Sala | Biblioteca del Instituto de Historia Argentina y Americana "Dr. Emilio Ravignani" | 69-04-44 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | Disponible | Colección Jorge Gelman | 494539 |
Preface / Lyman L. Johnson --
Women and crime: Buenos Aires, 1757-97 / Susan Midgen Socolow --
Continuities in crime and punishment: Buenos Aires, 1820-50 / Richard W. Slatta and Karla Robinson --
Violence for show: knife dueling on a nineteenth-century cattle frontier / John Charles Chasteen --
Urbanization, crime, and policing: Buenos Aires, 1880-1914 / Julia Kirk Blackwelder --
Prostitution and female criminality in Buenos Aires, 1875-1937 / Donna J. Guy --
Changing arrest patterns in three Argentine cities: Buenos Aires, Santa Fe, and Tucuman, 1900-1930 / Lyman L. Johnson.
Criminology makes visible a society's values. Statutes and police and court records reveal assumptions about race, class, and gender relations as well as about property rights and matters of civil propriety. The six essays in this volume examine Argentina from the eighteenth century to the 1930s and Uruguay during the nineteenth century to show the links between crime and the social and economic order.
The topics of crime and policing explored in these essays depict the underside of social change. What emerge are detailed accounts of how elites maintained public order amidst changes arising from urbanization, commercial development, and internal and international migration. Examined in this social history of crime during modernization in the Río de la Plata region are wife-beating and rape, knife fights in the pulpería (a combination general store and tavern), prostitution, and public drunkenness and disorder. Anyone interested in the social consequences of change will find these essays in historical criminology offer a challenging perspective on the process of modernization in the Río de la Plata region.
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