In this eye-opening critique, Ronald Kramer and James C. Oleson
interrogate the promises of crime science and target our misplaced faith
in technology as the solution to criminality. This book deconstructs
crime science's most prominent manifestations--biological, actuarial,
security, and environmental sciences. Rather than holding the
technological keys to crime's resolution, crime sciences inscribe
criminality on particular bodies and constitute a primary resource for
the conceptualization of crime that many societies take for granted.
Crime science may strive to reduce crime, but in doing so, it reproduces
power asymmetries, creates profit motives, undermines important legal
concepts, instantiates questionable practices, and forces open new
vistas of deviant activity.