This book provides a focused discussion of how families are governed
through technologies. It shows how states attempt to influence, shape
and govern families as both the source of and solution to a range of
social problems including crime.
The book critically reviews family governance in contemporary
neo-liberal society, notably through technologies of
self-responsibilisation, biologisation, and artificial intelligence. The
book draws attention to the poor working class and racialised families
that often are marked out and evaluated as culpable, dysfunctional, and
a threat to economic and social order, obscuring the structural
inequalities that underpin family lives and discriminations that are
built into the tools that identify and govern families.
Filling a gap where disciplinary perspectives cross-cut, this book
brings together sociological and criminological perspectives to provide
a unique cross-disciplinary approach to the topic. It will be of
interest to researchers, scholars and lecturers studying sociology and
criminology, as well as policy-makers and professionals working in the
fields of early years and family intervention programmes, including in
social work, health, education, and the criminologically-relevant
professions such as police and probation.