Crime and Social Criticism.
Taylor, Ian
The pimp, so to speak, is just another form of salesman.
- Alvin Gouldner (1973: xiii)
Author's Note
Late in 1988, the editors of Social Justice invited me to
contribute a piece commemorating the 25th Anniversary of the journal. I
had coincidentally already agreed to give a lecture on the legacies of
critical criminology to the Max-Planck-Institute in Freiburg, Germany,
and I anticipate that that lecture would be of interest to readers of
Social Justice, even though it does not specifically discuss the
considerable contributions that this journal has made to the development
of a critical tradition in respect of criminology on both sides of the
Atlantic.
It is a quarter of a century since the publication of The New
Criminology and its companion volume, Critical Criminology (Taylor,
Walton, and Young, 1973; 1975). It may be an appropriate moment - in
radically different historical circumstances - to appraise the legacy of
the very idea of a "critical criminology."
The interventions that Paul Walton, Jock Young, and I made into the
study of crime and social control in the early 1970s can be understood
to have been informed by two key objectives. We were concerned, first,
as the subtitle of The New Criminology declared, with advancing a
critique of the different forms of "analytically
individualist" approaches to the explanation of crime then dominant
in the criminology institutes of North America and Western Europe, and
with offering in its place what we called "a social theory of
deviance." Second, in offering this kind of intervention into the
prevailing thinking about crime, we were also interested, following the
examples of so many other social thinkers and commentators of the
period, from Alvin Gouldner to Herbert Marcuse, in thinking of these
issues in what we might call an "emancipatory mode."(1) That
is to say, we were interested in recognizing many different dimensions
of discrimination, injustice, and oppression operating specifically
within the criminal justice system or within the broader structures of
what we would call "the system of social control." We were
also interested, it must be said, in affirming the authenticity, in such
circumstances, of much of what passed for "deviance." Thus,
the focus of analytic interest in our own work, as in the work of some
of our friends within the National Deviancy Conference, extended from
the control systems then in place in the factories of the Fordist
manufacturing industry that were concerned with regulating pilferage and
sabotage by workers (L. Taylor and Walton, 1971) to the role played by
psychiatry in the containment of student unrest (Maddison, 1973).(2)
There is, indeed, a clear echo in the pages of The New Criminology of
one of the powerful political themes of the period - the idea of a
"worker-and-student alliance" against the various oppressions
of "capitalism" and, specifically, the "capitalist
state." Added to this more broadly understood political vision of
an "anti-capitalist alliance" extending, in the case of Paris,
from the Renault factories to Nanterre (the "university"
itself as a factory), however, was an interest in the criminal and,
quite specifically, the convict as an additional victim of the routine
operations of a capitalist system - a victim, that is, of
"processes of reproduction" of social and racial inequality.
In this respect, the influence of the writings of George Jackson,
the"Soledad Brother" (Jackson, 1970), and Angela Davis, whose
iconic "If they come in the night" poster decorated every one
of our walls at some time during this period, is unmistakable. Equally
unmistakable, however, especially in the exchanges in the pages of
Economy and Society between Paul Hirst (speaking, then, for a
structuralist Marxism heavily influenced by the writings of Louis
Althusser) (Hirst, 1972) and Paul Walton and myself (speaking for the
humanist Marx of the 1844 Manuscripts) (I. Taylor and Walton, 1972), is
the attempt made by "the new criminologists" to make a fulsome
use of Marxism as a particular form of critical social inquiry and
analysis, alongside other critical and hermeneutic forms of social
thinking (especially phenomenology), within a formal theoretical model
within which the social phenomena of crime and social control were to be
understood.
The Crisis of Marxism as Emancipatory Theory
(a) "Objective Conditions"
It is, of course, quite trite to note that the use of Marxism as
"emancipatory theory," 25 years on from 1968, is fraught with
difficulty, and, for many commentators, even in bad faith. A series of
unmistakable economic, political, and social developments - which
Marxists themselves might once have identified as "objective
conditions" - must be grasped "without fear or favor."
(i) First came the collapse of the Soviet Union. This massive
historical event - in part the result of popular rejection of the
quality of living under a command economy - effectively destroyed
utopian visions, still current in some quarters in the 1960s, about the
superiority of Soviet planning over the boom and slump conditions of
market capitalism as evidenced, for example, in the Sputnik launch. It
is also quite clear now that the achievements of the Soviet state
involved a very considerable restriction, and perhaps oppression, of
human liberty, in ways that no emancipatory thinker in the West could
contemplate and accept.
(ii) A further challenge to the utopian forms of Marxism still
current in the 1960s and 1970s, of course, was the developing
recognition that the size and influence of the agency thought within
Marxism to be sowing the seeds of an alternative post-capitalist future
- namely, the organized working class - was in significant, and possibly
terminal, decline (Gorz, 1980; Hobsbawm, 1981). Without the possibility
that this working class could move from being a
"class-in-itself" to a "class-for-itself," there
could be no chance of a socialist challenge to capital and the
capitalist state. For all the continuing protests of a far left
committed to such a transformation, by the mid-1980s there was
widespread recognition among critical social thinkers that no such
social transformation was in the cards.
(iii) Whether this "victory of capital" amounted to
"the end of history" - in the specific sense Francis Fukuyama (1992) was advancing (i.e., as an endpoint in epochal-style
transformations) - was a secondary discussion. Yet Western societies,
having recently experienced 25 to 30 years of life within "the
mixed economy," overlain by social democratic and welfarist ideologies, were clearly entering a very different period - one in which
the pursuit of everyday economic survival and/or personal advancement
would take place within "liberalized" free markets,
underpinned by competitive and individualistic forms of everyday
politics and cultural discourse (Hall, 1988).
(iv) Not the least important feature of this challenge to, and
transformation of, the Keynesian welfare state - now increasingly
recognized "on the Left," rather hurriedly and belatedly, as a
friend and ally rather than an instrument of capitalist oppression -
would be the veritable collapse of what Jurgen Habermas (1989) called
"the utopian energies" that had underpinned the self-denying
and underpaid work of people employed in public sector occupations like
education and social work. Subsequent analysis of the condition
of"the culture" in the United States by Robert Bellah et al.
(1985), Robert Putnam, and Amitai Etzioni (1992) confirmed this
particular consequence of the advance of an individualist consumer
culture and pointed to the massive decline that apparently occurred
during the 1980s and 1990s in levels of voluntary activity, low-paid pro
bono publico work within "the community," and, indeed, in
popular interest regarding "the public sphere" of politics and
democratic deliberation. This "crisis of the public sphere" is
a fundamental crisis for any kind of political vision, like Marxism or
social democracy, that is articulated around the idea of democratic
political involvement and participation.
(v) The crisis of the nation-state is a further - and in many ways
paradoxical - challenge to Marxism (which in its 19th- and 20th-century
incarnations always saw itself as an internationalist kind of politics
and theory). Whether a function of the increasingly international
character of economic life within liberalized and enlarged market
cartels (the European Union, the North American Free Trade Area, ASEAN,
etc.), or as Giddens (1990, 1991) and Beck (1986) argue, the result of
the increasingly widely shared and common sets of "threats"
and "risks" afflicting different "high modern"
societies, there is a clear sense that the nation-state has experienced
a considerable loss of power. In Europe, in particular, there is an
increasingly pressing sense of the emergence of new forms of
transnational systems of governance, whose provenance must be understood
in a much more complex and multifaceted fashion (taking into account new
forms of elite formation, interest and pressure group activity, the
emergence and resonance of an "information society," as well
as new forms of international and interpersonal deliberation) than was
used in the social scientific or critical analysis of the modernist
capitalist state. This is not to argue that the dominant discourses and
practical priorities of the European Union are not
"capitalist" in some important and possibly definitive sense.
Yet, the ways in which such positions of power, influence, and dominance
are achieved by "capital" are not to be understood by relying
on the theorizing of Marxist scholars of the 1960s and 1970s like Ralph
Miliband (1969) and Nicos Poulantzas (1973, 1978) on the conditions of
existence, the different structures, and the reproduction of "the
(national) capitalist state," i.e., as being absolutely and finally
determined by the agendas of the industrial elites of individual
capitalist societies, working directly and closely with national
governments.
The Crisis of Marxism
(b) Theoretical Impasses
The advance of certain "objective conditions" has posed
challenges to both structural and humanist varieties of Marxism. In the
1970s and 1980s, however, the received paradigm was also seriously
challenged on specifically theoretical grounds. Especially in the 1970s,
the most important challenge came from feminism, both with respect to
the issue of what social and political agenda underpinned the project of
social critique (what qualifies to be seen and critiqued) and to issues
of agency and voice (on what grounds or by what right those who adopt a
critical voice claim to speak). This challenge to Marxism, as a
masculinist and blinkered form of critical theory - able only to
identify with the injustices of class division in the developed
capitalist world - was also embraced by social analysts and activists
for whom the most urgent and serious expression of institutionalized
inequality was that based on race and ethnicity. The late 1970s and
early 1980s were a period of troubled, and essentially inconclusive,
struggle around the limitations of "class theory," accompanied
by anxious interest in the possibilities that "new social
movements" might somehow be able to resolve the difficulties of
abstract theory in concrete practice.
During the 1980s, another discrete challenge to Marxism and to any
social critique of "modernist" society predicated on a
conception of "replacement" - of one relatively ordered social
formation (high modern capitalism) by another (socialism?) - came from
the increasingly widespread argument that this orderly and coherent
"modern society" has begun to fragment into a mass of
unconnected scripts and messages, having in common only their provenance
within the "mediascape" or the consumer marketplace. In the
early 1970s, Jean Baudrillard (1975) began to write about a world in
which none of these "representations" bore any necessary
relationship to "reality," and in this way mounted an attack
on most earlier forms of Marxist theory in which the sphere of
representation was to be understood as the sphere of ideology - that is,
as a sphere in which the operation of particular political and economic
interests could be discovered not far below the surface of these
ideological representations. Baudrillard and many other thinkers
influenced by the perceived advance of "postmodern" conditions
believed that theories like Marxism, constrained by their overwhelming
focus on the world of labor and production, were unable to provide an
adequate explanation or understanding of the new world of images and
representation. Unable to suggest any alternative to the continuing
domination of this media-world, Marxism and other forms of
"critical theory" are doomed to impotence. Especially in his
later works, Baudrillard (1990) recommends the disavowal of any form of
social critique and can only envisage the appropriate task of social
commentary to be a close reportage of the nihilism of a culture without
foundations.
Theoretical Problems in Radical Deviancy Theory and Critical
Criminology
The influence of the postmodern agenda on the social analysis of
crime has taken several forms. Most obvious during the 1980s and 1990s
was the increasing incoherence both of forms of deviance theory that had
done battle with orthodox criminology and of orthodox forms of social
criticism like Marxism. In a world of endless invention, especially in
the visual media, of new forms of diversion and distraction for the
jaded consumer, the idea of a "deviant" makes less and less
sense as a description either of personality formation or of social
behavior. In an important sense, "bizarre" forms of behavior
and/or "different" forms of human existence are
"normal" - normal, that is, within the new marketplace of
images and representations that constitutes the cultural resource for
postmodern television. In such circumstances, as Colin Sumner (1994) has
argued, the idea of "deviance theory" itself (as an
exploration of marginal worlds within otherwise monolithic and orderly
societies) makes little sense at the fin de siecle. The mobilization of
such a firm idea of the deviant, he argues, has been replaced by a world
in which an unpredictable series of parasitical and unwanted Others are
singled out for momentary "social censure" and perhaps for the
imposition of penalty and exclusion.
A second effect of the postmodern influence, we would argue, has
been the development of a social account of crime that entirely lacks a
value or ethical foundation. Jack Katz' Seductions of Crime,
published in 1988, offers an ostensibly value-neutral account of
"the sensory attractions of doing evil." This includes a wide
range of criminal activities (from burglary and bank robbery to murder
to rape) that have become the field of study of Quentin Tarantino and,
more recently, Oliver Stone and other Hollywood film producers.
The "imaginative" exploration of these forms of crime by
privileged academic commentators working within the postmodern tradition
is "nihilistic" in that, unlike Thomas de Quincey's
(1827) famous essay on the art of murder, there is no attempt to be
ironic (or to understand how aestheticizing predatory violence is itself
a powerful, desperate critique of the culture). Such imaginative
ethnography is also literally "imaginative," in the sense that
it does not actually or accurately situate the "seductions of
crime" in specific individual or group circumstances. It does
generate the kind of critical but naturalistic appreciation of the
"drift into rule-breaking" in all of its contradictory
dimensions, as produced by the existential phenomenologist David Matza
(1964, 1969). Not the least of the contradictory features of the
individual drift into rule-breaking, consistently present in
Matza's work, but entirely absent in the approaches of Jack Katz
and other postmodern writers, is the sense of demoralization in
individual lives, especially that produced by massive and continuing
social disadvantage (something that close observers of unequal societies
have always understood).(3) Ironically or otherwise, this awareness of
the organic tendency toward a demoralization of life among the urban
poor was once part of the much-maligned Marxist tradition itself, not
least in the continuing debate over whether "the
lumpenproletariat" could ever be won over to progressive solutions
to its problems of multiple social disadvantage or whether it was
doomed, in all circumstances, to constitute "the dangerous
class."
However, the most important dimension of the theoretical crisis of
radical deviancy theory and/or critical criminology perhaps resides in
its continuing commitment to "social control," a libertarian
project of critique (cf., for example, Melossi, 1990). This continuing
one-dimensional commitment was the source of a variety of theoretical
and critical impasses during the 1970s and 1980s, such as that between
"critical criminology" and feminism in the course of angry
debates on the prosecution of rape and sexual assault (in which
feminists sought enhanced state intervention into the lives of men).
Attracting less public attention at the time was a body of critical work
into the operation of the courts and existing laws in the field of
safety at work, especially of workers employed in dangerous conditions
like the North Sea oil fields (Carson, 1982). Here, too, the idea of a
critical criminology organized only around the libertarian idea of
"radical nonintervention" seemed entirely unhelpful as a point
of departure. In the same period, the continuing influence of movements
for prison abolition, especially in the Netherlands and Scandinavia,
acted as a further reinforcement for the "critique of social
control," without ever giving space to a principled critical debate
as to the circumstances in which social critics, committed to the idea
of a collective social interest, might in fact contemplate the use of
prison.(4) In the early 1990s, a spate of very widely publicized
"crimes of the powerful," like the massive frauds committed
against small investors and pension-holders by Robert Maxwell in Britain
and Michael Milken in the United States, posed serious challenges to a
critical criminological project committed only to the minimization of
social control. It is quite startling, in retrospect, to observe how
little self-reflection there was among critical criminologists during
the 1970s and 1980s with respect to the use of "social
control" as an object of critical analysis, and how little interest
was shown in the ongoing debates taking place, for example, in the
adjacent field of social philosophy around the utility of a concept of
"social justice" as the organizing framework for social
critique (cf., for example, Walzer, 1983; Young, 1990). It is equally
startling to recognize how disavowing a concept like social justice
implied a break with the key demand that had always been advanced by
popular movements in the late feudal and early capitalist periods,
thereby situating the idea of critique entirely within a liberal or
libertarian framework.(5) Less surprising, in retrospect, is how the
continuing and unreflective commitment to "the critique of social
control" as a framework for analysis left critical or radical
deviancy theorists during the 1990s without a vantage point from which
to critique the rise of market libertarianism in Britain, the United
States, and other high modern Western societies. At its most extreme,
this form unmistakably played a contributory role in social critique,
sometimes as journalism drawing on the traditions of radical deviancy
theory and sometimes as directly political writing,(6) to advance this
libertarian utopia, now being realized in the extension of every freedom
to every energetic entrepreneur in the new market society.
Not So Fast: New Evidence for the Old Orthodoxies
In an important sense, the advance of the new market societies in
the West has thrown up an extension of state social control. Following
on the example of the United States in the 1980s, there has been an
unprecedented increase in the size of the prison population across much
of Europe in the 1990s (see Table 1 at the end of the article). There
were absolutely no comparable increases in the size of prison
populations in individual nation-states in the first half of the 20th
century - that is, during the period examined by the Marxist student of
penality, Georg Rusche, and later interpreted, with the support of Otto
Kirchheimer, in Punishment and Social Structure (Rusche and Kirchheimer,
1939). In this sense, analysis of the relationship between the size of
the prison population and the character of labor markets - of the kind
encouraged by Rusche and Kirchheimer, and subsequently taken further by
Melossi and Pavarini within this Marxist tradition, interpreting the
prison as an agency for the management of the "reserve army of
labor" (Melossi and Pavarini, 1977) - would appear entirely
apposite in a European market in which Official unemployment remains
firmly stuck at about 12%.
Among the reasons for revisiting this 1980's debate would be
the recognition that the increase in the prison population is not simply
an expression of actually occurring crime rates. In Britain, where the
experiment in liberal markets began in 1979, although rates of
officially recorded crime entered a period of radical increase from 1979
through 1991, since 1991 the rate has continued to decline (the first
eight-year period in which records have shown such a reduction). Despite
declining crime rates, the judicial use of imprisonment increased
radically. Current projections are that if the rates at which custody is
imposed and sentence lengths stay at their present level, the prison
population in 2006 in England and Wales will rise to 73,400 (19% higher
than its present level) (White et al., 1999). The increased use of
prison in England and Wales, it is strongly suggested, directly reflects
the centrality of the "Law and Order" issue in the political
stances of the last Conservative and the new Labor Government, as well
as the increased reliance on penal "solutions" to the social
problem of crime within such authoritative forms of national politics.
Where the prison population has increased significantly on the European
mainland (the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Belgium, France, and Italy),
this increase is widely thought to be at least partly understandable as
a response on the part of authorities to increased public anxieties
around issues of immigration and public order on the streets.
We are apparently confronting an important contemporary instance of
the intensified use of penality as an ideological instrument - that is,
as a mechanism wielded by the European governing classes in the
management (the calming) of the level of anxiety and/or panic among the
citizens of the larger society. Students of ideology, working within the
familiar frameworks of some forms of Marxism, would find considerable
scope for analytical research on the specific circumstances that have
led up to this explosion in prison populations within major member
states of the European Community. Students of this "embrace of
discipline," as evidenced in the adoption of "three strikes
and you're out" law-and-order policies in the United States
and Britain, might also be inspired by the critical essays of the Dutch
Marxist criminologist, Willem Bonger (1935), who in the 1930s identified
and challenged the rise of reactionary forms of jurisprudence and penal
thinking in Germany and the Low Countries. Whether the "return to
penality" in Europe in the last years of the 20th century can be
explained with a political economy that focuses on the control by
national (capitalist) states over their reserve armies of labor, for the
duration of periods of recession and slump, is a different question.
The reversion to penality in advanced capitalist societies runs
parallel to at least one other development for which some Marxist
critics might claim to have an explanation within traditional
frameworks. Across most of the advanced capitalist societies, the
adoption of liberal or free market policies has had the effect of
reversing the organic tendencies of the earlier postwar period toward a
greater equality of wealth distribution and, indeed, toward the
elimination of poverty. One aspect of this is the continuing increase in
the level of unemployment. In the European Community, for example,
unemployment during the 1960s averaged some 1.6% on official measures,
but in the mid- 1990s the official record suggested an average of about
12% (Judt, 1996: 6). A European Commission investigation of the
distribution of wealth across the Community in 1993 suggested that the
bottom 10% of the population was receiving only 37% of the overall gross
domestic product, compared with 39% 10 years earlier, and that the top
10% was appropriating 189% in 1993 as against 184% in 1983.(7) Students
of Europe's welfare systems of the late 1980s pointed to radical
increases in the numbers of Europeans whose survival depended entirely
on different forms of state social assistance (Teeskens and van Praag,
1990). These increases in poverty and dependency, they argued, were an
expression of increasingly long-term forms of unemployment and of new
social divisions (for example, within the family) that were largely
produced by the collapse of mass manufacturing industry and the loss of
the "family wage" earned during the Fordist period by the male
worker (Room, Lawson, and Laczko, 1989). Students of poverty pointed to
the return of street begging and homelessness as mass social phenomena,
especially in the large cities of Europe, as well as to the return of
diseases like rickets, which had been thought characteristic of an
earlier, less enlightened moment of social development. In 1993, the
European Commission's own agency, Eurostat, reported that one-fifth
of all children and one-sixth of all individual citizens of the European
Community were living below what was defined as the official poverty
line in their own country (Hajimichalis, 1997: 23). Other commentators
pointed to the return of "poor people's street markets"
and other cheap consumer outlets in market societies, catering to the
developing needs of increasing numbers of the "new poor"
(Taylor, Evans, and Fraser, 1996). There is an important sense here in
which we ought to recognize an "immiseration" of the working
people, predicted as an inevitable feature of capitalist development by
some Marxist writers of the most traditional persuasion. It is also
tempting to argue that the problem of "crime," which is so
high on the agenda of most Western market societies, is simply an
expression of the reemergence of a very traditional problem - the
lumpenproletariat - so familiar to students of the Marxist canon, but
now reconstituted in contemporary discussion as "the problem of the
underclass."
Yet there is also an important sense in which the emergence of a
"new poverty" and inequality, such as in the European
Community, is evidence of new social processes that need to be grasped
and analyzed on their own terms, rather than through the prism of
Marxist class analysis or, indeed, of any other traditional form of
sociological analysis. The return of "wars of blood and
belonging" in Europe during the 1990s has produced a new migrant
"class" of refugees and asylum-seekers, who are attempting to
find a home somewhere within the broad Community. According to the
United Nations Office of High Commissioner for Refugees, there were
nearly three million refugees in Europe, over 260,000 officially
recognized asylum seekers, and another 2.3 million people whose
circumstances were of immediate concern. Across the world as a whole,
there were some 12 million refugees, 954,000 asylum seekers, and nearly
six million others in circumstances of immediate concern (UNHCR, 1998).
The explosive increase in each of these categories during the 1980s and
1990s is one just one immediate measure of the numbers of people
experiencing new circumstances of uncertainty, enforced mobility, and
poverty. In the late 1990s, the growth of this population of refugees
and asylum-seekers is unquestionably a major factor in the fears and
anxieties that are expressed via the issue of crime in particular
societies (for example, in Italy and the Netherlands) and it is clearly
a responsibility of"critical criminology" to engage in a close
analysis of these new relationships.
Grasping the Realities of the New Market Society
Contemporary developments in free-market capitalist societies -
particularly the enhanced use of penal discipline, the return of a
strong and continuing trend toward inequality, and the provenance of
poverty within civil society - are familiar to Marxist and other critics
of capitalism. No study of patterns of crime in the late 20th century
that ignores this secular context is really credible. It is nevertheless
instructive to reflect on the relative absence of criminological studies
of crime that directly connect these secular trends toward
"inequality" and "poverty" to "crime" in
the last years of the century.(8)
Various reasons account for such an absence of attention. Social
scientific observers generally sense that the dynamics of wealth
creation, wealth distribution, and poverty are changing very rapidly.
Moreover, the framework recommended for understanding such issues,
inherited from an earlier period of welfare state development, may have
encountered its limits. Perhaps particular impacts of the post-Fordist
transformation on certain localities and specific local forms of
"gender-order," rather than overall levels of unemployment or
poverty per se, explain the explosion of burglaries and car thefts in a
country like Britain (which pushes it ahead of the United States in
terms of this kind of criminal victimization).(9) Perhaps some forms of
"private violence" by men must be explained primarily in terms
of changes in local gender-order, rather than in terms of local census
data on the distribution of wealth. Again, it may be important to
understand the changing patterns of wealth distribution and relative
poverty in terms of the levels of insecurity obtaining in particular
societies over the direction and speed of change. Will Hutton's
classic study on the impact of the "free market experiment" in
Britain spoke of the emergence in that society of a "30:30:40"
society, in which 30% of the population could only be described as
multiply disadvantaged (largely because of their experience of
unemployment and economic inactivity), while another 30% were
marginalized and insecure (because of the limited protection afforded by
part-time or short-term employment). Only 40% of the British population
- the privileged - had full-time work in the mid-1990s, but this was a
shrinking proportion of the total number of people employed in the labor
market (Hutton, 1995: 105-109). Within this working population,
therefore, there was evidence of the competitiveness and insecurity that
Arlie Hochschild identified in the American population during the 1980s.
Communitarian critics also focused on the immediate and long-term impact
of an accelerated work culture on the quality of parenting and
neighborhood life (including the capacity of neighborhoods to provide
any system of informal policing vis-a-vis local crime). In many of these
domestic contexts, the level of acceleration and stress within those
households, and the expressed desire for alternative ways of living, may
matter more than the level of household income. Within the new
"underclass" neighborhoods of market society, in the meantime,
long-term unemployment was producing an immobility and a restricted set
of life experiences, with its own demoralizing effects (and the
encouragement provided for certain kinds of desperate expressive
behavior, from "joy-riding" in stolen cars to predatory sexual
crimes).(10)
Any straightforwardly empirical investigation of the relation
between increasing levels of poverty (or inequality) and crime in the
new market societies confronts the very contradictions encountered
historically under different circumstances by Willem Bonger in his
investigations in the 1930s. Not the least of the obvious contradictions
is the increasingly visible phenomenon of upper-class or corporate crime
- evident throughout the 1980s and 1990s in a string of major cases of
money laundering, insider-trading scandals, junk bond and long-firm
frauds, illegal arms trades, and many other previously unknown instances
of economic fraudsterism. The temptation arises simply to identify in
these cases the contemporary echoes of the "cowboy" or
"piratical" activities that characterized earlier periods of
precapitalist and capitalist development- as activities awaiting a
suitable regulatory response by an organized nation-state acting in the
public interest. In the 1990s, even the most cursory examination of the
details of these offenses underlines the complicity between major
corporate institutions and national and international agencies of
government in the production of such crimes. Intergovernmental activity
on the question of "hot money" running through the
international banking system during the 1980s and 1990s has so far only
intensified the rate of investment of such illicit capital in stock
exchanges in the United States, Canada, and Europe.
The problems and challenges involved in explaining economic crime
empirically are relatively insignificant when compared to those involved
in providing a coherent account of different forms of interpersonal
crime, from assaults through rape and murder. Ironically, these crimes
(rather than mundane economic crimes like burglary) are most frequently
brought to the attention of contemporary criminologists by local
television, radio, and other media who are looking for a marketable
explanation from "the expert." The number of such offenses
being reported to the police is on the increase in most European
societies, even in societies experiencing a reduction in the overall
total of reported crime. Other areas of interpersonal activity that are
being increasingly understood in terms of the application of a criminal
sanction would include the exploding problem of prostitution, in
countries like Italy. An analysis of the "supply" of such sex
workers within Europe must be framed in terms of the new trade in people
across the borders of the European Community from the war zones of
middle Europe and the Balkans. As argued elsewhere (Taylor, 1999:
Chapter 8), however, the increased marketization of sexuality itself in
market society, as well as its different social effects, also ought to
be an important part of the project of critical criminology.
Any socially engaged criminological commentary, therefore,
confronts an increasingly complicated picture in terms of prioritizing
the types of harms and fears of harm that come to be identified by some
agency as crime, as well as of relating them to the question of social
justice. In some postmodern quarters, understandably, the task of social
critique seems to have been relinquished, after the example of
Baudrillard, in favor of a descriptive appreciation of crime, in effect,
as "text." Other sophisticated scholars, at pains to retain
some distance from a purely empirical and practical involvement with
"crime prevention" as currently defined, are concerned to
advance understanding of the range of different ways in which concepts
of crime are socially constructed or "constituted," in
increasingly fragmented, mass-mediated "representational"
cultures (Henry and Milovanovic, 1997). The contribution these
approaches could make to achieving any idea of a just or secure society
is not always easy to see, though that may not be a problem they
recognize.
Two concluding remarks may help frame "a position" with
respect to these connected issues. In contrast to many other fashionable
postmodernist accommodations to the nihilism of the marketplace, these
observations may facilitate a distinctive critical intervention into
ongoing public or private deliberations. First, I wish to suggest that
much remains to be gained from a critical tradition that attends, after
the example of Philippe Bourgois, Mike Davis, Will Hutton, Loic
Wacquant, and others mentioned in this essay, to new patterns of
inequality in the organization of economic and social life, even in the
analysis of societies that other commentators may prefer to describe in
terms of increasingly fragmented, complex, and overlapping forms of
"identity" and "difference." What matters, however,
in revisiting such critical traditions, as applied to
"modernist" and "Fordist" societies organized at the
level of individual nation-states, is that they try to perceive and
analyze these patterns of inequality transnationally, in relationship to
much larger spheres of influence than the individual nation-state itself
or the configuration of Fordist industrial workplaces and work forces in
an earlier historical period. Only by thinking about these issues
transnationally can there emerge a criminology of any critical value to
the analysis of patterns of migration into and across the European
Community, of crime and fear or crime, of the responses of agencies of
"social control," or to the broader issue of social justice.
It is vital to undertake this analysis of the new post-Fordist
economy in a coldly realistic fashion - paying regard to actual
developments such as the post-Fordist labor markets unfolding in North
America, Europe, and elsewhere - without anticipating any necessary
endpoint, or "revolutionary moment," in these developments.
Indeed, the arrival of a market society organized along post-Fordist
lines may have a permanence that could not be claimed by Fordism itself.
The emergence of a "permanent post-Fordism" has quite
fundamental implications for the ways in which modernist criminologists
conduct their analysis of a wide variety of phenomena.
"Subcultural" approaches to the study of young people
understood to be adjusting, momentarily, to the pains of essentially
temporary rejection at school may have to be rewritten to account for
lives of continuing and unending exclusion from a post-Fordist economic
world, in which unskilled young people have become endlessly surplus to
requirements.(11) Analysis of the troubled inner cities of Europe,
conducted with reference to conventional neo-Chicagoan frameworks that
view such areas as "zones of transition" in a mobile society
of opportunity, may have to take seriously the work of Mike Davis (1990)
and Loic Wacquant (1994, 1998) in the United States, which see these
areas as "permanent bantustans" or new forms of
"hyper-ghetto" (holding camps for particularly seriously
marginalized fractions of the "new poor"). It may be that
criminology, like social science in general, must take into account not
only the crisis of "rehabilitative optimism" (the belief in
the reformative capacity of juvenile institutions), but also a serious
crisis in utopian or ameliorist forms of commonsense in the population
at large.
Having encouraged that kind of realist recognition, however, I
still wish to defend the idea that the analysis of these developments
ought to be conducted in a critical - which is to say, emancipatory -
mode. I wish to defend the idea of critique first articulated by Adorno
(1970) and his colleagues in the Frankfurt School, the idea of criticism
as a "negative dialectic." The argument is that a principled
critique of social and political developments (in their case fascism,
and in ours increasingly hegemonic free markets) does not depend on the
description, or the immediate potentiality, of an alternative.
"Negative dialectics" in this sense is the straightforward
insistence that the analysis of existing social development does not
depend on its acceptance. Indeed, analysis may be enhanced by
recognizing the desperate and inhuman quality of much social behavior
within the world as currently constituted - that is, human activities
produced by the "demoralization" of a citizenry.(12) By
offering a critique of social formations in which "everything has
gone to the market" (including people's basic incomes and
standard of living, as well as their health and personal well-being), we
are not necessarily advancing a politics that rejects the importance of
competitiveness and efficiency in the conduct of economic life and work.
As I argue elsewhere (Taylor, 1999), all the major social
transformations that characterize our lives at the end of the century
need not necessarily be explained simply and exclusively in terms of the
sudden explosion of "the free market." However, connections
must still be made between the organic transformations that have
occurred in the organization of economic activity and work (the rise of
a new "market structure") and accompanying transformations of
the larger culture and social formation (the continuing rise to
dominance of a "market culture"). In "market
societies," as against welfare states, there are specific and
powerful structures (such as housing and labor market access, and
"personal financial services") that reinforce and reproduce
individual survival and individual success. Cultural scripts (in
advertising and political and media discourses) work in the same
direction. Generally more difficult to locate in market societies are
structures and cultures working in support of "communities,"
"neighborhoods," and other forms of collaborative or
collective forms of living (all of which have been under persistent
attack over the last two decades). It is vital for criminologists
engaged in the public task of explaining the presence of crime in such
societies to understand the fundamental transformation that has occurred
in the forms of social relationships and associated "cultural
scripts" during these last two decades. In both the legal and
illegal locales of the modern economy, social relations have rapidly
been transformed into intense, competitive, exploitative, and
self-interested forms of commodity exchange. Little imagination is
required to understand how this contemporary truth may help to explain
the increasing presence in so many "advanced" societies of
dehumanized and predatory criminality, as well as the level of fear and
insecurity on which the discipline of criminology is currently so
dependent.
[TABULAR DATA FOR TABLE 1 OMITTED]
NOTES
1. Our commitment to this "emancipatory mode" in The New
Criminology no doubt explains some of the exaggerated claims that were
made, especially in the final chapter, for our "social theory of
deviance." Our insistence on the primacy of a social explanation
could not in itself abolish the influence of biology or personality
disorder within individual acts of rule-breaking, and, as Elliott Currie
pointed out in a quite brilliant critical review (Currie, 1974), the
denial of biology and "pathology" would have been a very
"undialectical" position to assume. What matters in a theory
of criminal behavior framed in terms of a fully sociological analysis is
to try to specify the sets of social conditions that are conducive to
the production, enactment, and/or the institutionalization of pathology
within individual lives, or the experiences of social groups as a whole,
vis-a-vis those that have different, socially therapeutic effects.
2. Maddison's study of university psychiatry was clearly very
much influenced by another form of "critical social enquiry"
in place in that period - the "anti-psychiatry" of R.D. Laing,
and also the different critiques of psychiatric power advanced in North
America by the right-wing libertarian Thomas Szasz and in Italy by the
Marxist student of mental health, Franco Basaglia.
3. I have in mind here the quite unromantic observations of fiction
writers like Charles Dickens and Upton Sinclair on the range of
different adaptations to life among the urban poor in 19th-century
London and Chicago, including the most predatory of interpersonal theft
and personal attack. Similar observations about the contradictory
expressions of poverty in 19th-century London are found in Henry
Mayhew's famous taxonomies of the London poor. The recent scholarly
commentary on the lives of people in the multiply deprived
"hyper-ghettoes" of the urban United States, by Loic Wacquant
and William Julius Wilson, reemphasizes the overwhelming importance of
situating even the most "meaningless" forms of crime in the
desperate sets of social and economic circumstances from which they most
often emanate.
4. I made one modest attempt to inquire into these considerations,
drawing on the earlier work of the English utopian socialist, Edward
Carpenter (see Taylor, 1991).
5. But, as Zygmunt Bauman (1992:219) so clearly puts it, "one
thing that liberalism cannot cater for is precisely the matter of
justice, social justice."
6. One of the most extraordinary examples of the political
articulation of the "critique of social control" position in
Britain is to be found in the pages of Living Marxism, the journal of
the Revolutionary Communist Party sold on the streets of major cities.
Living Marxism is committed to a paranoid view of world politics, in
which most representations in television news are seen to be
substantially controlled by the CIA on the one hand, and, on the other,
a libertarian and individualist form of domestic politics, in which all
forms of state regulation (like the control of private ownership of
firearms or the supervision of pedophiles) are an intrusion to be
opposed.
7. See "Income Distribution and Poverty in EU12,"
Statistics in Focus No. 6 (Luxembourg: Eurostat, 1997).
8. An honorable exception here is John Hagan of the University of
Toronto in two important monographs co-authored in the 1990s (Hagan and
Peterson, 1995; Hagan and McCarthy, 1998). In Europe, other critical
commentators who have always insisted on the empirical connection
between poverty and crime would include Fritz Sack of the University of
Hamburg.
9. There are marked differences in the levels of these crimes
reported to the police across England and Wales, which bear no direct
relationship to recorded levels of unemployment or to other aspects of
local economic development. Car thefts are highest in Teesside, an area
of high unemployment and uncertain economic prospects, and in Greater
Manchester, with a lesser level of unemployment and relatively good
economic prospects.
10. In one of his most recent commentaries on life in postmodern
market society, Zygmunt Bauman speaks of a new inequality between those
privileged vanguards in the "first world" for whom space and
time restraints have been all but abolished (travel is unproblematic),
and a "second world" whose residents live almost entirely
within that space (i.e., in their own homes and neighborhoods). In this
space, "time is void"; in their time, "nothing ever
happens." Only virtual TV time has a structure, a "timetable -
the rest of time is monotonously ticking away" (Bauman, 1998:
88-89). When the residents of this second world "travel"
outside their neighborhoods, Bauman argues, they are immediately under
surveillance, harassed, and, very often, arrested or deported.
11. Some of this rewriting of subcultural approaches to
"delinquency" has already begun in the United States, as, for
example, in the ethnographic studies conducted by Jay MacLeod (1987) and
Mercer Sullivan (1989), but I know of no European equivalent study.
12. I take it that this approach was what informed the quite
extraordinary ethnographic work undertaken by Philippe Bourgois in a
community of "crack dealers" on the upper East Side in New
York in the early 1990s, prophetically entitled In Search of Respect
(Bourgois, 1996).
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IAN TAYLOR is a Professor at Van Mildert College and the Department
of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Durham, Durham DH1 3LH,
England (email: Ian.Taylor@Durham.ac.uk). Among his recent books is
Crime in Context: A Critical Criminology of Market Societies (Polity
Press, 1999). This article was first presented at the
Max-Planck-Institut fur Auslandisches und Internationales Strafrecht,
Freiburg-im-Breisgau, Germany (February 19, 1999).