Law & Humanities Blog |
Posted: 03 Feb 2012 10:44 AM PST Yxta Maya Murray, Loyola Law School, Los Angelos, has published The Pedagogy of Violence at 20 Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 537 (2011). Here is the abstract. In The Pedagogy of Violence, I develop a legal theory of the ways in which human beings teach each other to be violent. I am responding to the "contagion of violence" theory advocated by legal theorists such as Colin Loftin and Dr. Jeffrey Fagan, who argue that violence is akin to a contagious disease. Using disease as their paradigm, Loftin and Fagan contend that courts and political institutions should address the problem of violence through what they call the "epidemiological" approach; that is, they say that violence should be addressed as a public health problem. Though I do not take issue with the data-collection and public education strategies that they advocate, I argue against other aspects of this approach. Namely, I believe that the "contagion" metaphor dangerously dehumanizes violent offenders by characterizing them as "vectors" of parasitic disease. This language may pave the way for dangerous social policy. Moreover, the contagion metaphor has the unfortunate effect of obscuring the personal histories and emotions of violent actors, which may lead to myopic legal redresses that fail to get at the roots of the violence problem in our society – for example, poverty and despair, alienation and grief.Download the article from SSRN at the link. |
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