1st Edition

Communities, Crime and Social Capital in Contemporary China

By Lena Y. Zhong Copyright 2009
296 Pages
by Willan

296 Pages
by Willan

This book explores the theoretical and empirical dimensions of community crime prevention in China, examining in particular the role of social capital in a rapidly modernizing economic, social and political context. In doing so it provides a vivid picture of contemporary crime and crime control in China as well as analyzing the very particular Chinese approach to community crime prevention,... Read more
Foreword by Peter Grabosky  1. Introduction  2. Taking the Field  3. Community Crime Prevention and Social Capital  4. Social Capital in China  5. Crime and Social Control in China  6. Building Little, Safe and Civilized Communities in Shenzhen: Community Crime Prevention with Chinese Characteristics? Part One: CMSO, and BLSCC development and outcome  7. Building Little, Safe and Civilized Communities in Shenzhen: Community Crime Prevention with Chinese Characteristics? Part Two: BLSCC measures  8. BLSCC in Two Shenzhen Communities  9. Conclusion

Biography

Zhong, Lena

'This book is a great example of contemporary social science. Its treatment of criminological theory in its application to contemporary China is both comprehensive and accessible. Its use of multiple research methods, including observation, depth interviews, surveys, and documentary analysis, is exemplary ... For those who are unfamiliar with Chinese culture and institutions of social control, this book is the place to start. It is a wonderful and fascinating introduction to contemporary Chinese society and to the problems of crime control that accompany it. The reader's attention will be richly rewarded.' − Professor Peter Grabosky, Regulatory Institutions Network, Australian National University

'Lena Zhong has skilfully brought to bear insights from Western social and criminological theory to illuminate crime control policy and practice in a part of China which has been undergoing rapid socio-economic and political change. Her subtle theoretical analysis and empirical research will undoubtedly be of great interest to the growing number of scholars who are developing a more sophisticated comparative criminology.' Roger Hood, Professor Emeritus of Criminology, University of Oxford

'A very accomplished study of community-based crime prevention initiatives in China...'

'It is a methodologically ambitious study, which triangulates a range of research methods and sources of data.  The use of documentary analysis, observational techniques, in-depth interviews and surveys gives the reader a textured and nuanced narrative.  As well as being an exemplary empirical study, it is also a brave attempt to address some of the bias in western criminological theory...'

'This is an important contribution, which will be of interest to comparative criminologists...it deserves a much wider readership because it is a novel synthesis of theoretical and empirical material drawn from eastern and western sources.'
-Chris Crowther-Dowey, Senior Lecturer in Criminology, Nottingham Trent University, in the British Journal of Community Justice