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Critical Race Theory for Historical Criminology in Britain

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Forthcoming

Standard

Critical Race Theory for Historical Criminology in Britain. / Miller, Esmorie; Seal, Lizzie.
Memory as Power: Historical Criminology and the Role of the Past in Critical Scholarship. ed. / Alex Tepperman; Paul Bleakley. Vol. 1 1. ed. Berlin: Verlag Walter de Gruyter, 2025. p. 53-70 (Contemporary Social Sciences; Vol. 39).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Miller, E & Seal, L 2025, Critical Race Theory for Historical Criminology in Britain. in A Tepperman & P Bleakley (eds), Memory as Power: Historical Criminology and the Role of the Past in Critical Scholarship. 1 edn, vol. 1, Contemporary Social Sciences, vol. 39, Verlag Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, pp. 53-70.

APA

Miller, E., & Seal, L. (in press). Critical Race Theory for Historical Criminology in Britain. In A. Tepperman, & P. Bleakley (Eds.), Memory as Power: Historical Criminology and the Role of the Past in Critical Scholarship (1 ed., Vol. 1, pp. 53-70). (Contemporary Social Sciences; Vol. 39). Verlag Walter de Gruyter.

Vancouver

Miller E, Seal L. Critical Race Theory for Historical Criminology in Britain. In Tepperman A, Bleakley P, editors, Memory as Power: Historical Criminology and the Role of the Past in Critical Scholarship. 1 ed. Vol. 1. Berlin: Verlag Walter de Gruyter. 2025. p. 53-70. (Contemporary Social Sciences).

Author

Miller, Esmorie ; Seal, Lizzie. / Critical Race Theory for Historical Criminology in Britain. Memory as Power: Historical Criminology and the Role of the Past in Critical Scholarship. editor / Alex Tepperman ; Paul Bleakley. Vol. 1 1. ed. Berlin : Verlag Walter de Gruyter, 2025. pp. 53-70 (Contemporary Social Sciences).

Bibtex

@inbook{b6cd55afdfce4eabb065f091dff3d158,
title = "Critical Race Theory for Historical Criminology in Britain",
abstract = "This chapter posits that the contemporary moral panics about Critical Race Theory (CRT) in schools, characteristic of American politics, have relevance to Britain. British Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) Kemi Badenoch{\textquoteright}s recent declaration that CRT is political and should be treated as such is one way to understand, (a) CRT{\textquoteright}s relevance in Britain, and (b) how this relevance can be adduced in terms of the intersections with historical criminology. We outline what critical race theory is, criminological examples of applying critical race theory, and its relationship with intersectionality. CRT was developed by American legal scholars, including Derrick Bell, Kimberl{\'e} Williams Crenshaw, Patricia J. Williams, and Patricia Hill Collins. American criminologists thus originated intersectional and Black criminologies, incorporating the analysis of race and racism. However, race is not only an American phenomenon and racism is not only an American problem. Focusing on the United Kingdom, the chapter argues that CRT has application for historical criminology beyond the United States and presents illustrative examples from the authors{\textquoteright} historical criminological research. It examines the significance of gender and the need for intersectionality in historical criminological research about, and with, racialised women in Britain. ",
author = "Esmorie Miller and Lizzie Seal",
year = "2025",
month = mar,
day = "3",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783111317359",
volume = "1",
series = "Contemporary Social Sciences",
publisher = "Verlag Walter de Gruyter",
pages = "53--70",
editor = "Tepperman, {Alex } and Paul Bleakley",
booktitle = "Memory as Power",
edition = "1",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Critical Race Theory for Historical Criminology in Britain

AU - Miller, Esmorie

AU - Seal, Lizzie

PY - 2025/3/3

Y1 - 2025/3/3

N2 - This chapter posits that the contemporary moral panics about Critical Race Theory (CRT) in schools, characteristic of American politics, have relevance to Britain. British Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) Kemi Badenoch’s recent declaration that CRT is political and should be treated as such is one way to understand, (a) CRT’s relevance in Britain, and (b) how this relevance can be adduced in terms of the intersections with historical criminology. We outline what critical race theory is, criminological examples of applying critical race theory, and its relationship with intersectionality. CRT was developed by American legal scholars, including Derrick Bell, Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw, Patricia J. Williams, and Patricia Hill Collins. American criminologists thus originated intersectional and Black criminologies, incorporating the analysis of race and racism. However, race is not only an American phenomenon and racism is not only an American problem. Focusing on the United Kingdom, the chapter argues that CRT has application for historical criminology beyond the United States and presents illustrative examples from the authors’ historical criminological research. It examines the significance of gender and the need for intersectionality in historical criminological research about, and with, racialised women in Britain.

AB - This chapter posits that the contemporary moral panics about Critical Race Theory (CRT) in schools, characteristic of American politics, have relevance to Britain. British Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) Kemi Badenoch’s recent declaration that CRT is political and should be treated as such is one way to understand, (a) CRT’s relevance in Britain, and (b) how this relevance can be adduced in terms of the intersections with historical criminology. We outline what critical race theory is, criminological examples of applying critical race theory, and its relationship with intersectionality. CRT was developed by American legal scholars, including Derrick Bell, Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw, Patricia J. Williams, and Patricia Hill Collins. American criminologists thus originated intersectional and Black criminologies, incorporating the analysis of race and racism. However, race is not only an American phenomenon and racism is not only an American problem. Focusing on the United Kingdom, the chapter argues that CRT has application for historical criminology beyond the United States and presents illustrative examples from the authors’ historical criminological research. It examines the significance of gender and the need for intersectionality in historical criminological research about, and with, racialised women in Britain.

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9783111317359

VL - 1

T3 - Contemporary Social Sciences

SP - 53

EP - 70

BT - Memory as Power

A2 - Tepperman, Alex

A2 - Bleakley, Paul

PB - Verlag Walter de Gruyter

CY - Berlin

ER -