Abstract
This article reflects on the growing acceptance of intersectional criminology alongside emergent challenges of the contemporary moment. In light of social changes, the article asks: What is important about intersectionality and its relationship to criminology? How might we sustain and nurture these crucial dimensions and connections? Exploring answers to these questions, we consider how to retain intersectional commitments in areas of increasing importance, such as ubiquitous surveillance and technologies of policing. In discussing how we might examine and unpack the workings of interlocking systems of oppression and their effects, this article addresses how intersectional criminologists might reflect more critically on their methodologies to ensure robust analysis and incorporate frameworks that better capture the technosocial entanglements emblematic of ongoing shifts in social control. After reviewing approaches for doing so, the article concludes with a reflection on implications for intersectional criminological praxis.
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution.
Notes
Following Hochman (2018), we use “racialized” to acknowledge that individuals, groups, and structures become racialized through worldly processes, not as a result of their inherent attributes.
Nash (2019) uses “women’s studies” to delineate the “interdiscipline”—a term that Binder (1987) employed to describe criminology—that is also referred to as “feminist studies,” “gender studies,” “gender and sexuality studies,” and “women’s and gender studies.” We use her terminology in the interests of consistency, not to suggest the field is limited to the study of women.
We thank Jenna Imad Harb and Rita Shah for their perspectives on the significance of the event.
This framing of science and technology focuses on the material-semiotic dimensions of practice and thus requires attention to how both are co-constitutive and historically situated.
The practice of “mainstreaming a gender perspective,” which is often referred to as “gender mainstreaming,” is meant to incorporate women-centered perspectives and gender-sensitive research to enhance policy implementation (Association for Women’s Rights in Development 2004). Such strategies aim to achieve gender equality yet are recognized as encapsulating “many of the tensions and dilemmas in feminist theory and practice” (Walby 2005: 321).
We do not mean to suggest that all quantitative research undermines intersectionality because such work can aid in rendering structural intersectionality more visible. We do, however, believe positivistic training does not provide adequate preparation for carrying out intersectional analysis. The academic division of labor between quantitative and qualitative research methodologists, which is common in criminology, exacerbates these issues.
We should note that there are many qualitative studies that are not attentive to intersectional concerns. We mention quantitative research because of its privileged status in criminology and the clear challenges of capturing dynamic (yet alone multiplicative) social processes using positivistic methods (see Lynch et al. 2017).
Acknowledging Ahmed’s (2008) criticisms of “new materialism,” we refrain from using the term. Specifically, she argues recent feminist materialist critiques often disregard the important ways that poststructural analyses have examined constitutive relationships between the substantive and the discursive.
Feminist technoscience does not limit its inquiry to areas in the so-called Global North or to practices deemed modern. Wacjman (2010), for example, acknowledges that Indigenous women are among the first peoples to innovate in a technological sense.
Puar (2017: 172) also warns that a focus on matter may seek to disrupt the dominance of linguistic explanations of power, but that there is a danger that doing so might “privilege an essentialist truth produced through matter.”
References
Ahmed, S. (2008). Imaginary prohibitions: Some preliminary remarks on the founding gestures of the new materialism. European Journal of Women’s Studies, 15(1), 23–39.
Alexander, M. (2018). The newest Jim Crow. The New York Times, SR3. November 11.
Arrigo, B. A., & Bersot, H. Y. (2016). Revolutionizing academic activism: Transpraxis, critical pedagogy, and justice for a people yet to be. Critical Criminology: An International Journal, 24(4), 549–564.
Åsberg, C., & Lykke, N. (2010). Feminist technoscience studies. European Journal of Women’s Studies, 17(4), 299–305.
Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID). (2004). Gender mainstreaming: Can it work for women’s rights? Spotlight, 3. November. https://www.awid.org/sites/default/files/atoms/files/spotlight_-_gender_mainstreaming_-_can_it_work_for_womens_rights.pdf. Accessed 10 Mar 2019.
Barad, K. (2003). Posthumanist performativity: Toward an understanding of how matter comes to matter. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 28(3), 801–831.
Barad, K. (2007). Meeting the universe halfway: Quantum physics and the entanglement of matter and meaning. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Barak, G., Leighton, P., & Flavin, J. (2010). Class, race, gender, and crime: The social realities of justice in America. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
Belknap, J. (2015). Presidential address: Activist criminology—Criminologists’ responsibility to advocate for social and legal justice. Criminology, 53(1), 1–22.
Bell, K. E. (2017). Prison violence and the intersectionality of race/ethnicity and gender. Criminology, Criminal Justice, Law and Society, 18(1), 106–121.
Bernstein, E. (2010). Militarized humanitarianism meets carceral feminism: The politics of sex, rights, and freedom in contemporary antitrafficking campaigns. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 36(1), 45–72.
Binder, A. (1987). Criminology: Discipline or and interdiscipline? Issues in Integrative Studies, 5, 41–67. https://oakland.edu/Assets/upload/docs/AIS/Issues-in-Interdisciplinary-Studies/1987-Volume-05/04_Vol_5_pp_41_67_Criminology_Discipline_or_Interdiscipline_(Arnold_Binder).pdf. Accessed 10 Mar 2019.
Bowleg, L. (2008). When Black + lesbian + woman ≠ Black lesbian woman: The methodological challenges of qualitative and quantitative intersectionality research. Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 59(5–6), 312–325.
Braithwaite, J. (2000). The new regulatory state and the transformation of criminology. British Journal of Criminology, 40(2), 222–238.
Brayne, S. (2017). Big data surveillance: The case of policing. American Sociological Review, 82(5), 977–1008.
Britton, D. M. (2000). Feminism in criminology: Engendering the outlaw. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 571(1), 57–76.
Brown, S. (2006). The criminology of hybrids: Rethinking crime and law in technosocial networks. Theoretical Criminology, 10(2), 223–244.
Browne, S. (2010). Digital epidermalization: Race, identity, and biometrics. Critical Sociology, 36(1), 131–150.
Browne, S. (2015). Dark matters: On the surveillance of Blackness. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Campbell, R., & Fehler-Cabral, G. (2018). Why police “couldn’t or wouldn’t” submit sexual assault kits for forensic DNA testing: A focal concerns theory analysis of untested rape kits. Law & Society Review, 52(1), 73–105.
Carbado, D. W. (2013). Colorblind intersectionality. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 38(4), 811–845.
Carrington, K., Donnermeyer, J. F., & DeKeseredy, W. S. (2014). Intersectionality, rural criminology, and re-imaging the boundaries of critical criminology. Critical Criminology: An International Journal, 22(4), 463–477.
Charlesworth, H. (2005). Not waving but drowning: Gender mainstreaming and human rights at the United Nations. Harvard Human Rights Journal, 18(1), 1–18.
Cho, S., Crenshaw, K., & McCall, L. (2013). Toward a field of intersectionality studies: Theory, applications, and praxis. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 38(4), 785–810.
Collins, P. H. (2000). Gender, Black feminism, and Black political economy. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 568(1), 41–53.
Collins, P. H. (2015). Intersectionality’s definitional dilemmas. Annual Review of Sociology, 41, 1–20.
Creek, S. J., & Dunn, J. L. (2014). Intersectionality and the study of sex, gender, and crime. In R. Gartner & B. McCarthy (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of gender, sex, and crime (pp. 40–58). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Crenshaw, K. (1991). Mapping the margins: Intersectionality, identity politics, and violence against women of color. Stanford Law Review, 43(6), 1241–1299.
Crenshaw, K. W. (1988). Race, reform and retrenchment: Transformation and legitimation in antidiscrimination law. Harvard Law Review, 101(7), 1331–1387.
Daly, K. (2010). Feminist perspectives in criminology: A review with Gen Y in mind. In E. McLaughlin & T. Newburn (Eds.), The SAGE handbook of criminological theory (pp. 225–246). London: Sage.
Dottolo, A. L., & Stewart, A. J. (2008). “Don’t ever forget now, you’re a Black man in America”: Intersections of race, class and gender in encounters with the police. Sex Roles, 59(5–6), 350–364.
Dubrofsky, R. E., & Magnet, S. A. (2015). Feminist surveillance studies: Critical interventions. In R. E. Dubrofsky & S. A. Magnet (Eds.), Feminist surveillance studies (pp. 1–17). Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Erez, E., Adelman, M., & Gregory, C. (2009). Intersections of immigrations and domestic violence. Feminist Criminology, 4(1), 32–56.
Eubanks, V. (2018). Automating inequality: How high-tech tools profile, police, and punish the poor. New York: St. Martins Press.
Fullagar, S. (2017). Post-qualitative inquiry and the new materialist turn: Implications for sport, health and physical culture research. Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health, 9(2), 247–257.
Gabbidon, S. L., & Greene, H. T. (2018). Race and crime (5th ed.). New York: Routledge.
Haggerty, K., & Gazso, A. (2005). Seeing beyond the ruins: Surveillance as a response to terrorist threats. The Canadian Journal of Sociology, 30(2), 169–187.
Haggerty, K. D., & Ericson, R. V. (2000). The surveillant assemblage. The British Journal of Sociology, 51(4), 605–622.
Hannah-Moffat, K. (2018). Algorithmic risk governance: Big data analytics, race, and information activism in criminal justice debates. Theoretical Criminology. https://doi.org/10.1177/1362480618763582.
Haraway, D. (1991). Simians, cyborgs, and women: The reinvention of nature. New York, NY: Routledge.
Henne, K. (2014). The “science” of fair play in sport: Gender and the politics of testing. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 39(3), 787–812.
Henne, K. E. (2015). Testing for athlete citizenship: Regulating doping and sex in sport. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Henne, K., & Troshynski, E. (2013a). Mapping the margins of intersectionality: Criminological possibilities in a transnational world. Theoretical Criminology, 17(4), 455–473.
Henne, K., & Troshynski, E. (2013b). Suspect subjects: Affects of bodily regulation. International Journal for Crime, Justice, and Social Democracy, 2(2), 100–112.
Henne, K., & Troshynski, E. (2017). Intersectionality. In A. Brisman, E. Carrabine, & N. South (Eds.), The Routledge companion to criminological theory and concepts (pp. 316–320). Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
Hochman, A. (2018). Racialization: A defense of the concept. Ethnic and Racial Studies. https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2018.1527937.
Hong, G. K. (2008). “The future of our worlds”: Black feminism and the politics of knowledge in the university under globalization. Meridians: Feminism, race, transnationalism, 8(2), 95–115.
Hudson, B. (2000). Critical reflection as research methodology? In V. Jupp, P. Davies, & P. Francis (Eds.), Doing criminological research (pp. 175–192). London: Sage.
Jones-Brown, D. (2000). Debunking the myth of officer friendly: How African American males experience community policing. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, 16(2), 209–229.
Josephson, J. (2002). The intersectionality of domestic violence and welfare in the lives of poor women. Journal of Poverty, 6(1), 1–20.
Kennedy, H. (2005). Subjective intersections in the face of the machine. European Journal of Women’s Studies, 12(4), 471–487.
King, D. K. (1988). Multiple jeopardy, multiple consciousness: The context of a Black feminist ideology. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 14(1), 42–72.
Law, J. (2004). Matter-ing: Or how might STS contribute? Lancaster: Centre for Science Studies, Lancaster University. http://www.lancaster.ac.uk/fass/resources/sociology-online-papers/papers/law-matter-ing.pdf. Accessed 1 Nov 2018.
Lumsden, K., & Goode, J. (2018). Public criminology, reflexivity and the enterprise university: Experiences of research, knowledge transfer work, and co-option with police forces. Theoretical Criminology, 22(2), 243–257.
Lupton, D. (2016). Digital companion species and eating data: Implications for theorizing digital data–human assemblages. Big Data & Society, 3(1), 1–5.
Lykke, N. (2011). Intersectional analysis: Black box or useful critical feminist thinking technology. In H. Lutz, M. T. H. Vivar, & L. Supik (Eds.), Framing intersectionality: Debates on a multifaceted concept in gender studies (pp. 207–220). Surrey: Ashgate.
Lynch, M. J., Barrett, K. L., Stretesky, P. B., & Long, M. A. (2017). The neglect of quantitative research in green criminology and its consequences. Critical Criminology: An International Journal, 25(2), 183–198.
Lyon, D. (2003). Surveillance as social sorting: Computer codes and mobile bodies. In D. Lyon (Ed.), Surveillance as social sorting: Privacy, risk, and digital discrimination (pp. 13–30). London: Routledge.
Magnet, S. A. (2011). When biometrics fail: Gender, race, and the technology of identity. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
May, V. M. (2015). Pursuing intersectionality, unsettling dominant imaginaries. London: Routledge.
McCall, L. (2005). The complexity of intersectionality. Signs, 30(3), 1771–1800.
Mol, A. (2002). The body multiple: Ontology in medical practice. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Monahan, T. (2017). Regulating belonging: Surveillance, inequality, and the cultural production of abjection. Journal of Cultural Economy, 10(2), 191–205.
Moser, I. (2006). Sociotechnical practices and difference: On the interferences between disability, gender, and class. Science, Technology and Human Values, 31(5), 537–564.
Musto, J. L. (2016). Control and protect: Collaboration, carceral protection, and domestic sex trafficking in the United States. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Naples, N. A. (2009). Crossing borders: Community activism, globalization, and social justice. Social Problems, 56(1), 2–20.
Nash, J. C. (2008). Re-thinking intersectionality. Feminist Review, 89, 1–15.
Nash, J. C. (2019). Black feminism reimagined: After intersectionality. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Noble, S. U. (2018). Algorithms of oppression: How search engines reinforce racism. New York: NYU Press.
Parker, K. F., & Hefner, M. K. (2015). Intersections of race, gender, disadvantage, and violence: Applying intersectionality to the macro-level study of female homicide. Justice Quarterly, 32(2), 223–254.
Patton, P. (1994). Metamorpho-logic: Bodies and powers in A Thousand Plateaus. Journal of the British Society of Phenomenology, 25(2), 157–169.
Potter, H. (2013). Intersectional criminology: Interrogating identity and power in criminology research and theory. Critical Criminology: An International Journal, 21(3), 305–318.
Potter, H. (2015). Intersectionality and criminology: Disrupting and revolutionizing studies of crime. London: Routledge.
Puar, J. K. (2007). Terrorist assemblages: Homonationalism in queer times. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Puar, J. K. (2017). The right to main: Debility, capacity, disability. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Purdie-Vaughns, V., & Eibach, R. P. (2008). Intersectional invisibility: The distinctive advantages and disadvantages of multiple subordinate-group identities. Sex Roles, 59(5–6), 377–391.
Quinlan, A. (2017). The technoscientific witness of rape: Contentious histories of law, feminism, and forensic science. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Richie, B. E. (1996). Compelled to crime: The gender entrapment of battered Black women. New York: Routledge.
Russell-Brown, K. (1998). The color of crime. New York: New York University Press.
Shelby, R. (2018a). Whose rape kit? Stabilizing the Vitullo® Kit through positivist criminology and protocol feminism. Theoretical Criminology. https://doi.org/10.1177/1362480618819805.
Shelby, R. (2018b). Sexual violence, intersectionality, and the “forensic gaze.” Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Criminology on 16 November, Atlanta, Georgia.
Simpson, S. S., & Gibbs, C. (2006). Making sense of intersections. In K. Heimer & C. Kruttschnitt (Eds.), Gender and crime: Patterns in victimization and offending (pp. 269–302). New York: New York University Press.
Singh, R. D. (2010). In between the system and the margins: Community organizations, mandatory charging and immigrant victims of abuse. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 35(1), 31–62.
Sokoloff, N. J. (2004). Domestic violence at the crossroads: Violence against poor women and women of color. Women’s Studies Quarterly, 32(2–3), 139–147.
Southern Poverty Law Center. (2016). Hatewatch update: 1094 bias-related incidents in the month following the election. Montgomery, AL. https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2016/12/16/update-1094-bias-related-incidents-month-following-election. Accessed 16 December.
Townsend-Bell, E. E. (2009). Intersectional praxis. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Toronto, Ontario.
Trahan, A. (2011). Qualitative research and intersectionality. Critical Criminology: An International Journal, 19(1), 1–14.
Troshynski, E. I. (2017). “Stalked by the state”: GPS surveillance technology and sex offender parolees. Kriminologisches Journal, 49(2), 103–119.
Troshynski, E. I., & Weiner, J. D. (2016). Freak Show: Modern constructions of Ciceronian Monstra and Foucauldian monstrosity. Law, Culture and the Humanities, 12(3), 741–765.
Visher, C. A. (1983). Gender, police arrest decisions, and notions of chivalry. Criminology, 21(1), 5–28.
Wajcman, J. (2010). Feminist theories of technology. Cambridge Journal of Economics, 34(1), 143–152.
Walby, S. (1999). The new regulatory state: The social powers of the European Union. British Journal of Sociology, 50(1), 118–138.
Walby, S. (2005). Gender mainstreaming: Productive tensions in theory and practice. Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society, 12(3), 321–343.
Walters, R. (2003). Deviant knowledge: Criminology, politics, and policy. Cullompton, Devon: Willan.
Whalley, E., & Hackett, C. (2017). Carceral feminisms: The abolitionist project and undoing dominant feminisms. Contemporary Justice Review, 20(4), 456–473.
Williams, T. (2008). Intersectionality analysis in the sentencing of Aboriginal women in Canada: What difference does it make? In E. Gabham, D. Cooper, J. Krishnada, & D. Herman (Eds.), Intersectionality and beyond (pp. 95–120). London: Routledge-Cavendish.
Woolgar, S., & Lezaun, J. (2013). The wrong bin bag: A turn to ontology in science and technology studies? Social Studies of Science, 43(3), 321–340.
Young, V. D. (1986). Gender expectations and their impact on Black female offenders and victims. Justice Quarterly, 3(3), 305–327.
Yuval-Davis, N. (2006). Intersectionality and feminist politics. European Journal of Women’s Studies, 13(3), 193–209.
Yuval-Davis, N. (2011). Beyond the recognition and re-distribution dichotomy: Intersectionality and stratification. In H. Lutz, M. T. H. Vivar, & L. Supik (Eds.), Framing intersectionality: Debates on a multi-faceted concept in gender studies (pp. 155–169). Surrey: Ashgate.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Additional information
Publisher's Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Henne, K., Troshynski, E.I. Intersectional Criminologies for the Contemporary Moment: Crucial Questions of Power, Praxis and Technologies of Control. Crit Crim 27, 55–71 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10612-019-09441-z
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10612-019-09441-z