CRIME, SHAME , AND COMMUNITY:
MEDIATION
AGAINST VIOLENCE

WELLNESS FOUNDATION
DISTINGUISHED LECTURE

Thomas J. Scheff
Professor Emeritus of Sociology
University of California, Santa Barbara.

REFERENCES
WELLNESS LECTURE SERIES VOLUME VI
October 1996.


REFERENCES

1. Danzig R. Toward the creation of a complementary, decentralized system of criminal justice. Stanford Law Review. 1973;26:1-54.

2. Hibbard JL Jr. The Kpelle Moot. In: Bohannon P, ed. Law and Warfare. Garden City, NY: Natural History Press; 1967.

3. Umbreit M, Coates R. Cross-site analysis of VOM in four states. Crime and Delinquency. 1993;39(4):565-585.

4. Braithwaite J. Crime, Shame, and Reintegration. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1989.

5. Braithwaite J, Mugford S. Conditions of successful reintegration ceremonies. British Journal of Criminology. 1994;34:139-171.

6. Bradshaw J. Healing the Shame That Binds You. Deerfield, FL: Health Communications; 1988.

7. Scheff T. Microsociology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1990.

8. Retzinger S. Violent Emotions. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications; 1991.

9. Scheff T, Retzinger S. Emotions and Violence. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books; 1991.

10. Scheff T. Bloody Revenge. Boulder, CO: Westview Press; 1994.

11. Lynd H. On Shame and the Search for Identity. New York: Harcourt; 1956.

12. Tavuchis N. Mea Culpa: The Sociology of Apology and Reconciliation. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press; 1991.

13. Goffman E. Interaction Ritual. New York: Anchor; 1967.

14. Moore D. Shame, forgiveness, and juvenile justice. Criminal Justice Ethics. 1993;Winter/Spring:3-25.

15. O’Connell T. Personal communication. 1994.

16. Labov W, Fanshel D. Therapeutic Discourse. New York: Academic Press; 1977.

17. Horowitz M. Self-righteous rage and attribution of blame. Archives of General Psychiatry. 1981;38:1233-1238.

18. Kohut H. Thoughts on narcissism and narcissistic rage. In: Ornstein P, ed. The Search for Self. New York: International University Press; 1978.

19. Hyndman M, Moore D, Thorsborne M. Family and community conferences in schools. In: Homel R, ed. Preventive Criminology. Brisbane: Griffith University; 1995.


*The following is a modification of Retzinger S, Scheff T. Strategy for community conferences. In: Galaway B, Ryan J, eds. Restorative Justice. Monsey, NY: Criminal Justice Press; 1996.

Thomas J. Scheff is a Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is the author of Being Mentally Ill; Microsociology; Emotions and Violence (with Suzanne Retzinger); Bloody Revenge; and other books and articles. He is a former Chair of the Section on the Sociology of Emotions, American Sociological Association, and the President of the Pacific Sociological Association. His fields of research are social psychology, emotions, mental illness, and new approaches to theory and method. His current studies concern anger management, solidarity-alienation, and alternative methods of crime control. A forthcoming book will concern part/whole analysis, a unified approach to theory and method in the human sciences.

Acknowledgments: Comments on earlier drafts by Suzanne Retzinger, Terry O’Connell, and Irene Bronston and her staff were very helpful. Thomas J. Scheff, Professor Emeritus Dept of Sociology UCSB Fax 805 893 3324


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