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The Biology of Culpability:: Pathological Identity and Crime Control in a Biological Culture

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This article considers the impact of the new biological criminology on control strategies. Biocriminology does not purport to have a general explanation for crime, but draws upon contemporary human genetics and neurobiology to account for what is represented as a growing social problem of violent and anti-social conduct. Jurisprudential notions of free will and responsibility are not being displaced by genetic essentialism in the courtroom, where the tendency is for an increased emphasis upon moral responsibility of all offenders for their actions. However, in other areas of the criminal justice system, we are seeing the emergence of new conceptions of the individual `genetically at risk' of offending, and the development of crime prevention strategies based upon a rationale of public health. This is not a new eugenics, but a control strategy that aims to identify, treat and control individuals predisposed to impulsive or aggressive conduct. The implications of the new biological criminology may be seen in the form of genetic discrimination, genetic screening in risk assessments and the use of quasi-consensual `treatment' for supposed biological tendencies, as conditions for a non-custodial sentence, loss of employment or denial of insurance or other benefits. The search for biological dispositions may also play a part in the increased use of preventive detention and other pre-emptive interventions for `the protection of the public' against those whose conduct seems to show wanton disregard for the moral constraints on the conduct of free individuals in a liberal society.
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Theoretical Criminology
DOI: 10.1177/1362480600004001001
2000; 4; 5 Theoretical Criminology
NIKOLAS ROSE
in a Biological Culture
The Biology of Culpability:: Pathological Identity and Crime Control
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... Os estudos biológicos sobre o comportamento criminal remontam ao século XIX, com o desenvolvimento da antropologia criminal, que inequivocamente marcou a forma como a relação entre crime e família é considerada. De acordo estes estudos, a criminalidade encontra-se inscrita no corpo na forma de características físicas e morais, degenerativas, de carácter inalterável e hereditário (Cole, 2001;Rose, 2000). Embora esta abordagem tenha sido amplamente criticada e desacreditada, o surgimento da genética e da neurociência tem vindo a desencadear uma tentativa de revitalização e relegitimação sobre a biogenética do comportamento criminal (Baker et al., 2010;Walsh & Beaver, 2009). ...
... Esta é uma abordagem relativamente recente que defende que o comportamento das mães durante a gravidez e a infância tem um papel fulcral na suposta predisposição biogenética para comportamento agressivos por parte das crianças (Tremblay, 2015) 4 . Este tipo de abordagem enquadra-se no que Nikolas Rose designa de «biologia da culpabilidade» (Rose, 2000). Tal conceito visa traduzir as formas pelas quais algumas pessoas tendem a ser consideradas como parte de populações «de risco» devido à sua relação biogenética com indivíduos que cometem atos desviantes ou criminais. ...
... By looking at visualizations of bodies based on genomic information, we analyze the use of technologies that "render a picture of that which cannot be seen" (Brown and Carrabine 2019: 199) -at least not without digital mediation. This rendering expresses a desire for control and mastery at a new, molecular level (Rose 2000). Visualizing the invisible assumes here several meanings: it is not just a rendering of that which cannot be seen with the bare eye into an actual body image, but it is also an act of tying molecular and physiognomic traits to intangible, yet powerful notions of "latent social dangerousness" (Horn 2003: 59). ...
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