Module Details

The information contained in this module specification was correct at the time of publication but may be subject to change, either during the session because of unforeseen circumstances, or following review of the module at the end of the session. Queries about the module should be directed to the member of staff with responsibility for the module.
Title THE PANOPTICON AND THE PEOPLE: DIGITAL APPROACHES TO THE HISTORY OF CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
Code SOCI328
Coordinator Dr Z Alker
Sociology, Social Policy and Criminology
Z.Alker@liverpool.ac.uk
Year CATS Level Semester CATS Value
Session 2019-20 Level 6 FHEQ First Semester 15

Aims

• To introduce students to social studies of crime, offending, and punishment from the eighteenth to the present.
• Encourage students to use and problematise a range of online research tools that facilitate the use of historical data to interrogate criminological theories.
• Introduce students to a range of quantitative and qualitative methodological techniques that underpin such studies including record linkage, prosopography, discourse analysis, corpus linguistics, and digital mapping (ArcGIS).


Learning Outcomes

(LO1) Ability to problematise narratives of crime and criminal justice, and view offending and punishment as products of particular social, cultural, economic and political contexts

(LO2) Be able to critically use historical evidence to answer contemporary criminological ‘What Works?’ questions and engage with criminological theory

(LO3) Employ and interrogate online criminal history datasets, and critically consider their advantages and limitations

(LO4) Practice a range of quantitative and qualitative digital methodologies and visualisation techniques including corpus linguistics, mapping, and record linkage.

(LO5) Analyse and present research for online (blog) and offline platforms (essay)

(LO6) Reflect on the ethical implications of researching and presenting historical material

(S1) Practical online research skills and evaluation of online data

(S2) Critical thinking and problem solving (critical analysis)

(S3) Communication (written and visual) - Academic writing (inc. referencing skills)

(S4) Understand and problematise narratives of crime and criminal justice, and view offending and punishment as products of particular social, cultural, economic and political contexts

(S5) Practice a range of digital methodologies and techniques

(S6) Organise and articulate ideas/arguments both in the blog, essay, and in informed contributions to discussions about the criminal justice system in the past and present

(S7) Critical thinking and problem solving (creative thinking)

(S8) Identify, summarise and comment upon different ways of approaching histories of crime, punishment, and criminal justice


Syllabus

 

• The Panopticon and the People: Introduction to the History of Crime and Punishment •    Problematising the Gaze: Using Virtual Reality to examine Theories of Imprisonment and Power • Offenders and the Life Course: Using Record Linkage and Prosopography in the Digital Age •  Unlocking the Victorian Offender: Digitisation and Criminal Lives •  The Real Artful Dodgers: Youth, Crime, and Imprisonment, 1780- Present. •  Victims or Perpetrators? Female Offending in the Past, Present and Future •  Mapping Criminal Mobilities: Peripatetic Offending in the Past and Present • Gang Crime: Gender, Violence, and Street Life in Liverpool and Manchester •  Viral Victorians: Using the 19th Century Newspapers to explore the Garrotting Panics • The Roaring Twenties to the Naughty Nineties: Moral Panics and Substance Abuse •  Conclusions: Digitisation and Crime History • Assessment Support Workshop


Teaching and Learning Strategies

Teaching Method 1 - Lecture
Description: Lectures will provide an introduction to debates in crime history and criminology, theoretical approaches, and an awareness of digital humanities and digital social science and how they can relate to critical understanding of crime, justice and punishment today.
Attendance Recorded: Not yet decided
Notes: The lectures are designed to introduce students to historical case studies, criminological theories, and digital techniques and debates and to direct students to the areas they need to go on to cover in their
seminars and independent study through reading, writing and reflection.
Unscheduled Directed Student Hours (time spent away from the timetabled sessions but directed by the teaching staff): Preparation for lectures, seminars, and assessments will all account for the 114 hours of unsupervised independent study

Teaching Method 2 - Seminar
Description: Seminars will be two hours long and take place weekly to allow for practical introductions to online research and to be able to use of the software alongside a discussion of historical and criminological approaches to offending and imprisonment.
Attendance Recorded: Yes
Notes: Seminars will take place fortnightly and each session be two hours in duration. This is to allow students to take a hands-on approach to learning and, through the utilization of online databases and open access digital software including QGis and Wordle, locate and analyse crime and punishment data through a range of innovative techniques. Alongside the practical element of seminars, students will be asked to reflect on their readings and frame their digital work with debates about digital practices, crime history and criminology.
Unscheduled Directed Student Hours (time spent away from the timetabled sessions but directed by the teaching staff): Preparation for lectures, seminars, and assessments will all account for the 114 hours of unsupervised indep endent study


Teaching Schedule

  Lectures Seminars Tutorials Lab Practicals Fieldwork Placement Other TOTAL
Study Hours 12

24

        36
Timetable (if known)              
Private Study 114
TOTAL HOURS 150

Assessment

EXAM Duration Timing
(Semester)
% of
final
mark
Resit/resubmission
opportunity
Penalty for late
submission
Notes
             
CONTINUOUS Duration Timing
(Semester)
% of
final
mark
Resit/resubmission
opportunity
Penalty for late
submission
Notes
Blog post on selected case study. There is a resit opportunity. Standard UoL penalty applies for late submission. This is not an anonymous assessment. Assessment Schedule (When) :Semester 1  2000 words    50       
Essay There is a resit opportunity. Standard UoL penalty applies for late submission. This is an anonymous assessment. Assessment Schedule (When) :Semester 1  2000 words    50       

Recommended Texts

Reading lists are managed at readinglists.liverpool.ac.uk. Click here to access the reading lists for this module.