Abstract
Review 1 of "Everyday Aesthetics, Space, and the Sensory: Fear of Crime and Affect in Inner Sydney"
Highlights
[For votes to count, referees must reasonably explain why they voted as they did
The paper’s use of these conceptual and material registers is engaging and novel, and represents some of the ways that emergent frameworks of ‘the sensory’ and ‘the affective’ in criminology might be put to work in research agendas across a range of topics and issues
There is little question, that the paper is an original, compelling, useful, unique and timely intervention into qualitative criminology, and that it suggests that the sensory and the affective might continue to penetrate other disciplinary tendencies like cultural criminology and others that are still well outside of the umbrella of criminology like risk and security studies, geography, critical ontology, etc
Summary
[For votes to count, referees must reasonably explain why they voted as they did. please explain your vote. License: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0)
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