’The critical humanism of C. Wright Mills is only rarely encountered in criminology, which remains a field of study characterized by an undeveloped imagination. For anyone who wants to see how enriching Mills' intuitions can be to criminology, this is an essential book. From now on, when administrative or realist colleagues ask the trite, prosaic question what are the policy implications of your theory?, we are allowed to retort what are the theoretical implications of your policy?’ Vincenzo Ruggiero, Middlesex University, UK ’To build a creative and critical criminology for the twenty-first century will require a major effort of innovative, critical and even speculative scholarship. Drawing on C. Wright Mills’ vision of the sociological imagination, this book provides both a vital stimulus and key pointers - new ways of thinking summed up in the idea of the criminological imagination - towards how such an enterprise can be brought into being.’ Pat O’Malley, University of Sydney, Australia