1 Introduction, The editors
2 In search of the state and crime in state crime studies, Raymond Michalowski (Northern Arizona University)
3 Toward a criminology of Empire: centrality of the Empire concept in the study of state violence, Peter Iadicola (Indiana University - Purdue University, Indiana)
4 Obligatory sacrifice and Imperial projects, Frank Pearce (Queen's University, Kingston and Ontario, Canada)
5 Towards a prospective criminology of state crime, David O. Friedrichs (University of Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA)
6 Modern institutionalized torture, Martha K. Huggins (Tulane University)
7 Privatizing international conflict: war as corporate crime, Vincenzo Ruggiero (Middlesex University, UK)
8 From Guernica to Hiroshima to Baghdad: the normalization of the state crime of terror bombing civilians, Ronald C. Kramer (Western Michigan University)
9 A fake law: the 'state of exception' and lex mercatoria in occupied Iraq, David Whyte (University of Liverpool)
10 Dragon rising: China's foreign aid policy as a counter force against the criminogenic conditions of international finance institution policies?, Dawn L. Rothe (Old Dominion University)
11 Framing innocents: the wrongly convicted as victims of state harm, Saundra D. Westervelt (University of North Carolina Greensboro) and Kimberly J. Cook (University of North Carolina-Wilmington)
12 Prosecutorial misconduct as state organized crime?, Lauren N. Lang
13 Harm reduction drug programs and state crime, Jonathan William Anderson, Tanya Whittle and William J. Chambliss (George Washington University)
14 Transitional justice as global industry, Elizabeth Stanley (Victoria University of Wellington, new Zealand)
15 The reason of state: theoretical inquiries and consequences for the criminology of state crime, Athanasios Chouliaras (Attorney at Law, Greece)
16 Epilogue: for a public criminology of state crime, The editors
References