Search Books
Understanding Labor and Emp… Sport: Law and Practice: Th…

Taking Stock: The Status of Criminological Theory (Advances in Criminological Theory)

Author Cullen, Francis T.
Publisher Transaction Publishers
Category Law
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
42.68 52.95 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸

✓ In Stock.

Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN1412808561
ISBN-139781412808569
AvailabilityIn Stock.
Sales Rank1,132,664
CategoryLaw
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Criminology is in a period of much theoretical ferment. Older theories have been revitalized, and newer theories have been set forth. The very richness of our thinking about crime, however, leads to questions about the relative merits of these competing paradigms. Accordingly, in this volume advocates of prominent theories are asked to "take stock" of their perspectives. Their challenge is to assess the empirical status of their theory and to map out future directions for theoretical development.

The volume begins with an assessment of three perspectives that have long been at the core of criminology: social learning theory, control theory, and strain theory. Drawing on these traditions, two major contemporary macro-level theories of crime have emerged and are here reviewed: institutional-anomie theory and collective efficacy theory. Critical criminology has yielded diverse contributions discussed in essays on feminist theories, radical criminology, peacemaking criminology, and the effects of racial segregation. The volume includes chapters examining Moffitt's insights on life-course persistent/adolescent-limited anti-social behavior and Sampson and Laub's life-course theory of crime. In addition, David Farrington provides a comprehensive assessment of the adequacy of the leading developmental and life-course theories of crime.

Finally, Taking Stock presents essays that review the status of perspectives that have direct implications for the use of criminological knowledge to control crime. Taken together, these chapters provide a comprehensive update of the field's leading theories of crime. The volume will be of interest to criminological scholars and will be ideal for classroom use in courses reviewing contemporary theories of criminal behavior.

Similar Products

Logical Form and Language
View
Covert Policing: Law and Practice
View
Legal Research and Citation: Research Process Exercise…
View
Disputing Doctors
View
Wolf and Stanley on Environmental Law
View
A Vision of American Law: Judging Law, Literature, and…
View
Property and Justice
View
Wretched Sisters (Studies in Crime and Punishment)
View
Invisible Acts of Power: Channeling Grace in Your Ever…
View