Record ID | marc_nuls/NULS_PHC_180925.mrc:144806602:13601 |
Source | marc_nuls |
Download Link | /show-records/marc_nuls/NULS_PHC_180925.mrc:144806602:13601?format=raw |
LEADER: 13601pam 22003374a 4500
001 9921747540001661
005 20181019100004.0
008 000308s2001 at ab b 001 0 eng
010 $a 00028964
020 $a0534545149
035 $a(CSdNU)u94260-01national_inst
035 $a(Sirsi) l00028964
035 $a(Sirsi) l00028964
035 $a(Sirsi) 01-AAL-5342
035 $a 00028964
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dDLC$dOrPss
042 $apcc
043 $an-us---
050 4 $aHV6025$b.S48 2001
100 1 $aSiegel, Larry J.
245 10 $aCriminology :$btheories, patterns, and typologies /$cLarry J. Siegel.
250 $a7th ed.
260 $aAustralia ;$aBelmont, CA :$bWadsworth/Thomson Learning,$cc2001.
300 $axvi, 523 p. :$bcol. ill., col. maps. ;$c28 cm.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 $aConcepts of Crime, Law, and Criminology -- Crime and Criminology -- The Study of Criminology -- What Is Criminology? -- A Brief History of Criminology -- Classical Criminology -- Nineteenth-Century Positivism -- The Development of Sociological Criminology -- The Foundations of Sociological Criminology -- The Chicago School and Beyond -- Conflict Criminology -- Criminology Today -- Criminology and Criminal Justice -- The Distinction Between Criminology and Criminal Justice -- The Distinction Between Criminology and Deviance -- What Criminologists Do: The Criminological Enterprise -- Criminal Statistics -- Sociology of Law -- Theory Construction -- Criminal Behavior Systems -- race, culture, gender, and criminology: The Changing Face of International Crime Rates -- Penology -- Victimology -- How Criminologists View Crime -- The Consensus View of Crime -- The Conflict View of Crime -- The Interactionist View of Crime -- Defining Crime -- Criminology Research Methods -- Survey Research -- Cohort Research -- Aggregate Data Research -- Experimental Research -- Observational and Interview Research -- Ethical Issues in Criminology -- Thinking Like a Criminologist -- Criminal Law and Its Processes -- The Origin of Law -- Early Crime, Punishment, and Law in Chaos -- Origins of Common Law -- Compensation for Crime -- The Norman Conquest -- Common Law -- Policy and praotice in criminology Origin of the Jury Trial -- Common Law and Statutory Law -- Common Law and Statutory Law in America -- Common Law in Other Cultures -- Classification of Law -- Crimes and Torts -- Felonies and Misdemeanors -- Mala in Se and Mala Prohibitum -- Functions of Criminal Law -- Enforcing Social Control -- Discouraging Revenge -- Expressing Public Opinion and Morality -- Deterring Criminal Behavior -- Punishing Wrongdoing -- Maintaining Social Order -- The Legal Definition of a Crime -- Actus Reus -- Mens Rea -- Criminal Defenses -- Ignorance or Mistake -- Insanity -- Intoxication -- Duress -- Policy and practice in criminology: The Insanity Controversy -- Necessity -- Self-Defense -- Entrapment -- Exotic Defenses -- Changing Criminal Law -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- The Nature and Extent of Crime -- The Uniform Crime Report -- Collecting the Uniform Crime Report -- How Accurate Are the Uniform Crime Reports? -- The Future of the Uniform Crime Report -- Victim Surveys -- The National Crime Victimization Survey -- Is the NCVS Valid? -- Self-Report Surveys -- The Focus of Self-Reports -- Are Self-Reports Accurate? -- The "Missing Cases" -- Are Crime Statistics Sources Compatible? -- Crime Trends -- The Criminological Enterprise: Explaining Crime Trends -- Trends in Violent Crime -- Trends in Property Crime -- Trends in Self-Reports and Victimization -- What the Future Holds -- Crime Patterns -- The Ecology of Crime -- Use of Firearms -- Policy and practice in criminology: Gun Control Practices -- Social Class and Crime -- Age and Crime -- Gender and Crime -- Race and Crime -- Criminal Careers -- Delinquency in a Birth Cohort -- Implications of the Chronic Offender Concept -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- Victims and Victimization -- Problems of Crime Victims -- Loss -- Suffering -- Fear -- Antisocial Behavior -- The Nature of Victimization -- The Social Ecology of Victimization -- The Victim's Household -- Victim Characteristics -- The Victims and Their Criminals -- The Criminological Enterprise: Victims of Stalking -- Theories of Victimization -- Victim Precipitation Theory -- The Criminological Enterprise: Parents Who Get Killed and the Children Who Kill Them -- Lifestyle Theories -- Routine Activities Theory -- The Criminological Enterprise: Crime and Everyday Life -- Caring for the Victim -- The Government's Response -- Victim Service Programs -- Victims' Rights -- Self-Protection -- Community Organization -- Thinking Like a Criminologist -- Theories of Crime Causation -- Choice Theory -- The Development of Rational Choice Theory -- The Classical Theory of Crime -- Choice Theory Emerges -- The Concepts of Rational Choice -- Rational Choice and Routine Activities -- Is Crime Rational? -- Are Street Crimes Rational? -- Is Drug Use Rational? -- Can Violence Be Rational? -- The Criminological Enterprise: In the Drug Business -- The Seductions of Crime -- Eliminating Crime -- Situational Crime Prevention -- Policy and practice in criminology: Reducing Subway Crime -- General Deterrence -- Specific Deterrence -- race, culture, gender, and criminology: Deterring Domestic Violence -- Rethinking Deterrence -- Incapacitation -- Policy Implications of Choice Theory -- Just Desert -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- Trait Theories -- Foundations of Biological Trait Theory -- Impact of Sociobiology -- Modern Trait Theories -- The Criminological Enterprise: The Nature Assumption -- Biological Trait Theories -- Biochemical Conditions and Crime -- Neurophysiological Conditions and Crime -- Genetics and Crime -- Evolutionary Views of Crime -- Evaluation of the Biological Branch of Trait Theory -- Psychological Trait Theories -- Theory of Imitation -- Psychodynamic Perspective -- Behavioral Theories -- Cognitive Theory -- The Criminological Enterprise: The Media and Violence -- Crime and Mental Illness -- Personality and Crime -- The Criminological Enterprise: The Antisocial Personality -- Intelligence and Crime -- Social Policy Implications -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- Social Structure Theories -- Sociological Criminology -- Economic Structure and Crime -- Lower-Class Culture -- Are the Poor Undeserving? -- race, culture, gender, and criminology: When Work Disappears -- Social Structure Theories -- Branches of Social Structure Theory -- Social Disorganization Theory -- The Work of Shaw and McKay -- The Social Ecology School -- Strain Theories -- Anomie -- Theory of Anomie -- Institutional Anomie Theory -- Relative Deprivation Theory -- General Strain Theory (GST) -- Cultural Deviance Theory -- Conduct Norms -- Focal Concerns -- Theory of Delinquent Subcultures -- Theory of Differential Opportunity -- Evaluation of Social Structure Theories -- Is the Structural Approach Valid? -- Social Structure Theory and Social Policy -- Policy and practice in criminology: Operation Weed and Seed -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- Social Process Theories -- Socialization and Crime -- Family Relations -- Educational Experience -- Peer Relations -- Institutional Involvement and Belief -- The Effects of Socialization on Crime -- Social Learning Theories -- Differential Association Theory -- Differential Reinforcement Theory -- Neutralization Theory -- Are Learning Theories Valid? -- Social Control Theories -- Self-Concept and Crime -- Social Control Theory -- Elements of the Social Bond -- Testing Social Control Theory -- Social Reaction Theory -- Crime and Labeling Theory -- Differential Enforcement -- Becoming Labeled -- Consequences of Labeling -- Primary and Secondary Deviance -- Research on Social Reaction Theory -- Is Labeling Theory Valid? -- An Evaluation of Social Process Theory -- Social Process Theory and Social Policy -- Policy and practice in criminology: Head Start -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- Conflict Theory -- Marxist Thought -- Productive Forces and Productive Relations -- Surplus Value -- Marx on Crime -- Developing a Conflict Theory of Crime -- The Contribution of Willem Bonger -- The Contribution of Ralf Dahrendorf -- The Contribution of George Vold -- Conflict Theory -- Conflict Criminology -- Research on Conflict Theory -- Analysis of Conflict Theory -- Marxist Criminology -- The Development of a Radical Criminology -- Fundamentals of Marxist Criminology -- Instrumental Marxism -- Structual Marxism -- Research on Marxist Criminology -- The Criminological Enterprise: Marxist Theories of Crime -- Critique of Marxist Criminology -- Emerging Forms of Conflict Theory -- Left Realism -- Radical Feminist Theory -- Power-Control Theory -- Postmodern Theory -- Peacemaking Criminology -- Social Conflict Theory and Social Policy -- The Criminological Enterprise: Restorative Justice -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- Integrated Theories: Latent Trait and Developmental Theories -- Developing Complex Theories -- The Criminological Enterprise: The Crime Prism -- Latent Trait Theories -- Human Nature Theory -- General Theory of Crime -- The Criminological Enterprise: Mating Habits and Crime -- Control-Balance Theory -- Developmental Theories -- The Glueck Research -- Developmental Concepts -- Theories of Criminal Development -- race, culture, gender, and criminology: Violent Female Criminals -- The Social Development Model -- Elliott's Integrated Theory -- Farrington's Theory of Delinquent Development -- Interactional Theory -- Sampson and Laub: Age-Graded Theory -- Commonalities and Distinctions -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- Crime Typologies -- Violent Crime -- The Roots of Violence -- Personal Traits -- The Criminological Enterprise: Violent Land -- Ineffective Families -- race, culture, gender, and criminology: Mothers Who Kill Their Children -- Evolutionary Factors/Human Instinct -- Exposure to Violence -- Substance Abuse -- Firearm Availability -- Cultural Values -- Forcible Rape -- History of Rape -- Incidence of Rape -- Types of Rape/Rapists -- TheCauses of Rape -- Rape and the Law -- Murder and Homicide -- Degrees of Murder -- The Nature and Extent of Murder -- Murderous Relations -- Types of Murders -- The Criminological Enterprise: Mass Murder and Serial Killing -- Assault and Battery -- Patterns of Assault -- The Nature and Extent of Assaults -- Assault in the Home -- Robbery -- The Criminological Enterprise: Armed Robbers in Action -- Emerging Forms of Interpersonal Violence -- Hate Crimes -- Workplace Violence -- Political Violence -- Terrorism -- Forms of Terrorism -- Extent of Terrorism -- Who Is the Terrorist? -- Responses to Terrorism -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- Property Crimes -- A Brief History of Theft.
505 8 $aModern Thieves -- Occasional Criminals -- race, culture, gender, and criminology: Catching Thieves in Eighteenth-Century England -- Professional Criminals -- The Criminological Enterprise: Transforming Theft: Train Robbers and Safe Crackers -- Larceny/Theft -- Larceny Today -- Varieties of Larceny -- Shoplifting -- Bad Checks -- Credit Card Theft -- Auto Theft -- False Pretenses or Fraud -- Confidence Games -- Embezzlement -- Burglary -- The Nature and Extent of Burglary -- Careers in Burglary -- race, culture, gender, and criminology: The Female Burglar -- The Criminological Enterprise: What Motivates Juvenile Firesetters? -- Arson -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- White-Collar and Organized Crime -- White-Collar Crime -- Redefining White-Collar Crime -- The White-Collar Crime Problem -- International White-Collar Crime -- Components of White-Collar Crime -- Stings and Swindles -- Chiseling -- Individual Exploitation of Institutional Position -- Influence Peddling and Bribery -- Embezzlement and Employee Fraud -- Client Fraud -- The Criminological Enterprise: The Savings and Loan Cases -- Corporate Crime -- High-Tech Crime -- The Cause of White-Collar Crime -- Greedy or Needy? -- White-Collar Law Enforcement Systems -- Corporate Policing -- Controlling White-Collar Crime -- Organized Crime -- The Criminological Enterprise: Can Corporations Commit Murder? -- Characteristics of Organized Crime -- Activities of Organized Crime -- The Concept of Organized Crime -- Organized Crime Groups -- Controlling Organized Crime -- The Future of Organized Crime -- Thinking Like A Criminologist -- Public Order Crimes -- Law and Morality -- Debating Morality -- Homosexuality -- Attitudes Toward Homosexuality -- Homosexuality and the Law -- Paraphilias -- Prostitution -- Incidence of Prostitution -- Types of Prostitutes -- Becoming a Prostitute -- Legalize Prostitution? -- Pornography -- The Dangers of Pornography -- Does Pronography Cause Violence? -- Pornography and the Law -- Controlling Sex for Profit -- Substance Abuse -- When Did Drug Use Begin? -- Alcohol and Its Prohibition -- Commonly Abused Drugs -- The Extent of Substance Abuse -- AIDS and Drug Use -- The Causes of Substance Abuse -- Types of Drug Users -- Drugs and Crime -- Drugs and the Law -- The Criminological Enterprise: How Substance Abuse Provokes Violence -- Drug Control Strategies -- Policy and practice in oriminology: Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) -- Thinking Like A Criminologist.
650 0 $aCriminology.
650 0 $aCrime$zUnited States.
948 $a06/05/2001$b07/03/2001
999 $aHV 6025 S48 2001$wLC$c1$i31786101266317$d8/5/2013$e8/5/2013$f2/3/2004$g1$kCHECKEDOUT$lCIRCSTACKS$mNULS$n23$q1$rM$sY$tBOOK$u7/3/2001