PART I: CRIME, CRIMINOLOGY, AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Thomas J. Bernard
1. Twenty Years of Testing Theories: What Have We Learned and Why?
Ineke Haen Marshall
2. The Criminological Enterprise in Europe and the United States
Thomas J. Bernard & Robin Shepard Engel
3. Conceptualizing Criminal Justice Theory
PART II: BIOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORIES OF CRIME
Diana H. Fishbein
4. Biological Perspectives in Criminology
Augustine Brannigan
5. Criminology and The Holocaust: Xenophobia, Evolution, and Genocide
PART III: SOCIAL STRUCTURAL THEORIES OF CRIME
Clifford R. Shaw & Henry D. McKay
6. Delinquency Rates and Community Characteristics
Dina R. Rose & Todd R. Clear
7. Incarceration, Social Capital, and Crime: Implications for Social Disorganization Theory
Marvin E. Wolfgang & Franco Ferracuti
8. The Subculture of Violence
Robert K. Merton
9. Social Structure and Anomie
Steven F. Messner & Richard Rosenfeld
10. Crime and the American Dream
Robert Agnew
11. Foundation for a General Strain Theory of Crime and Delinquency
PART IV: SOCIAL PROCESS THEORIES OF CRIME
Edwin H. Sutherland
12. A Sociological Theory of Criminal Behavior
Ronald L. Akers
13. A Social Learning Theory of Crime
Gresham M. Sykes and David Matza
14. Techniques of Neutralization: A Theory of Delinquency
John Hagan, John Simpson, & A. R. Gillis
15. Class in the Household: A Power-Control Theory of Gender and Delinquency
John Braithwaite
16. Charles Tittle's Control Balance and Criminological Theory
Charles R. Tittle
17.Thoughts Stimulated by Braithwaite's Analysis of Control Balance Theory
John Curra
18. The Dynamic Nature of Deviance
Leslie Margolin
19. Deviance on the Record: Techniques for Labeling Child Abusers in Official Documents
Carter Hay
20. Parental Sanctions and Delinquent Behavior: Toward Clarification of Braithwaite's Theory of Reintegration
Edwin H. Sutherland
21. Is "White Collar Crime" Crime?
Michael R. Gottfredson & Travis Hirschi
22. The Nature of Criminality: Low-Self Control
Gary E. Reed & Peter Cleary Yeager
23. Organizational Offending and Neoclassical Criminology: Challenging the Reach of a General Theory of Crime
PART V. CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES IN CRIME AND CRIMINOLOGY
Ian Taylor, Paul Walton, & Jock Young
24. Marx, Engels, and Bonger on Crime and Social Control
Stuart Henry & Dragan Milovanovic
25. Constitutive Criminology: The Maturation of Critical Theory
Bruce A. Arrigo and Thomas J. Bernard
26. Postmodern Criminology in Relation to Radical and Conflict Criminology
David Shichor
27. "Three Strikes" as Public Policy: The Convergence of the New Penology and the McDonaldization of Punishment
Kathleen Daly and Meda Chesney-Lind
28. Feminism and Criminology
Kathleen Daly
29. Different Ways of Conceptualizing Sex/Gender in Feminist Theory and Their Implications for Criminology
PART VI: INTEGRATED THEORIES AND UNIQUE APPROACHES
Derek B. Cornish and Ronald V. Clarke
30. Crime as a Rational Choice
Marcus Felson
31. Routine Activities and Crime Prevention in the Developing Metropolis
Terrie E. Moffitt
32. Adolescent-Limited and Life Course Persistent Anti-Social Behavior
Rolf Loeber and Magda Stouthamer-Loeber
33. The Development of Offending
Delbert S. Elliott, Suzanne S. Ageton, & Rachelle J. Canter
34. Integrated Theoretical Perspective on Delinquent Behavior
Terence P. Thornberry
35. Toward an Interactional Theory of Delinquency
Anthony Walsh
36. Behavior Genetics and Anomie/Strain Theory
Selected References
Index
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