Appearance Bias and Crime
Herausgeber: Berry, Bonnie
Appearance Bias and Crime
Herausgeber: Berry, Bonnie
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Offers an entirely new way of examining crime, criminal victimization, and crime control, through the lens of appearance bias.
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Offers an entirely new way of examining crime, criminal victimization, and crime control, through the lens of appearance bias.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. April 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 662g
- ISBN-13: 9781108422314
- ISBN-10: 1108422314
- Artikelnr.: 54802849
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. April 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 662g
- ISBN-13: 9781108422314
- ISBN-10: 1108422314
- Artikelnr.: 54802849
Part I. Unattractiveness, Criminality, and Victimization: 1. Appearance and
delinquency Robert Agnew; 2. 'Ugly' criminals and 'ugly' victims: a
quantitative analysis of add health data Brent Teasdale and Bonnie Berry;
Part II. Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality as Targeted Identities: 3. Racial
profiling and reconciliation: the quest for indigenous justice in Canada
Terry Wotherspoon and John Hansen; 4. Black Lives Matter: the watchdog for
the criminal justice system Lorenzo M. Boyd and Kimberly Conway Dumpson; 5.
An absence of appearance identifiers: misguided moral crusades in
anti-human trafficking Billy James Ulibarrí; Part III. The Process of
Social Control as Influenced by Appearance: 6. Becoming and being a woman
prisoner: does appearance matter? Brenda Chaney; 7. The impact of victim
attractiveness on victim blameworthiness and defendant guilt determinations
in cases of domestic and sexual assault Jennifer Wareham, Bonnie Berry,
Brenda Sims Blackwell and Denise Paquette Boots; 8. Do attractive women
'get away' with traffic violations? An observational study of police
responses to traffic stops Brent Teasdale, Taylor Gann and Dean Dabney; 9.
The police 'presence': public service versus intimidation Stephen A.
Bishopp; Part IV. Identifying Terrorists, Mistakenly or Not, by Appearance:
10. Dressed to kill: jihadi appearance and its significance in Austria and
beyond Daniela Pisoiu; 11. Charisma, prisoner radicalization, and
terrorism: the role of appearance Mark S. Hamm; Part VI. Very Visible
Differences: Orientation, Disability, Freaks, and Clowns and their
Relationship to Crime and Victimization: 12. Queer looking: appearance and
LGBTQ citizens' victimization and interactions with the criminal justice
system Elicka Peterson Sparks and Ian Skinner; 13. Visible disabilities and
risk of interpersonal victimization Heidi L. Scherer and Bradford W. Reyns;
14. Remarkably unique human appearances: scary clowns and freaks Bonnie
Berry; 15. Appearance criminology: a new approach toward equitable
treatment Bonnie Berry; Index.
delinquency Robert Agnew; 2. 'Ugly' criminals and 'ugly' victims: a
quantitative analysis of add health data Brent Teasdale and Bonnie Berry;
Part II. Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality as Targeted Identities: 3. Racial
profiling and reconciliation: the quest for indigenous justice in Canada
Terry Wotherspoon and John Hansen; 4. Black Lives Matter: the watchdog for
the criminal justice system Lorenzo M. Boyd and Kimberly Conway Dumpson; 5.
An absence of appearance identifiers: misguided moral crusades in
anti-human trafficking Billy James Ulibarrí; Part III. The Process of
Social Control as Influenced by Appearance: 6. Becoming and being a woman
prisoner: does appearance matter? Brenda Chaney; 7. The impact of victim
attractiveness on victim blameworthiness and defendant guilt determinations
in cases of domestic and sexual assault Jennifer Wareham, Bonnie Berry,
Brenda Sims Blackwell and Denise Paquette Boots; 8. Do attractive women
'get away' with traffic violations? An observational study of police
responses to traffic stops Brent Teasdale, Taylor Gann and Dean Dabney; 9.
The police 'presence': public service versus intimidation Stephen A.
Bishopp; Part IV. Identifying Terrorists, Mistakenly or Not, by Appearance:
10. Dressed to kill: jihadi appearance and its significance in Austria and
beyond Daniela Pisoiu; 11. Charisma, prisoner radicalization, and
terrorism: the role of appearance Mark S. Hamm; Part VI. Very Visible
Differences: Orientation, Disability, Freaks, and Clowns and their
Relationship to Crime and Victimization: 12. Queer looking: appearance and
LGBTQ citizens' victimization and interactions with the criminal justice
system Elicka Peterson Sparks and Ian Skinner; 13. Visible disabilities and
risk of interpersonal victimization Heidi L. Scherer and Bradford W. Reyns;
14. Remarkably unique human appearances: scary clowns and freaks Bonnie
Berry; 15. Appearance criminology: a new approach toward equitable
treatment Bonnie Berry; Index.
Part I. Unattractiveness, Criminality, and Victimization: 1. Appearance and
delinquency Robert Agnew; 2. 'Ugly' criminals and 'ugly' victims: a
quantitative analysis of add health data Brent Teasdale and Bonnie Berry;
Part II. Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality as Targeted Identities: 3. Racial
profiling and reconciliation: the quest for indigenous justice in Canada
Terry Wotherspoon and John Hansen; 4. Black Lives Matter: the watchdog for
the criminal justice system Lorenzo M. Boyd and Kimberly Conway Dumpson; 5.
An absence of appearance identifiers: misguided moral crusades in
anti-human trafficking Billy James Ulibarrí; Part III. The Process of
Social Control as Influenced by Appearance: 6. Becoming and being a woman
prisoner: does appearance matter? Brenda Chaney; 7. The impact of victim
attractiveness on victim blameworthiness and defendant guilt determinations
in cases of domestic and sexual assault Jennifer Wareham, Bonnie Berry,
Brenda Sims Blackwell and Denise Paquette Boots; 8. Do attractive women
'get away' with traffic violations? An observational study of police
responses to traffic stops Brent Teasdale, Taylor Gann and Dean Dabney; 9.
The police 'presence': public service versus intimidation Stephen A.
Bishopp; Part IV. Identifying Terrorists, Mistakenly or Not, by Appearance:
10. Dressed to kill: jihadi appearance and its significance in Austria and
beyond Daniela Pisoiu; 11. Charisma, prisoner radicalization, and
terrorism: the role of appearance Mark S. Hamm; Part VI. Very Visible
Differences: Orientation, Disability, Freaks, and Clowns and their
Relationship to Crime and Victimization: 12. Queer looking: appearance and
LGBTQ citizens' victimization and interactions with the criminal justice
system Elicka Peterson Sparks and Ian Skinner; 13. Visible disabilities and
risk of interpersonal victimization Heidi L. Scherer and Bradford W. Reyns;
14. Remarkably unique human appearances: scary clowns and freaks Bonnie
Berry; 15. Appearance criminology: a new approach toward equitable
treatment Bonnie Berry; Index.
delinquency Robert Agnew; 2. 'Ugly' criminals and 'ugly' victims: a
quantitative analysis of add health data Brent Teasdale and Bonnie Berry;
Part II. Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality as Targeted Identities: 3. Racial
profiling and reconciliation: the quest for indigenous justice in Canada
Terry Wotherspoon and John Hansen; 4. Black Lives Matter: the watchdog for
the criminal justice system Lorenzo M. Boyd and Kimberly Conway Dumpson; 5.
An absence of appearance identifiers: misguided moral crusades in
anti-human trafficking Billy James Ulibarrí; Part III. The Process of
Social Control as Influenced by Appearance: 6. Becoming and being a woman
prisoner: does appearance matter? Brenda Chaney; 7. The impact of victim
attractiveness on victim blameworthiness and defendant guilt determinations
in cases of domestic and sexual assault Jennifer Wareham, Bonnie Berry,
Brenda Sims Blackwell and Denise Paquette Boots; 8. Do attractive women
'get away' with traffic violations? An observational study of police
responses to traffic stops Brent Teasdale, Taylor Gann and Dean Dabney; 9.
The police 'presence': public service versus intimidation Stephen A.
Bishopp; Part IV. Identifying Terrorists, Mistakenly or Not, by Appearance:
10. Dressed to kill: jihadi appearance and its significance in Austria and
beyond Daniela Pisoiu; 11. Charisma, prisoner radicalization, and
terrorism: the role of appearance Mark S. Hamm; Part VI. Very Visible
Differences: Orientation, Disability, Freaks, and Clowns and their
Relationship to Crime and Victimization: 12. Queer looking: appearance and
LGBTQ citizens' victimization and interactions with the criminal justice
system Elicka Peterson Sparks and Ian Skinner; 13. Visible disabilities and
risk of interpersonal victimization Heidi L. Scherer and Bradford W. Reyns;
14. Remarkably unique human appearances: scary clowns and freaks Bonnie
Berry; 15. Appearance criminology: a new approach toward equitable
treatment Bonnie Berry; Index.