Whether criminologists position themselves in the left or right of the field, the reality common to their work involves a reconsideration of virtually all of our past theoretical journeys in criminology. This book captures the range of criminological thinking today, and provides a picture of a dynamic discipline in transition. Chapters consider contemporary theoretical development and discussion, focusing on street crime, youth and identity, and crime and social control in relation to questions of gender, class, race, learning, and culture. While there is disagreement among the authors about…mehr
Whether criminologists position themselves in the left or right of the field, the reality common to their work involves a reconsideration of virtually all of our past theoretical journeys in criminology. This book captures the range of criminological thinking today, and provides a picture of a dynamic discipline in transition. Chapters consider contemporary theoretical development and discussion, focusing on street crime, youth and identity, and crime and social control in relation to questions of gender, class, race, learning, and culture. While there is disagreement among the authors about whether criminologists are developing new theory or circulating old theory, their contributions in this reader demonstrate the emerging plurality in criminological discourse, revealing continuities and discontinuities between old and new.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
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Autorenporträt
GREGG BARAK is Professor and Head of the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology at Eastern Michigan University. He is the author of many scholarly articles and books, including Gimme Shelter: A Social History of Homelessness in Contemporary America (Praeger, 1991).
Inhaltsangabe
Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: Criminological Theory in the "Postmodernist" Era by Gregg Barak Mainstream Criminology Biological and Neuropsychiatric Approaches to Criminal Behavior by C. Ray Jeffery Crime and Psychology of Mind: A Neo-Cognitive View of Delinquency by Thomas Kelley Human Ecology and Social Disorganization Revisit Little Rock by Jeffery T. Walker Strain, Relative Deprivation, and Middle-Class Delinquency by Velmer S. Burton, Jr. and R. Gregory Dunaway Social Control, Family Structure, and Delinquency by Joseph H. Rankin and L. Edward Wells The Collective Reality of Crime: An Integrative Approach to the Causes and Consequences of the Criminal Event by Frank Schmalleger and Ted Alleman A Neofunctionalist Model of Crime and Crime Control by Thomas O'Connor Critical Criminology Confronting the Agenda of Authority: Critical Criminology, Anarchism, and Urban Graffiti by Jeff Ferrell Young People, Culture, and the Construction of Crime: Doing Wrong versus Doing Crime by Mike Presdee Crime, Excitement, and Modernity by Pat O'Malley and Stephen Mugford Gender and Justice: Feminist Contributions to Criminology by Susan Caulfield and Nancy Wonders Law, Ideology, and Subjectivity: A Semiotic Perspective on Crime and Justice by Dragan Milovanovic Crime, Criminology, and Human Rights: Toward an Understanding of State Criminality by Gregg Barak References Index
Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: Criminological Theory in the "Postmodernist" Era by Gregg Barak Mainstream Criminology Biological and Neuropsychiatric Approaches to Criminal Behavior by C. Ray Jeffery Crime and Psychology of Mind: A Neo-Cognitive View of Delinquency by Thomas Kelley Human Ecology and Social Disorganization Revisit Little Rock by Jeffery T. Walker Strain, Relative Deprivation, and Middle-Class Delinquency by Velmer S. Burton, Jr. and R. Gregory Dunaway Social Control, Family Structure, and Delinquency by Joseph H. Rankin and L. Edward Wells The Collective Reality of Crime: An Integrative Approach to the Causes and Consequences of the Criminal Event by Frank Schmalleger and Ted Alleman A Neofunctionalist Model of Crime and Crime Control by Thomas O'Connor Critical Criminology Confronting the Agenda of Authority: Critical Criminology, Anarchism, and Urban Graffiti by Jeff Ferrell Young People, Culture, and the Construction of Crime: Doing Wrong versus Doing Crime by Mike Presdee Crime, Excitement, and Modernity by Pat O'Malley and Stephen Mugford Gender and Justice: Feminist Contributions to Criminology by Susan Caulfield and Nancy Wonders Law, Ideology, and Subjectivity: A Semiotic Perspective on Crime and Justice by Dragan Milovanovic Crime, Criminology, and Human Rights: Toward an Understanding of State Criminality by Gregg Barak References Index
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