Criminology

Criminology
- ISBN 13:
9780314045607
- ISBN 10:
0314045600
- Edition: 5th
- Format: Hardcover
- Copyright: 01/01/1995
- Publisher: Wadsworth Pub Co
- Newer Edition

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Summary
Table of Contents
Read moreConcepts of Crime, Law, and Criminology | |
Crime and Criminology | p. 2 |
Introduction | p. 3 |
The Study of Criminology | p. 4 |
What Is Criminology? | p. 4 |
A Brief History of Criminology | p. 4 |
Classical Criminology | p. 5 |
Nineteenth-Century Positivism | p. 6 |
The Development of Sociological Criminology | p. 7 |
The Foundations of Sociological Criminology | p. 7 |
The Chicago School and Beyond | p. 8 |
Conflict Criminology | p. 9 |
Criminology Today | p. 9 |
Criminology and Criminal Justice | p. 10 |
The Distinction Between Criminology and Criminal Justice | p. 10 |
The Distinction Between Criminology and Deviance | p. 10 |
What Criminologists Do: The Criminological Enterprise | p. 11 |
Criminal Statistics | p. 12 |
Sociology of Law | p. 12 |
Theory Construction | p. 12 |
Criminal Behavior Systems | p. 13 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
The Changing Face of International Crime Rates | p. 14 |
Penology | p. 14 |
Victimology | p. 15 |
How Criminologists View Crime | p. 16 |
The Consensus View of Crime | p. 17 |
The Conflict View of Crime | p. 17 |
The Interactionist View of Crime | p. 18 |
Defining Crime | p. 19 |
Criminology Research Methods | p. 20 |
Survey Research | p. 20 |
Cohort Research | p. 20 |
Aggregate Data Research | p. 21 |
Experimental Research | p. 21 |
Observational and Interview Research | p. 22 |
Ethical Issues in Criminology | p. 23 |
Summary | p. 24 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 24 |
Key Terms | p. 24 |
Notes | p. 25 |
Criminal Law and Its Processes | p. 26 |
Introduction | p. 27 |
The Origin of Law | p. 28 |
Early Crime, Punishment, and Law in Chaos | p. 29 |
Origins of Common Law | p. 30 |
Compensation for Crime | p. 30 |
The Norman Conquest | p. 30 |
Common Law | p. 31 |
Policy and practice in criminology | |
Origin of the Jury Trial | p. 32 |
Common Law and Statutory Law | p. 32 |
Common Law and Statutory Law in America | p. 33 |
Common Law in Other Cultures | p. 34 |
Classification of Law | p. 34 |
Crimes and Torts | p. 34 |
Felonies and Misdemeanors | p. 35 |
Mala in Se and Mala Prohibitum | p. 35 |
Functions of Criminal Law | p. 36 |
Enforcing Social Control | p. 36 |
Discouraging Revenge | p. 37 |
Expressing Public Opinion and Morality | p. 37 |
Deterring Criminal Behavior | p. 38 |
Punishing Wrongdoing | p. 38 |
Maintaining Social Order | p. 39 |
The Legal Definition of a Crime | p. 39 |
Actus Reus | p. 39 |
Mens Rea | p. 40 |
Criminal Defenses | p. 41 |
Ignorance or Mistake | p. 41 |
Insanity | p. 42 |
Intoxication | p. 43 |
Duress | p. 43 |
Policy and practice in criminology | |
The Insanity Controversy | p. 44 |
Necessity | p. 45 |
Self-Defense | p. 45 |
Entrapment | p. 45 |
Exotic Defenses | p. 46 |
Changing Criminal Law | p. 46 |
Summary | p. 47 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 48 |
Key Terms | p. 48 |
Notes | p. 49 |
The Nature and Extent of Crime | p. 50 |
Introduction | p. 51 |
The Uniform Crime Report | p. 51 |
Collecting the Uniform Crime Report | p. 51 |
How Accurate Are the Uniform Crime Reports? | p. 53 |
The Future of the Uniform Crime Report | p. 55 |
Self-Report Surveys | p. 55 |
The Focus of Self-Reports | p. 55 |
Are Self-Reports Accurate? | p. 56 |
The "Missing Cases" | p. 57 |
Victim Surveys | p. 57 |
The National Crime Victimization Survey | p. 58 |
Is the NCVS Valid? | p. 58 |
Are Crime Statistics Sources Compatible? | p. 58 |
Crime Trends | p. 59 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Explaining Crime Trends | p. 60 |
Trends in Violent Crime | p. 60 |
Trends in Property Crime | p. 61 |
Trends in Self-Reports and Victimization | p. 61 |
What the Future Holds | p. 62 |
Crime Patterns | p. 63 |
The Ecology of Crime | p. 63 |
Use of Firearms | p. 64 |
Policy and practice in criminology | |
Gun Control Practices | p. 66 |
Social Class and Crime | p. 67 |
Age and Crime | p. 69 |
Gender and Crime | p. 71 |
Race and Crime | p. 74 |
Criminal Careers | p. 75 |
Delinquency in a Birth Cohort | p. 76 |
Birth Cohort | p. 76 |
Stability in Crime: From Delinquent to Criminal | p. 76 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
Criminal Careers in Europe | p. 77 |
Implications of the Chronic Offender Concept | p. 78 |
Summary | p. 79 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 79 |
Key Terms | p. 79 |
Notes | p. 80 |
Victims and Victimization | p. 84 |
Introduction | p. 85 |
Problems of Crime Victims | p. 85 |
Loss | p. 85 |
Suffering | p. 86 |
Fear | p. 87 |
Antisocial Behavior | p. 87 |
The Nature of Victimization | p. 88 |
The Social Ecology of Victimization | p. 89 |
The Victim's Household | p. 90 |
Victim Characteristics | p. 90 |
The Victims and Their Criminals | p. 93 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Victims of Stalking | p. 94 |
Theories of Victimization | p. 95 |
Victim Precipitation Theory | p. 95 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Parents Who Get Killed and the Children Who Kill Them | p. 96 |
Lifestyle Theories | p. 97 |
Routine Activities Theory | p. 98 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Crime and Everyday Life | p. 100 |
Caring for the Victim | p. 101 |
The Government's Response | p. 101 |
Victim Service Programs | p. 102 |
Victims' Rights | p. 103 |
Self-Protection | p. 104 |
Community Organization | p. 105 |
Summary | p. 105 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 106 |
Key Terms | p. 107 |
Notes | p. 107 |
Theories of Crime Causation | |
Choice Theory | p. 112 |
Introduction | p. 113 |
The Development of Rational Choice Theory | p. 113 |
The Classical Theory of Crime | p. 114 |
Choice Theory Emerges | p. 114 |
The Concepts of Rational Choice | p. 115 |
Rational Choice and Routine Activities | p. 116 |
Is Crime Rational? | p. 118 |
Are Street Crimes Rational? | p. 119 |
Is Drug Use Rational? | p. 120 |
Can Violence Be Rational? | p. 120 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
In the Drug Business | p. 121 |
The Seductions of Crime | p. 122 |
Eliminating Crime | p. 123 |
Situational Crime Prevention | p. 123 |
Crime Prevention Strategies | p. 124 |
General Deterrence | p. 126 |
Policy and practice in criminology | |
Reducing Subway Crime | p. 127 |
Specific Deterrence | p. 132 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
Deterring Domestic Violence | p. 134 |
Rethinking Deterrence | p. 136 |
Incapacitation | p. 136 |
Policy Implications of Choice Theory | p. 138 |
Just Desert | p. 138 |
Summary | p. 139 |
Thinking Like a Criminologist | p. 140 |
Key Terms | p. 140 |
Notes | p. 140 |
Trait Theories | p. 146 |
Introduction | p. 147 |
Foundations of Biological Trait Theory | p. 148 |
Impact of Sociobiology | p. 149 |
Modern Trait Theories | p. 149 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
The Nature Assumption | p. 150 |
Biological Trait Theories | p. 151 |
Biochemical Conditions and Crime | p. 152 |
Neurophysiological Conditions and Crime | p. 155 |
Genetics and Crime | p. 158 |
Evolutionary Views of Crime | p. 160 |
Evaluation of the Biological Branch of Trait Theory | p. 161 |
Psychological Trait Theories | p. 162 |
Theory of Imitation | p. 162 |
Psychodynamic Perspective | p. 163 |
Behavioral Theories | p. 165 |
Cognitive Theory | p. 166 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
The Media and Violence | p. 168 |
Crime and Mental Illness | p. 170 |
Personality and Crime | p. 170 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
The Antisocial Personality | p. 172 |
Intelligence and Crime | p. 172 |
Social Policy Implications | p. 175 |
Summary | p. 177 |
Thinking Like a Criminologist | p. 177 |
Key Terms | p. 177 |
Notes | p. 178 |
Social Structure Theories | p. 184 |
Introduction | p. 185 |
Sociological Criminology | p. 185 |
Economic Structure and Crime | p. 186 |
Lower-Class Culture | p. 186 |
Are the Poor Undeserving? | p. 188 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
When Work Disappears | p. 189 |
Social Structure Theories | p. 190 |
Branches of Social Structure Theory | p. 190 |
Social Disorganization Theory | p. 191 |
The Work of Shaw and McKay | p. 191 |
The Social Ecology School | p. 194 |
Strain Theories | p. 198 |
Anomie | p. 198 |
Theory of Anomie | p. 199 |
Institutional Anomie Theory | p. 200 |
Relative Deprivation Theory | p. 202 |
General Strain Theory (GST) | p. 203 |
Cultural Deviance Theory | p. 207 |
Conduct Norms | p. 207 |
Focal Concerns | p. 207 |
Theory of Delinquent Subcultures | p. 208 |
Theory of Differential Opportunity | p. 209 |
Evaluation of Social Structure Theories | p. 211 |
Is the Structural Approach Valid? | p. 211 |
Social Structure Theory and Social Policy | p. 211 |
Policy and practice in criminology | |
Operation Weed and Seed | p. 212 |
Summary | p. 213 |
Thinking Like a Criminologist | p. 215 |
Key Terms | p. 215 |
Notes | p. 215 |
Social Process Theories | p. 220 |
Introduction | p. 221 |
Socialization and Crime | p. 222 |
Family Relations | p. 222 |
Educational Experience | p. 224 |
Peer Relations | p. 224 |
Institutional Involvement and Belief | p. 225 |
The Effects of Socialization on Crime | p. 225 |
Social Learning Theories | p. 226 |
Differential Association Theory | p. 226 |
Differential Reinforcement Theory | p. 231 |
Neutralization Theory | p. 232 |
Are Learning Theories Valid? | p. 234 |
Social Control Theories | p. 234 |
Self-Concept and Crime | p. 235 |
Social Control Theory | p. 236 |
Elements of the Social Bond | p. 236 |
Testing Social Control Theory | p. 237 |
Social Reaction Theory | p. 239 |
Crime and Labeling Theory | p. 240 |
Differential Enforcement | p. 241 |
Becoming Labeled | p. 241 |
Consequences of Labeling | p. 241 |
Primary and Secondary Deviance | p. 242 |
Research on Social Reaction Theory | p. 243 |
Is Labeling Theory Valid? | p. 244 |
An Evaluation of Social Process Theory | p. 245 |
Social Process Theory and Social Policy | p. 246 |
Policy and practice in criminology | |
Head Start | p. 247 |
Summary | p. 248 |
Thinking Like a Criminologist | p. 249 |
Key Terms | p. 249 |
Notes | p. 249 |
Conflict Theory | p. 254 |
Introduction | p. 255 |
Marxist Thought | p. 255 |
Productive Forces and Productive Relations | p. 256 |
Surplus Value | p. 257 |
Marx on Crime | p. 258 |
Developing a Conflict Theory of Crime | p. 258 |
The Contribution of Willem Bonger | p. 258 |
The Contribution of Ralf Dahrendorf | p. 259 |
The Contribution of George Vold | p. 260 |
Conflict Theory | p. 260 |
Conflict Criminology | p. 260 |
Research on Conflict Theory | p. 263 |
Analysis of Conflict Theory | p. 263 |
Marxist Criminology | p. 264 |
The Development of a Radical Criminology | p. 264 |
Fundamentals of Marxist Criminology | p. 265 |
Instrumental Marxism | p. 267 |
Structural Marxism | p. 268 |
Research on Marxist Criminology | p. 269 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Marxist Theories of Crime | p. 270 |
Critique of Marxist Criminology | p. 272 |
Emerging Forms of Conflict Theory | p. 272 |
Left Realism | p. 272 |
Radical Feminist Theory | p. 273 |
Power-Control Theory | p. 275 |
Postmodern Theory | p. 276 |
Peacemaking Criminology | p. 277 |
Social Conflict Theory and Social Policy | p. 277 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Restorative Justice | p. 278 |
Summary | p. 279 |
Thinking Like a Criminologist | p. 280 |
Key Terms | p. 280 |
p. 281 | |
Integrated Theories: Latent Trait and Developmental Theories | p. 285 |
Introduction | p. 286 |
Developing Complex Theories | p. 287 |
Latent Trait Theories | p. 287 |
Human Nature Theory | p. 288 |
General Theory of Crime | p. 289 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Mating Habits and Crime | p. 293 |
Developmental Theories | p. 294 |
The Glueck Research | p. 295 |
Developmental Concepts | p. 296 |
Theories of Criminal Development | p. 299 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
Violent Female Criminals | p. 300 |
The Social Development Model (SDM) | p. 300 |
Elliott's Integrated Theory | p. 302 |
Farrington's Theory of Delinquent Development | p. 304 |
Interactional Theory | p. 306 |
Sampson and Laub: Age-Graded Theory | p. 307 |
Commonalities and Distinctions Between Latent Trait and Developmental Theories | p. 310 |
Summary | p. 310 |
Thinking Like a Criminologist | p. 310 |
Key Terms | p. 311 |
Notes | p. 311 |
Crime Typologies | |
Violent Crime | p. 318 |
Introduction | p. 319 |
The Roots of Violence | p. 320 |
Personal Traits | p. 320 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Violent Land | p. 321 |
Ineffective Families | p. 322 |
Evolutionary Factors/Human Instinct | p. 322 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
Mothers Who Kill Their Children | p. 323 |
Exposure to Violence | p. 324 |
Cultural Values | p. 324 |
Substance Abuse | p. 325 |
Firearm Availability | p. 326 |
Forcible Rape | p. 326 |
History of Rape | p. 327 |
Incidence of Rape | p. 327 |
Types of Rape | p. 328 |
The Causes of Rape | p. 330 |
Rape and the Law | p. 331 |
Murder and Homicide | p. 332 |
Degrees of Murder | p. 333 |
The Nature and Extent of Murder | p. 334 |
Murderous Relations | p. 334 |
Types of Murders | p. 335 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Mass Murder and Serial Killing | p. 338 |
Assault and Battery | p. 339 |
Nature and Patterns of Assault | p. 339 |
Assault in the Home | p. 340 |
Robbery | p. 344 |
Emerging Forms of Interpersonal Violence | p. 345 |
Hate Crimes | p. 345 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Armed Robbers in Action | p. 346 |
Workplace Violence | p. 347 |
Political Violence | p. 349 |
Terrorism | p. 349 |
Forms of Terrorism | p. 351 |
Extent of Terrorism | p. 353 |
Who Is the Terrorist? | p. 354 |
Responses to Terrorism | p. 354 |
Summary | p. 355 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 355 |
Key Terms | p. 356 |
Notes | p. 356 |
Property Crimes | p. 362 |
Introduction | p. 363 |
A Brief History of Theft | p. 364 |
Modern Thieves | p. 364 |
Occasional Criminals | p. 364 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
Catching Thieves in Eighteenth-Century England | p. 365 |
Professional Criminals | p. 366 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Transforming Theft: Train Robbers and Safe Crackers | p. 368 |
Larceny/Theft | p. 369 |
Larceny Today | p. 370 |
Varieties of Larceny | p. 371 |
Shoplifting | p. 371 |
Bad Checks | p. 372 |
Credit Card Theft | p. 373 |
Auto Theft | p. 373 |
False Pretenses or Fraud | p. 374 |
Confidence Games | p. 375 |
Embezzlement | p. 375 |
Burglary | p. 375 |
The Nature and Extent of Burglary | p. 376 |
Careers in Burglary | p. 377 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
The Female Burglar | p. 379 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
What Motivates Juvenile Firesetters? | p. 380 |
Arson | p. 381 |
Summary | p. 381 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 382 |
Key Terms | p. 382 |
Notes | p. 382 |
White-Collar and Organized Crime | p. 384 |
Introduction | p. 385 |
White-Collar Crime | p. 386 |
Redefining White-Collar Crime | p. 386 |
The White-Collar Crime Problem | p. 387 |
International White-Collar Crime | p. 387 |
Components of White-Collar Crime | p. 388 |
Stings and Swindles | p. 388 |
Chiseling | p. 389 |
Individual Exploitation of Institutional Position | p. 391 |
Influence Peddling and Bribery | p. 391 |
Embezzlement and Employee Fraud | p. 394 |
Client Fraud | p. 394 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
The Savings and Loan Cases | p. 396 |
Corporate Crime | p. 398 |
High-Tech Crime | p. 401 |
The Cause of White-Collar Crime | p. 403 |
Greedy or Needy? | p. 403 |
White-Collar Law Enforcement Systems | p. 405 |
Corporate Policing | p. 406 |
Controlling White-Collar Crime | p. 406 |
Organized Crime | p. 409 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Can Corporations Commit Murder? | p. 410 |
Characteristics of Organized Crime | p. 411 |
Activities of Organized Crime | p. 411 |
The Concept of Organized Crime | p. 412 |
Organized Crime Groups | p. 415 |
Controlling Organized Crime | p. 416 |
The Future of Organized Crime | p. 416 |
Summary | p. 417 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 418 |
Key Terms | p. 418 |
Notes | p. 418 |
Public Order Crimes | p. 423 |
Introduction | p. 424 |
Law and Morality | p. 424 |
Debating Morality | p. 425 |
Homosexuality | p. 427 |
Attitudes Toward Homosexuality | p. 427 |
Homosexuality and the Law | p. 429 |
Paraphilias | p. 430 |
Prostitution | p. 431 |
Incidence of Prostitution | p. 432 |
Types of Prostitutes | p. 432 |
Becoming a Prostitute | p. 434 |
Legalize Prostitution? | p. 434 |
Pornography | p. 435 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Victimless Crimes: Streetwalkers in New York City | p. 436 |
The Dangers of Pornography | p. 436 |
Does Pornography Cause Violence? | p. 437 |
Pornography and the Law | p. 438 |
Controlling Sex for Profit | p. 439 |
Substance Abuse | p. 441 |
When Did Drug Use Begin? | p. 441 |
Alcohol and Its Prohibition | p. 441 |
Commonly Abused Drugs | p. 442 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Careers in Crack | p. 445 |
The Extent of Substance Abuse | p. 446 |
AIDS and Drug Use | p. 450 |
The Causes of Substance Abuse | p. 450 |
Types of Drug Users | p. 452 |
Drugs and Crime | p. 454 |
Drugs and the Law | p. 456 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
How Substance Abuse Provokes Violence | p. 457 |
Drug Control Strategies | p. 458 |
Summary | p. 463 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 464 |
Key Terms | p. 464 |
Notes | p. 464 |
The Criminal Justice System | |
Overview of the Criminal Justice System | p. 472 |
Introduction | p. 473 |
Origins of Criminal Justice | p. 473 |
Crime and Justice in the Twentieth Century | p. 474 |
Early Origins of American Justice | p. 474 |
The Modern Era of Justice | p. 474 |
What Is the Criminal Justice System? | p. 475 |
Police and Law Enforcement | p. 475 |
The Criminal Courts | p. 476 |
Corrections | p. 477 |
The Process of Justice | p. 478 |
Policy and practice in criminology | |
The Juvenile Justice System | p. 480 |
Going Through the System | p. 483 |
The "Wedding Cake" Model | p. 484 |
Criminal Justice and the Rule of Law | p. 486 |
Procedural Laws | p. 486 |
Due Process | p. 487 |
The Exclusionary Rule | p. 488 |
Concepts of Justice | p. 490 |
Crime Control Model | p. 490 |
Justice Model | p. 491 |
Due Process Model | p. 491 |
Rehabilitation Model | p. 492 |
Nonintervention Model | p. 493 |
Restorative Justice Perspective | p. 493 |
Concepts of Justice Today | p. 494 |
Summary | p. 495 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 495 |
Key Terms | p. 495 |
Notes | p. 496 |
Police and Law Enforcement | p. 498 |
Introduction | p. 499 |
History of Police | p. 500 |
The London Police | p. 500 |
Policing the American Colonies | p. 500 |
Early American Police Agencies | p. 501 |
Reform Movements | p. 501 |
The Advent of Professionalism | p. 502 |
Law Enforcement Agencies Today | p. 503 |
Federal Law Enforcement | p. 503 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
Law Enforcement in the Twenty-First Century | p. 504 |
County Law Enforcement | p. 506 |
State Police | p. 506 |
Metropolitan Police | p. 506 |
Police Functions | p. 508 |
Patrol Function | p. 508 |
Investigation Function | p. 509 |
Other Police Functions | p. 510 |
Changing the Police Role | p. 510 |
Community-Oriented Policing (COP) | p. 510 |
Problem-Oriented Policing | p. 513 |
Does Community Policing Work? | p. 514 |
Police and the Rule of Law | p. 514 |
Custodial Interrogation | p. 515 |
Search and Seizure | p. 516 |
Issues in Policing | p. 517 |
Police Personality and Subculture | p. 517 |
Discretion | p. 519 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
Does Race Influence the Police Use of Discretion? | p. 520 |
Women and Minority Police Officers | p. 522 |
The Police and Violence | p. 524 |
The Criminological Enterprise | |
In the Line of Fire: Shootings of Police | p. 527 |
Summary | p. 528 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 528 |
Key Terms | p. 529 |
Notes | p. 529 |
The Judicatory Process | p. 534 |
Introduction | p. 535 |
Court Structure | p. 537 |
State Courts | p. 537 |
Federal Courts | p. 537 |
Actors in the Judicatory Process | p. 540 |
Prosecutor | p. 540 |
Defense Attorney | p. 543 |
Judge | p. 544 |
Pretrial Procedures | p. 545 |
Bail | p. 545 |
Plea Bargaining | p. 549 |
The Criminal Trial | p. 550 |
Jury Selection | p. 551 |
The Trial Process | p. 552 |
Trials and the Rule of Law | p. 554 |
Sentencing | p. 555 |
Purposes of Sentencing | p. 556 |
Sentencing Dispositions | p. 556 |
Sentencing Structures | p. 557 |
How People Are Sentenced | p. 561 |
The Death Penalty | p. 563 |
The Death Penalty Debate | p. 563 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
Race and Sentencing | p. 564 |
Race, culture, gender, and criminology | |
The International Use of the Death Penalty | p. 566 |
Legality of the Death Penalty | p. 568 |
Summary | p. 568 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 569 |
Key Terms | p. 569 |
Notes | p. 569 |
Corrections | p. 573 |
Introduction | p. 574 |
History of Punishment and Corrections | p. 575 |
The Middle Ages | p. 575 |
Punishment in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries | p. 576 |
Corrections in the Late Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries | p. 576 |
Corrections in the Twentieth Century | p. 578 |
The Modern Era | p. 579 |
Probation | p. 580 |
Probationary Sentences | p. 580 |
Probation Organizations | p. 580 |
Probation Services | p. 581 |
Probation Rules and Revocation | p. 581 |
Success of Probation | p. 582 |
Intermediate Sanctions | p. 582 |
Fines | p. 583 |
Forfeiture | p. 583 |
Policy and practice in criminology | |
The Risk of Probation Failure | p. 584 |
Restitution | p. 585 |
Shock Probation and Split Sentencing | p. 585 |
Intensive Probation Supervision | p. 585 |
Home Confinement/Electronic Monitoring | p. 586 |
Residential Community Corrections | p. 588 |
Boot Camps/Shock Incarceration | p. 588 |
Can Alternatives Work? | p. 589 |
Jails | p. 589 |
Jail Populations | p. 590 |
Jail Conditions | p. 590 |
Prisons | p. 591 |
Types of Institutions | p. 591 |
Policy and practice in criminology | |
Ultra-Maximum-Security Prisons | p. 592 |
Prisoners in the United States | p. 594 |
Profile of Prison Inmates | p. 596 |
Prison Life: Males | p. 597 |
Prison Life: Females | p. 599 |
Correctional Treatment | p. 600 |
Prison Violence | p. 602 |
Corrections and the Rule of Law | p. 603 |
Parole | p. 604 |
The Parolee in the Community | p. 604 |
How Effective Is Parole? | p. 605 |
Summary | p. 605 |
Thinking Like A Criminologist | p. 606 |
Key Terms | p. 606 |
Notes | p. 606 |
Glossary | p. 611 |
Table of Cases | p. 629 |
Name Index | p. 630 |
Subject Index | p. 646 |
Photo Credits | p. 664 |
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