For the most part, the theoretical practice of traditional (i.e., modernist) criminology relies on causal and structural formulations to describe and explain the existence of crime. Ultimately, these practices focus on individual-level factors and/or socio-economic conditions to situate and validate any subsequent claim
A postmodern orientation, with its epicenter in France in the late 1960s and 1970s, was to develop a...
This survey intends to critically inform the reader about new and further developments of criminolog...
Crime, Deviance and Society: An Introduction to Sociological Criminology offers a comprehensive intr...
The way we think about crime and the way that society responds to it are imbued with values that can...
Defining the concept of crime is the starting point in the criminal thought. Basically, any view ta...
By the 1980s, theoretical work had more widely acknowledged that the social world was highly fragmen...
Since the 1970s, the field of criminology has produced numerous philosophies, theories, and research...
Cultural criminology which emerged in the 1990s, based on new criminology of Taylor, Walton, Young, ...
A fresh and original approach to the study of theories of criminology Criminologists can benefit fro...
In this contribution, Hirschi’s widely influential social bond theory is criticized on logical and t...
The purpose of this journal is to create a conversation within the social sciences that may also inc...
The concept of critical criminology – that crime and the present day processes of criminalization ar...
Cultural criminology is of importance because it captures the phenomenology of crime – its adrenalin...
Crime is a subject of perennial interest, and in recent years it has once again become a topic of ma...
Crime, Deviance and Society: An Introduction to Sociological Criminology offers a comprehensive intr...
A postmodern orientation, with its epicenter in France in the late 1960s and 1970s, was to develop a...
This survey intends to critically inform the reader about new and further developments of criminolog...
Crime, Deviance and Society: An Introduction to Sociological Criminology offers a comprehensive intr...
The way we think about crime and the way that society responds to it are imbued with values that can...
Defining the concept of crime is the starting point in the criminal thought. Basically, any view ta...
By the 1980s, theoretical work had more widely acknowledged that the social world was highly fragmen...
Since the 1970s, the field of criminology has produced numerous philosophies, theories, and research...
Cultural criminology which emerged in the 1990s, based on new criminology of Taylor, Walton, Young, ...
A fresh and original approach to the study of theories of criminology Criminologists can benefit fro...
In this contribution, Hirschi’s widely influential social bond theory is criticized on logical and t...
The purpose of this journal is to create a conversation within the social sciences that may also inc...
The concept of critical criminology – that crime and the present day processes of criminalization ar...
Cultural criminology is of importance because it captures the phenomenology of crime – its adrenalin...
Crime is a subject of perennial interest, and in recent years it has once again become a topic of ma...
Crime, Deviance and Society: An Introduction to Sociological Criminology offers a comprehensive intr...
A postmodern orientation, with its epicenter in France in the late 1960s and 1970s, was to develop a...
This survey intends to critically inform the reader about new and further developments of criminolog...
Crime, Deviance and Society: An Introduction to Sociological Criminology offers a comprehensive intr...