The steady growth of historical criminology as a field of research in the past decade is a promising development in the social sciences, and one which has the potential to significantly strengthen the relationship between criminologists and historians and reinvigorate the historical study of crime in the 21st century
The author reviews Thorns and Thistles: Juvenile Delinquents in the United States, 1825-1940
You’re Nicked utilises a well-chosen range of case studies to examine historical trends in the devel...
This article makes the case for greater use of systematic archival research as a methodological tool...
Recent years have seen increasing interest in, and scholarly discussion of, historical criminology. ...
The relationship between history and social science generally, as well as history and criminology sp...
A review of Narrative Criminology: Understanding Stories of Crime, edited by Lois Presser and Sveinu...
In this engaging and accessible book, Richard Ashby Wilson addresses key questions related to the le...
Roger Matthews’ Realist Criminology offers a timely, provocative and essential call to arms for scho...
Russell Hogg reviews Stuart Hall, Conjunctural Analysis and Cultural Criminology – A Missed Moment b...
A book review of "The Crime of All Crimes: Towards a Criminology of Genocide" (Rafter, 2016
If this book has any weakness at all, it is that it straddles two quite distinctive research styles ...
Lindsay Farmer, Making the Modern Criminal Law: Criminalization and Civil Order Oxford: Oxford Unive...
First paragraph: Traces of the past are found in the present, in the continued (re)construction of i...
A Transatlantic History of the Social Sciences helps us better understand how and in what way the so...
At the 1963 California State Bar Convention, Chief Justice Phil S. Gibson, in the course of an addre...
The author reviews Thorns and Thistles: Juvenile Delinquents in the United States, 1825-1940
You’re Nicked utilises a well-chosen range of case studies to examine historical trends in the devel...
This article makes the case for greater use of systematic archival research as a methodological tool...
Recent years have seen increasing interest in, and scholarly discussion of, historical criminology. ...
The relationship between history and social science generally, as well as history and criminology sp...
A review of Narrative Criminology: Understanding Stories of Crime, edited by Lois Presser and Sveinu...
In this engaging and accessible book, Richard Ashby Wilson addresses key questions related to the le...
Roger Matthews’ Realist Criminology offers a timely, provocative and essential call to arms for scho...
Russell Hogg reviews Stuart Hall, Conjunctural Analysis and Cultural Criminology – A Missed Moment b...
A book review of "The Crime of All Crimes: Towards a Criminology of Genocide" (Rafter, 2016
If this book has any weakness at all, it is that it straddles two quite distinctive research styles ...
Lindsay Farmer, Making the Modern Criminal Law: Criminalization and Civil Order Oxford: Oxford Unive...
First paragraph: Traces of the past are found in the present, in the continued (re)construction of i...
A Transatlantic History of the Social Sciences helps us better understand how and in what way the so...
At the 1963 California State Bar Convention, Chief Justice Phil S. Gibson, in the course of an addre...
The author reviews Thorns and Thistles: Juvenile Delinquents in the United States, 1825-1940
You’re Nicked utilises a well-chosen range of case studies to examine historical trends in the devel...
This article makes the case for greater use of systematic archival research as a methodological tool...