Preface |
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xiii | |
Acknowledgments |
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xvii | |
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PART I. INTRODUCTION: A UNIFYING ANALYSIS OF CRIME AND CRIME CONTROL |
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1 | (154) |
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Criminology and Criminal Justice: An Integrated Perspective |
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3 | (26) |
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Globalization, Criminology and Criminal Justice: Crisis, Integration, and Legitimation |
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6 | (8) |
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Globalization and the Criminological Crisis |
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7 | (2) |
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Globalization and Criminal Justice Policy |
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9 | (3) |
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Reflexive Modernization and the Demystification of Criminology |
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12 | (2) |
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Integrated Criminology as a Prelude of Things to Come |
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14 | (9) |
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A Concise History of Criminological Integration |
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14 | (2) |
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Pathways for Doing Integrated Criminology |
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16 | (1) |
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Developmental Criminology |
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17 | (2) |
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19 | (1) |
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20 | (3) |
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Summary and Conclusion: Integrated Approaches to Criminology |
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23 | (2) |
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25 | (4) |
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Official and Unofficial Crimes: A Domestic (U.S.) Perspective |
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29 | (36) |
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Criminology and the Politics of Defining Crime |
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29 | (3) |
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32 | (2) |
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Official Crimes in the United States |
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34 | (19) |
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36 | (8) |
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44 | (5) |
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49 | (4) |
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Unofficial Crimes in the United States |
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53 | (4) |
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Summary and Conclusion: A Power Typology of Crime and Violence |
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57 | (4) |
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61 | (4) |
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Official and Unofficial Crimes: A Global Perspective |
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65 | (28) |
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Beyond the Nation-State Crimes |
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67 | (7) |
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An Early Snapshot of Extraordinary Transnational Crime |
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68 | (1) |
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Nationally and Internationally Prosecuted Crimes |
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69 | (1) |
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Nationally Prosecuted Transnational Crimes |
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69 | (2) |
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Internationally Prosecuted Crimes |
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71 | (3) |
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Official Transnational Crime |
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74 | (5) |
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Unofficial Transnational Crime |
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79 | (9) |
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81 | (1) |
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82 | (3) |
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85 | (3) |
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Summary and Conclusion: A Crime by Any Other Name |
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88 | (1) |
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89 | (4) |
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Crime Control, Risk Management, and Surveillance: Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement |
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93 | (28) |
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Criminal Justice Theorizing |
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94 | (3) |
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Risk Management at the Front End of Crime Control |
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97 | (3) |
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Situational Crime Prevention |
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98 | (1) |
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98 | (1) |
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99 | (1) |
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Technological Surveillance |
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100 | (3) |
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101 | (1) |
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101 | (1) |
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Closed Circuit Television |
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101 | (1) |
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102 | (1) |
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102 | (1) |
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102 | (1) |
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102 | (1) |
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Changing Law Enforcement Post-9/11 |
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103 | (6) |
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103 | (1) |
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104 | (5) |
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The Blurring of Warfare and Law Enforcement |
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109 | (7) |
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110 | (2) |
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Professionalizing the Police |
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112 | (4) |
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Summary and Conclusion: On the Dialectics of Crime and Crime Control |
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116 | (1) |
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117 | (4) |
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Crime Control, Dangerousness, and the Penal-Industrial Complex: Punishment and Sentencing |
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121 | (34) |
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A Historical Perspective on Punishment |
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122 | (9) |
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Rationalizing Criminal Punishment |
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124 | (3) |
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Theories of Criminal Punishment |
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127 | (4) |
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Marginally Dangerous Offenders |
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131 | (9) |
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Trend Data on Convicted Felons and Sentencing |
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133 | (3) |
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A Profile of Incarcerated Dangerous Offenders |
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136 | (4) |
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Risk Management, Predicting Dangerousness, and Sentencing Disparities |
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140 | (3) |
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Crime Control and the Penal-Industrial Complex |
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143 | (5) |
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145 | (3) |
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Summary and Conclusion: From Correctional Discipline to Penal Incarceration |
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148 | (2) |
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150 | (5) |
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PART II. STRANDS OF CRIMINOLOGICAL THOUGHT: EXPLAINING CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR AND CRIME |
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155 | (130) |
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On the Foundations of Criminological Inquiry: Contributions in Time and Space |
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157 | (22) |
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Traditional Histories: Social Thought and Revolutionary Idealism |
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158 | (2) |
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Revisionist Histories: On the Order of Things |
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160 | (3) |
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A Political-Economic History: A Heuristic of Criminological Strands |
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163 | (11) |
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Mercantilism and the Rise of State Criminology |
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164 | (2) |
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166 | (1) |
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167 | (1) |
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167 | (1) |
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Laissez-faire and the Rise of Disciplinary Criminology |
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168 | (2) |
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170 | (1) |
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171 | (2) |
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173 | (1) |
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Globalization and the Rise of Transnational Criminology |
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174 | (2) |
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Summary and Conclusion: A Dynamic Criminology for the Twenty-first Century |
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176 | (1) |
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177 | (2) |
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Interest and Rationality: Contributions from Economics and Law |
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179 | (24) |
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Economic Models and Rational Choice Theories |
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180 | (3) |
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Critiques of Legal Formalism and Criminalization |
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183 | (3) |
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186 | (2) |
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Mercantilism, Dangerousness, and the Emergence of Criminal Law |
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187 | (1) |
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188 | (11) |
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Regulated to Deregulated Corporations |
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189 | (6) |
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Corporate Abuse, Regulatory Law, and Consumer Protection |
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195 | (4) |
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Summary and Conclusion: Rational Interests as Normative Deviance |
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199 | (1) |
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199 | (4) |
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Nature and Nurture: Contributions from Biology |
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203 | (20) |
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Nature and Nurture: On Biological and Cultural Evolution |
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204 | (2) |
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206 | (13) |
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Genetic Factors and Criminality |
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206 | (1) |
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Twin and Adoption Studies |
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207 | (1) |
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Gene-Environment Interaction and Correlation |
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207 | (2) |
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Risk Factors and Criminal Behavior |
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209 | (1) |
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Evolutionary Factors and Criminality |
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210 | (1) |
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Evolutionary Theories of Gendered Violence |
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211 | (3) |
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Neurohormonal Factors and Criminality |
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214 | (1) |
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Brain Structure, Neuroscience, and Behavior: The Basics |
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214 | (4) |
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Neurohormonal Theories of Criminal Behavior |
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218 | (1) |
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Summary and Conclusion: Wider Propositions for Crime Prevention |
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219 | (2) |
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221 | (2) |
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Mind and Character: Contributions from Psychology |
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223 | (28) |
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Biopsychological Approaches to Criminal Behavior |
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224 | (1) |
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Psychoanalytic and Psychodynamic Approaches to Criminal Behavior |
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225 | (9) |
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Psychoanalytic Personality Theory |
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226 | (3) |
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Psychoanalytic and Psychodynamic Theories of Criminality |
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229 | (5) |
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Behavioral and Social Learning Approaches to Criminal Behavior |
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234 | (2) |
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Temperament and Development |
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236 | (2) |
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Personality Approaches to Criminal Behavior: Trait-Based, Impulsive, and Antisocial |
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238 | (5) |
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Cognitive Approaches to Criminal Behavior |
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243 | (2) |
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Summary and Conclusion: Mental Illness, Criminality, and the Law |
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245 | (2) |
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247 | (4) |
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Culture and Society: Contributions from Sociology |
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251 | (34) |
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Social Organization and Structural Approaches to Crime |
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252 | (7) |
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Social Disorganization and Social Ecology Theories |
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252 | (3) |
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Anomie and Strain Theories |
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255 | (2) |
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257 | (2) |
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Social Process and Control Approaches to Crime |
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259 | (4) |
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259 | (2) |
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261 | (2) |
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Social Power and Critical Approaches to Crime |
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263 | (14) |
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Labeling and Social Construction Theories |
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264 | (3) |
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Conflict and Marxist Theories |
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267 | (4) |
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Feminist and Gender Theories |
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271 | (3) |
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Anarchism and Peacemaking Theories |
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274 | (2) |
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276 | (1) |
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Summary and Conclusion: Reciprocal Explanations |
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277 | (1) |
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278 | (7) |
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PART III. INTEGRATING CRIMINOLOGICAL STRANDS: THEORY AND PRACTICE |
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285 | (78) |
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Integrated Models in an Age of Globalization and Transdisciplinarity: An Eclectic Overview of Emerging Approaches |
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287 | (40) |
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290 | (3) |
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The Constitutive Parts of an Integrated Definition of Crime |
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291 | (1) |
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291 | (1) |
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291 | (1) |
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Individual and Social Harm |
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291 | (1) |
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292 | (1) |
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Integrating the Dimensions of the Prism of Crime |
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292 | (1) |
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Integrated Criminological Frames of Reference |
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293 | (28) |
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An Integrated Systems Theory of Antisocial Behavior: Matt Robinson |
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294 | (3) |
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Toward an Integration of Sociological and Public Health Perspectives in the Study of Violence: William Pridemore |
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297 | (2) |
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Integrating the Study of Mythogenes and Myths: Shlomo Shoham |
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299 | (5) |
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An Integrated Understanding of the Holocaust: David Friedrichs |
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304 | (1) |
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Understanding the Holocaust in Terms of Criminality |
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305 | (1) |
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Understanding the Holocaust in Terms of Crime |
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306 | (1) |
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Understanding the Holocaust in Terms of Criminalization |
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307 | (1) |
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Toward an Integrated Social Psychological Model of White Supremacist Behavior: Michael Arena and Bruce Arrigo |
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308 | (3) |
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Integrating Critical Race Theory and Postmodernism: Implications of Race, Class, and Gender: Christopher Schneider |
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311 | (4) |
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Integrating Buddhist Philosophy and Peacemaking Criminology: John Walsh |
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315 | (3) |
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Integration by Way of the Criminology of Hybrids: Sheila Brown |
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318 | (3) |
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Summary and Conclusion: The Integrative Imagination |
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321 | (1) |
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322 | (5) |
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Crime, Globalization, and the Capitalist World Order: Implications for Criminology and Strategies for Social Justice |
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327 | (36) |
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Crime and Crime Control at the Turn of the Twenty-first Century |
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328 | (4) |
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Security, Privatization, and Neoliberal Globalization |
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332 | (2) |
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334 | (3) |
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337 | (1) |
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Strategies and Recommendations for Justice |
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338 | (12) |
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Domestic Polices for Criminal Reduction and Crime Control---United States |
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339 | (1) |
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340 | (1) |
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Investing in Social Capital |
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340 | (1) |
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Investing in Harm Reduction |
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341 | (2) |
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343 | (1) |
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Professionalizing the Police |
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343 | (1) |
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Reaffirming Due Process and Equal Protection |
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344 | (1) |
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De-escalating the War on Crime |
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344 | (1) |
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Controlling Police Corruption |
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345 | (1) |
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Enriching Community Control |
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346 | (1) |
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346 | (1) |
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Improving Representation and Technology for Indigent Defandants |
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347 | (1) |
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347 | (1) |
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Abandoning Mandatory Sentences, Closure of Supermax Prisons, and Abolishing Capital Punishment |
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348 | (1) |
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A Moratorium on Prison Construction and Inmate ``Slave'' Labor |
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349 | (1) |
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Intermediate Sanctions and Community-Based Alternatives |
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350 | (1) |
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350 | (1) |
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International Policies in Support of Human Needs, Human Rights, and Human Justness |
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350 | (9) |
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351 | (1) |
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352 | (1) |
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353 | (1) |
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Privatization, Government, and Public Accountability |
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353 | (2) |
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Extraordinary Crimes, Sociolegal Reconstruction, and International Accountability |
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355 | (4) |
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359 | (4) |
Index |
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363 | (16) |
About the Author |
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379 | |