Tuesday, August 16, 2016

An Introduction to Criminological Theory Third Edition



Judul:   An Introduction to Criminological Theory Third Edition
Oleh:   Roger Hopkins Burke
Penerbit:   Willan Publishing, UK
Tahun: 2009
Jumlah Halaman: 425  hal.




An Introduction to Criminological Theory Third Edition
Buku ini diterbitkan pada tahun 2009  oleh  Willan Publishing, UK adalah buku edisi ketiga.

Penulis:

Roger Hopkins Burke adalah Kriminologi Subjek Leader, Divisi Kriminologi, Kesehatan Masyarakat
dan Kebijakan, Nottingham Trent University. kepentingan penelitian saat ini adalah perkembangan teori kriminologi dan orang-orang muda dan kejahatan. publikasi terbaru termasuk Muda, Kejahatan dan Keadilan (Willan Publishing, 2008).

Lingkup Pembahasan:
Buku ini mengemukakan tentang cara-cara yang berbeda di mana kejahatan dan perilaku kriminal
telah dijelaskan di zaman modern.  Dalam buku ini akan terlihat penjelasan yang berbeda - atau teori - yang telah diajukan berkali-kali selama 200 tahun terakhir antara lain hukum filsuf, ahli biologi,
psikolog, sosiolog dan ilmuwan politik. Selain itu, teori-teori ini – di khususnya  sebagai varian sebelumnya - cenderung mencerminkan berbagai keprihatinan dan kepentingan profesional dari disiplin dimana teori, ahli biologi mengemukakan penjelasan untuk kriminalitas dalam hal dipandang dari ilmu fisiologi pidana individu, sementara psikolog  mengarahkan kami memperhatikan pikiran atau kepribadian orang tersebut. Semakin, penjelasan  pada kemudian hari memasukkan unsur-unsur dari lebih dari satu disiplin. Dengan demikian, untuk sebagai contoh, beberapa ahli biologi datang untuk mengakui bahwa individu dengan yang sama profil fisiologis akan berperilaku berbeda tergantung pada keadaan sosialisasi mereka.
Sebagian besar teori yang dibahas dalam buku ini tetap berbagi satu kesamaan ciri. Mereka adalah semua produk dari periode waktu - sekitar masa lalu dua abad - dan cara hidup yang telah datang untuk disebut modern. Dengan demikian ini penjelasan yang berbeda dari kejahatan dan perilaku kriminal yang sangat banyak refleksi dari ide-ide dominan yang telah ada selama era ini. Oleh karena itu titik awal yang berguna untuk mempertimbangkan secara singkat bagaimana kejahatan dan perilaku kriminal dijelaskan dan dibahas dalam periode pra-modern.


Daftar Isi:
Acknowledgements xi
1  Introduction: crime and modernity 1
    Pre-modern crime and criminal justice 1
    The rise of modern society 3
    Defining and the extent of crime 5
    The structure of the book 7
    Suggested further reading 20

Part One: The rational actor model of crime and criminal behaviour 21
2   Classical criminology 27
    The Classical theorists 27
    The limitations of Classicism 31
    The neo-Classical compromise 31
    The enduring influence of Classicism 33
    Suggested further reading 35
3  Populist conservative criminology 36
    The rise of the political new right 36
    James Q. Wilson and ‘right realism’ 37
    Right realism and social control 41
    A critique of right realism 42
    Suggested further reading 44
4  Contemporary rational actor theories 46
    Contemporary deterrence theories 46
    Rational choice theory 49
    Routine activities theory 53
    The rational actor reconsidered 56
    Suggested further reading 59
   
Part Two: The predestined actor model of crime and criminal behaviour 61
5  Biological positivism 65
    Early biological theories 65
    Inherited criminal characteristics 68
    Genetic structure 72
    Criminal body types 73
    Psychoses and brain injuries 75
    Autistic spectrum disorders 77
    Biochemical theories 80
    Altered biological state theories 82
    Treating the offender 87
    Conclusions 88
    Suggested further reading 90
6  Psychological positivism 92
    Psychodynamic theories 92
    Behavioural learning theories 97
    Cognitive learning theories 103
    Conclusions 108
    Suggested further reading 108
7  Sociological positivism 110
    Emile Durkheim and social disorganisation theory 110
    The Chicago school 116
    Robert Merton and anomie theory 119
    Deviant subculture theories 126
    Conclusions 141
    Suggested further reading 141
8  Women and positivism 143
    Biological positivism and women 143
    Psychological positivism and women 146
    Sociological positivism and women 152
    Conclusions 157
    Suggested further reading 157

Part Three: The victimised actor model of crime and criminal behaviour 159
9  Labelling theories 167
    The social construction of crime 167
    The recipients of deviant labels 170
    The consequences of labelling for the recipients 171
    Moral panics and deviance amplification 173
    Criticisms of labelling theories 175
    Labelling theories revisited 176
    Suggested further reading 179
10  Conflict and radical theories 180
    Conflict theories 180
    Criticisms of conflict theories 183
    Radical theories 184
    Criticisms of radical theories 188
    Suggested further reading 190
11  The gendered criminal 191
    Perspectives in feminist theory 192
    The feminist critique of early explanations of female criminality 195
    The impact of feminist critiques 197
    Feminism and prostitution 200
    Is there a feminist criminology? 202
    Crime and masculinities 203
    Suggested further reading 205
12  Critical criminology 206
    The origins of critical criminology 206
    Crimes of the powerful 208
    Crimes of the less powerful 210
    Critical criminology or ‘left idealism’ 211
    Critical criminology and the challenge of zemiology 212
    Critical criminology revisited 215
    Suggested further reading 216

Part Four: Integrated theories of crime and criminal behaviour 219
13  Socio-biological theories 223

    Biosocial theory 223
    Biosocial theory and the ‘new right’ 225
    Sociobiological theories of rape 226
    Recent sociobiological explanations of childhood delinquency 228
    Conclusions 229
    Suggested further reading 230
14  Environmental theories 231
    Early environmental theories 231
    British environmental theories 232
    North American environmental theories 233
    Environmental design 238
    Environmental management 242
    Suggested further reading 243
15  Social control theories 245
    The origins of social control theories 245
    Early social control theories 247
    Later social control theories 249
    Integrated theoretical perspectives 251
    A general theory of crime 254
    Developments in social control theories 256
    Conclusions 260
    Suggested further reading 261
16  Left realism 262
    The origins of left realism 262
    A balance of intervention 266
    Left realism and ‘New’ Labour 269
    Social exclusion and the ‘underclass’: a case study 270
    ‘New’ Labour criminal justice policy revisited 272
    Left realist theory revisited 275
    Suggested further reading 277

Part Five: Crime and criminal behaviour in the age of moral uncertainty 279
17  Crime and the postmodern condition 287

    Constitutive criminology and postmodernity 289
    Anarchist criminology 293
    Suggested further reading 298
18  Cultural criminology and the schizophrenia of crime 299
    The focus of cultural criminology 299
    The seductions of crime 302
    The carnival of crime 304
    The schizophrenia of crime 304
    Crime as normal and non pathological 305
    One planet under a groove 307
    Suggested further reading 311
19  Crime, globalisation and the risk society 312
    New modes of governance 312
    Crime and the risk society 313
    Globalisation and crime 317
    Terrorism and state violence 321
    Terrorism and postmodernism revisited 327
    Suggested further reading 328
20  Conclusions: radical moral communitarian criminology 329
    The communitarian agenda 333
    Radical egalitarian communitarianism 336
    The concept of community reconsidered 338
    Radical moral communitarian criminology 340
    Suggested further reading 341
Glossary of terms 343
References 351
Index  394

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