TY - BOOK AU - Muncie,John AU - McLaughlin,Eugene AU - Langan,Mary TI - Criminological perspectives: a reader SN - 0761950028 PY - 1996/// CY - London PB - Sage, in association with the Open University KW - Criminology N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Criminological Perspectives: an introduction --; Pt. 1; Criminological formations; 1; On crimes and punishments; Cesare Beccaria; 2; Of the development of the propensity to crime; Adolphe Quetelet; 3; The criminal type in women and its atavistic origin; Cesare Lombroso and William Ferrero; 4; Causes of criminal behavior; Enrico Ferri; 5; Criminality and economic conditions; Willem Bonger; 6; The normal and the pathological; Emile Durkheim; 7; Law and authority; Peter Kropotkin; 8; British criminology before 1935; David Garland --; Pt. 2; The problem of crime I: causation; 9; Genetic factors in the etiology of criminal behavior; Sarnoff A. Mednick, William F. Gabrielli, Jr. and Barry Hutchings; 10; Personality theory and the problem of criminality; H. J. Eysenck; 11; Explanations of crime and place; Anthony E. Bottoms and Paul Wiles; 12; Crime and consumption; Simon Field; 13; The underclass; Charles Murray; 14; Relative deprivation; John Lea and Jock Young; 15; Seductions and repulsions of crime; Jack Katz; 16; The etiology of female crime; Dorie Klein; 17; Explaining male violence; Lynne Segal --; Pt. 3; The problem of crime II: criminalization; 18; Techniques of neutralization; Gresham M. Sykes and David Matza; 19; Outsiders; Howard Becker; 20; Toward a political economy of crime; William J. Chambliss; 21; The new criminology; Ian Taylor, Paul Walton and Jock Young; 22; Crime, power and ideological mystification; Steven Box; 23; Drifting into a law and order society; Stuart Hall; 24; Criminalization and racialization; Michael Keith; 25; The theoretical and political priorities of critical criminology; Phil Scraton and Kathryn Chadwick; 26; Critical criminology and the concept of crime; Louk H. C. Hulsman --; Pt. 4; Crime control I: criminal justice and social policy; 27; On deterrence; James Q. Wilson; 28; Giving criminals their just deserts; Andrew von Hirsch; 29; The value of rehabilitation; Francis T. Cullen and Karen E. Gilbert; 30; 'Situational' crime prevention: theory and practice; Ronald V. G. Clarke; 31; Social crime prevention strategies in a market society; Elliot Currie; 32; Abolitionism and crime control; Willem De Haan; 33; The new penology; Malcolm M. Feeley and Jonathan Simon --; Pt. 5; Crime control II: social control, discipline and regulation; 34; Crime, authority and the policeman-state; V. A. C. Gatrell; 35; The carceral; Michel Foucault; 36; The punitive city; Stanley Cohen; 37; From the Panopticon to Disney World: the development of discipline; Clifford D. Shearing and Philip C. Stenning; 38; The power of law; Carol Smart; 39; Reintegrative shaming; John Braithwaite --; Pt. 6; Within and beyond criminology; 40; The failure of criminology: the need for a radical realism; Jock Young; 41; Feminist approaches to criminology or postmodern woman meets atavistic man; Carol Smart; 42; Towards transgression: new directions in feminist criminology; Maureen Cain; 43; Criminal women and criminal justice: the limits to, and potential of, feminist and left realist perspectives; Pat Carlen; 44; Postmodernism and critical criminology; Alan Hunt; 45; Human rights and crimes of the state: the culture of denial; Stanley Cohen; 46; The fragmentation of criminology; Richard Ericson and Kevin Carriere ER -