Willan Publishing

An Introduction to Criminological Theory (3e)

Roger Hopkins Burke (Nottingham Trent University)


No Text This book provides a comprehensive and up to date introduction to criminological theory for students taking courses in criminology at both undergraduate and postgraduate level.

The text is divided into five parts, the first three of which address ideal type models of criminal behaviour – the rational actor, predestined actor, and victimised actor models. Within these the various criminological theories are located chronologically in the context of one of these different traditions, and the strengths and weaknesses of each theory and model are clearly identified.

The fourth part of the book looks more closely at more recent attempts to integrate theoretical elements from both within and across models of criminal behaviour, while the fifth part addresses a number of key recent concerns of criminology - postmodernism, cultural criminology, globalisation and communitarianism.
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expanded and updated new edition of Roger Hopkins Burke’s best-selling criminological theory textbook

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includes four completely new chapters on crime and the postmodern condition, cultural criminology, globalisation and the risk society, and radical communitarian criminology

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interdisciplinary text which recognises the value of legal, biological, psychological and sociological explanations of crime and criminal behaviour

Contents

Acknowledgements
Preface to the third edition
1 Introduction: crime and modernity
Part One: The rational actor model of crime and criminal behaviour
2 Classical criminology
3 Populist conservative criminology
4 Contemporary rational actor theories
Part Two: The predestined actor model of crime and criminal behaviour
5 Biological positivism
6 Psychological positivism
7 Sociological positivism
8 Women and positivism
Part Three: The victimised actor model of crime and criminal behaviour
9 Labelling theories
10 Conflict and radical theories
11 The gendered criminal
12 Critical criminology
Part Four: Integrated theories of crime and criminal behaviour
13 Socio-biological theories
14 Environmental theories
15 Social control theories
16 Left realism
Part Five: Crime and criminal behaviour in the age of moral uncertainty
17 Crime and the postmodern condition
18 Cultural criminology and the schizophrenia of crime
19 Crime, globalisation and the risk society
20 Conclusion: crime radical moral communitarian criminology
Glossary of terms
References
Author index
Subject index

About Roger Hopkins Burke Roger Hopkins Burke is Criminology Subject Leader, Division of Criminology, Public Health and Policy Studies, Nottingham Trent University. His current research interests are the development of criminological theory and young people and crime. Recent publications include Young People, Crime and Justice (Willan Publishing, 2008).



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