- Title Pages
- Dedication
- FOREWORD
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
- What is Criminology? An Introduction
- 1 Criminology's Public Roles: A Drama in Six Acts
- 2 Some Advantages of a Crime-free Criminology
- 3 Critical Criminology: The Renewal of Theory, Politics, and Practice
- 4 Disciplinarity and Drift
- 5 The Global Financial Crisis: Neo-Liberalism, Social Democracy, and Criminology
- 6 Against Evangelism in Academic Criminology: For Criminology as a Scientific Art
- 7 Shake it up, Baby: Practising Rock ‘N’ Roll Criminology
- 8 Criminology's Disney World: The Ethnographer's Ride of South African Criminal Justice
- 9 Origins of Criminology
- 10 Have I Got News For You? Media, Research, & Popular Audiences
- 11 Sort Crimes, Not Criminals
- 12 Studying Desistance From Crime: Where Quantitative Meets Qualitative Methods
- 13 Criminology and the Role of Experimental Research
- 14 Criminology and Social Justice: Expanding the Intellectual Commitment
- 15 A New Look at Victim and Offender—An Abolitionist Approach
- 16 Remembering Criminology's ‘Forgotten Theme’: Seeking Justice in US Crime Policy Using an Intersectional Approach
- 17 Postcolonial Perspectives for Criminology
- 18 Putting Crime Back on the Criminological Agenda
- 19 Transcending the Boundaries of Criminology: The Example of Richard Ericson
- 20 Criminology's Place in the Academic Field
- 21 Why Can't Criminology be More Like Medical Research?: Be Careful What You Wish For
- 22 Criminal Justice, Not Criminology?
- 23 Criminology, Accountability, and International Justice
- 24 Transnational Criminology and the Globalization of Harm Production
- 25 The Missing Link: Criminological Perspectives on Transitional Justice and International Crimes
- 26 Why Compare Criminal Justice?
- 27 Visions of Global Control: Cosmopolitan Aspirations in a World of Friction
- 28 Criminology as Invention
- 29 Criminological Cliques: Narrowing Dialogues, Institutional Protectionism, and the Next Generation
- 30 Official Criminology and the New Crime Sciences
- 31 Criminology: Science + Policy Analysis
- 32 Criminology, Bureaucracy, and Unfinished Business
- 33 Criminology and Government: Some Reflections on Recent Developments in England1
- 34 Being a Criminologist: Investigation as a Lifestyle and Living
- Mapping the Borders of Criminology: Concluding Thoughts
- INDEX
(p. vii ) FOREWORD
- Source:
- What is Criminology?
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- FOREWORD
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
- What is Criminology? An Introduction
- 1 Criminology's Public Roles: A Drama in Six Acts
- 2 Some Advantages of a Crime-free Criminology
- 3 Critical Criminology: The Renewal of Theory, Politics, and Practice
- 4 Disciplinarity and Drift
- 5 The Global Financial Crisis: Neo-Liberalism, Social Democracy, and Criminology
- 6 Against Evangelism in Academic Criminology: For Criminology as a Scientific Art
- 7 Shake it up, Baby: Practising Rock ‘N’ Roll Criminology
- 8 Criminology's Disney World: The Ethnographer's Ride of South African Criminal Justice
- 9 Origins of Criminology
- 10 Have I Got News For You? Media, Research, & Popular Audiences
- 11 Sort Crimes, Not Criminals
- 12 Studying Desistance From Crime: Where Quantitative Meets Qualitative Methods
- 13 Criminology and the Role of Experimental Research
- 14 Criminology and Social Justice: Expanding the Intellectual Commitment
- 15 A New Look at Victim and Offender—An Abolitionist Approach
- 16 Remembering Criminology's ‘Forgotten Theme’: Seeking Justice in US Crime Policy Using an Intersectional Approach
- 17 Postcolonial Perspectives for Criminology
- 18 Putting Crime Back on the Criminological Agenda
- 19 Transcending the Boundaries of Criminology: The Example of Richard Ericson
- 20 Criminology's Place in the Academic Field
- 21 Why Can't Criminology be More Like Medical Research?: Be Careful What You Wish For
- 22 Criminal Justice, Not Criminology?
- 23 Criminology, Accountability, and International Justice
- 24 Transnational Criminology and the Globalization of Harm Production
- 25 The Missing Link: Criminological Perspectives on Transitional Justice and International Crimes
- 26 Why Compare Criminal Justice?
- 27 Visions of Global Control: Cosmopolitan Aspirations in a World of Friction
- 28 Criminology as Invention
- 29 Criminological Cliques: Narrowing Dialogues, Institutional Protectionism, and the Next Generation
- 30 Official Criminology and the New Crime Sciences
- 31 Criminology: Science + Policy Analysis
- 32 Criminology, Bureaucracy, and Unfinished Business
- 33 Criminology and Government: Some Reflections on Recent Developments in England1
- 34 Being a Criminologist: Investigation as a Lifestyle and Living
- Mapping the Borders of Criminology: Concluding Thoughts
- INDEX