The future of criminology 1st Edition by Rolf Loeber, Brandon C. Welsh – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0199950431, 978019995043
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 0199950431
ISBN 13: 978019995043
Author: Rolf Loeber, Brandon C. Welsh
Criminology is a dynamic and evolving field of study. In the recent decades, the study of the causes, development, prevention, and treatment of juvenile delinquency and adult crime has produced many important discoveries. This volume address two questions about crucial topics facing criminology – from causation to prevention to public policy: Where are we now? What does the future hold? Rolf Loeber and Brandon C. Welsh lead a team of more than forty top scholars from across the world to present the future of research, policy, and practice in the discipline.
“Criminology has entered into a new era in which standard ideas are being revised or replaced by fresh theoretical and empirical investigations. In The Future of Criminology, Rolf Loeber and Brandon Welsh capture the field’s dynamic nature by pulling together, under one cover, diverse ideas of where criminology should head. Written by leading scholars, the volume’s contributions provide lucid and compelling assessments of how best to think about crime and its control. Every scholar should keep this book close at hand and consult it regularly.”—Francis T. Cullen, Distinguished Research Professor, University of Cincinnati
“Inspired by David Farrington, one of the world’s foremost scholars of criminology, The Future of Criminology is designed to be a ‘state of the art’ collection of essays delineating criminology’s contribution to our understanding of crime prevention and its control. It succeeds admirably as a diverse group of leading scholars summarize, integrate, and extend previous work on child delinquency, criminal careers, psychopathology, high-risk families and communities, and experimental criminology. Researchers, policymakers, and students will benefit greatly from a close study of its chapters.” — Joan Petersilia, Adelbert H. Sweet Professor of Law, Stanford Law School
“This set of contributions, by forty world-renowned criminologists, constitutes a cutting-edge volume for future generations of scholars to take the baton from David Farrington.”—Gerben Bruinsma, Director of Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement, Amsterdam
Table of contents:
Contents
Foreword: Looking Back and Forward
David P. Farrington
A Future of Criminology and a Criminologist for the Ages
Rolf Loeber and Brandon C. Welsh
Contributors
I. DEVELOPMENT AND CAUSATION
1. Some Future Trajectories for Life Course Criminology
D. Wayne Osgood
2. Does the Study of the Age-Crime Curve have a Future?
Rolf Loeber
3. Developmental Origins of Aggression: From Social Learning to Epigenetics
Richard E. Tremblay
4. Biology of Crime: Past, Present, and Future Perspectives
Adrian Raine and Jill Portnoy
5. Self-Control, Then and Now
Terrie E. Moffitt
6. Criminological Theory: Past Achievements and Future Challenges
Terence P. Thornberry
7. Individuals’ Situational Criminal Actions: Current Knowledge and Tomorrow’s Prospects
Per-Olof H. Wikström
8. Lack of Empathy and Offending: Implications for Tomorrow’s Research and Practice
Darrick Jolliffe and Joseph Murray
9. Person-in-Context: Insights and Issues in Research on Neighborhoods and Crime
Gregory M. Zimmerman and Steven F. Messner
10. Risk and Protective Factors in the Assessment of School Bullies and Victims
Maria M. Ttofi and Peter K. Smith
11. Adult Onset Offending: Perspectives for Future Research
Georgia Zara
12. The Next Generation of Longitudinal Studies
Magda Stouthamer-Loeber
II. CRIMINAL CAREERS AND JUSTICE
13. Research on Criminal Careers: Part 1: Contributions, Opportunities, and Needs
Alfred Blumstein
14. Research on Criminal Careers: Part 2: Looking Back to Predict Ahead
Alex R. Piquero
15. The Harvesting of Administrative Records: New Problems, Great Potential
Howard N. Snyder
16. Twenty-Five Years of Developmental Criminology: What We Know, What We Need to Know
Marc Le Blanc
17. Pushing Back the Frontiers of Knowledge on Desistance from Crime
Lila Kazemian
18. Does Psychopathology Appear Fully Only in Adulthood?
Raymond R. Corrado
III. PREVENTION
19. Preventing Delinquency by Putting Families First
Brandon C. Welsh
20. The Future of Preventive Public Health: Implications of Brain Violence Research
Frederick P. Rivara
21. “Own the Place, Own the Crime ” Prevention: How Evidence about Place-Based Crime Shifts the Burden of Prevention
John E. Eck and Rob T. Guerette
22. Community Approaches to Preventing Crime and Violence: The Challenge of Building Prevention Capacity
Ross Homel and Tara Renae McGee
23. Taking Effective Crime Prevention to Scale: From School-Based Programs to Community-Wide Prevention Systems
J. David Hawkins, Richard F. Catalano, Karl G. Hill, and Rick Kosterman
IV. INTERVENTION AND TREATMENT
24. The Human Experiment in Treatment: A Means to the End of Offender Recidivism
Doris Layton MacKenzie and Gaylene Styve Armstrong
25. Towards a Third Phase of ‘What Works’ in Offender Rehabilitation
Friedrich Lösel
26. Raising the Bar: Transforming Knowledge to Practice for Children in Conflict with the Law
Leena K. Augimeri and Christopher J. Koegl
27. Intervening with Violence: Priorities for Reform from a Public Health Perspective
Jonathan P. Shepherd
28. How to Reduce the Global Homicide Rate to 2 per 100,000 by 2060
Manuel Eisner and Amy Nivette
V. PUBLIC POLICY STRATEGIES
29. The Problem with Macro-Criminology
James Q. Wilson
30. Staking Out the Next Generation of Studies of the Criminology of Place: Collecting Prospective Longitudinal Data at Crime Hot Spots
David Weisburd, Brian Lawton, and Justin Ready
31. The Futures of Experimental Criminology
Lawrence W. Sherman
32. Stopping Crime Requires Successful Implementation of What Works
Irvin Waller
33. The Future of Sentencing and Its Control
Michael Tonry
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Tags: Rolf Loeber, Brandon C Welsh, Future, Criminology


