ABSTRACT

Despite illustrious origins dating to the 1920s, qualitative crime research has long been overshadowed by quantitative inquiry. After decades of limited use, there has been a notable resurgence in crime ethnography, naturalistic inquiry, and related forms of fieldwork addressing crime and related social control efforts. The Routledge Handbook of Qualitative Criminology signals this momentum as the first major reference work dedicated to crime ethnography and related fieldwork orientations. Synthesizing the foremost topics and issues in qualitative criminology into a single definitive work, the Handbook provides a "first-look" reference source for scholars and students alike.

The collection features twenty original chapters on leading qualitative crime research strategies, the complexities of collecting and analyzing qualitative data, and the ethical propriety of researching active criminals and incarcerated offenders. Contributions from both established luminaries and talented emerging scholars highlight the traditions and emerging trends in qualitative criminology through authoritative overviews and "lived experience" examples.

Comprehensive and current, The Routledge Handbook of Qualitative Criminology promises to be a sound reference source for academics, students and practitioners as ethnography and fieldwork realize continued growth throughout the 21st Century.

part 1|59 pages

Situating qualitative research in criminology and criminal justice

part 2|61 pages

Traditional and unorthodox qualitative research strategies

part 3|34 pages

Collecting and interpreting qualitative data

chapter 10|13 pages

Negotiating identity as a qualitative researcher

The impact of studying marginalized populations in criminology

chapter 11|16 pages

Interviewing offenders

The active versus inmate debate

part 5|53 pages

Qualitative research on the justice systems

chapter 5 17|10 pages

From the mouths of babes

Conducting qualitative research with youths

chapter 5 19|13 pages

Court ethnographies