ABSTRACT

The science of criminology is at a crossroads. Despite accumulating a dizzying array of facts about crime, the field has yet to identify a body of theories that allows for the adequate prediction, explanation, and control of phenomena of central interest to criminologists. Mechanistic Criminology locates this problem within the field’s failure to conform to the expectations of scientific fields and reliance on antiquated methods of theory construction. The authors contend that this failure has resulted in an inability of criminologists to engage in theory falsification and competition—two central activities of science—that produce the forms of reliable knowledge that are unique to scientific fields.

Mechanistic Criminology advocates for the adoption of a mechanistic mode of theorizing to allow criminologists to engage in theory falsification and competition and ignite rapid scientific discovery in the field. The proposed method is the same one employed within the biological sciences, which is responsible for their rapid scientific progress in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Should criminologists adopt this mechanistic approach, criminology could experience the same scientific revolution that is occurring in the biological sciences, and criminologists would generate the knowledge necessary for the prediction, explanation, and control of crime.

part I|10 pages

Scientific Criminology

chapter 1|22 pages

What Is Science?

chapter 3|17 pages

Progress within Scientific Fields

chapter 4|28 pages

Scientific Progress in Criminology

part II|6 pages

Mechanistic Science

chapter 5|19 pages

Mechanistic Explanations

chapter 6|30 pages

Mechanism Schemas

chapter 7|24 pages

Biosocial Criminology

chapter 8|22 pages

Analytical Criminology

part III|5 pages

Mechanistic Translations of Criminological Theories

chapter 9|15 pages

Social Learning Theory

chapter 10|19 pages

Social Control Theory

chapter 11|14 pages

General Strain Theory

part IV|12 pages

Mechanistic Criminology

chapter 12|35 pages

Nondeclarative Memory

chapter 13|25 pages

Declarative Memory

chapter 14|26 pages

Theory of Mind

chapter 15|26 pages

Conclusion