ABSTRACT

First published in 1999. This concludes work on a series Current Issues in Criminal Justice. Criminology. The book represents another milestone in a criminologist’s journey to uncover some “truths” about the discipline and to reflectcritically on how that field has evolved. This journey, some of youmay remember, began in The Sociology of Criminological Theory:Paradigm or Fad and continued in The Demise of the CriminologicalImagination. To date, this latest work has already attracted considerabledebate and in the tradition of C. Wright Mills, engendered somewhatheated discussion about the philosophy of criminology and the logic ofits paradigms. What is perhaps most exciting about this work is that it is critical, in the true sense of critical, a term that has been abused and overused.

chapter Chapter One|20 pages

Thought and Ideology

chapter Chapter Two|32 pages

Recent Criminological Theorizing

chapter Chapter Three|26 pages

A Critique of Contemporary Criminological Theory

chapter Chapter Four|22 pages

Conceptualizing and Measuring

chapter Chapter Five|14 pages

The Search for Reality

chapter Chapter Six|24 pages

Chaos, Complex Systems, and Self-Organized Criticality 1

chapter Chapter Seven|12 pages

A Critical-Incident Orienting-Perspective 1

chapter Chapter Eight|16 pages

Specific Features of the Perspective

chapter Chapter Nine|16 pages

Implications of a Critical-Incident Metatheory

chapter Chapter Ten|10 pages

Conclusions