ABSTRACT

Our understanding of criminal behaviour and its causes has been too long damaged by the failure to integrate the emotional, psychological, social and cultural influences on the way people behave.

This book offers a concise and accessible introduction to criminal behaviour, examining and integrating perspectives from criminology and psychology. It proposes a range of ‘psychosocial’ approaches that seek to understand the emotions that surround criminal behaviour, allowing for an exploration of individual differences and social and cultural issues that help to bridge the gap between disciplinary approaches. It offers substantive chapters on a range of topics, including:

  • mental disorder and the relationship between mental health and offending;
  • criminal career research;
  • youth crime and the question of criminal responsibility;
  • gender and crime; and
  • violent crime, including homicide and sexual crime.

This new edition has been fully updated, including a revised opening chapter that offers an introduction to psychosocial criminology, up-to-date discussion of changes in the criminal justice system in the context of mental health, and two new chapters on race and crime, and public violence, extremism and terrorism.

This book is essential reading for students taking a range of courses on criminal behaviour, criminological theory, criminal psychology and psychological criminology.

chapter 1|31 pages

The need for a psychosocial criminology

chapter 2|34 pages

Mental disorder

Madness, personality disorder and criminal responsibility

chapter 4|21 pages

Familial and parental influences

chapter 5|22 pages

Youth crime

chapter 6|21 pages

Gender and crime

chapter 7|21 pages

Understanding violence

Learning from studies of homicide

chapter 8|30 pages

Intimate violence and sexual crime

chapter 9|27 pages

Public violence and crimes of terror

chapter 10|23 pages

‘Race’ and crime

chapter 11|21 pages

Conclusion