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Book

Evolution and Crime

Book

Evolution and Crime

DOI link for Evolution and Crime

Evolution and Crime book

Evolution and Crime

DOI link for Evolution and Crime

Evolution and Crime book

ByJason Roach, Ken Pease
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2013
eBook Published 11 April 2013
Pub. Location London
Imprint Willan
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203101087
Pages 144
eBook ISBN 9780203101087
Subjects Social Sciences
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Roach, J., & Pease, K. (2013). Evolution and Crime (1st ed.). Willan. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203101087

ABSTRACT

Human physique and behaviour has been shaped by the pressures of natural selection. This is received wisdom in all scientifically informed circles. Currently, the topic of crime is rarely touched upon in textbooks on evolution and the topic of evolution rarely even mentioned in criminology textbooks. This book for the first time explores how an evolution informed criminology has clear implications for enhancing our understanding of the criminal law, crime and criminal behaviour.

This book is directed more towards students of criminology than students of evolution. It is suggested that there is scope for more collaborative work, with criminologists and crime scientists exposed to Darwinian thought having much to gain. What is suggested is simply that such thinking provides a fresh perspective. If that perspective yields only a fraction of the understanding when applied to crime as it has elsewhere in science, the effort will have been worthwhile.

The authors attempt to provide a modest appraisal of the potential contribution that a more welcoming approach to the evolutionary perspective would make to criminology; both theoretically (by expanding understanding of the complexity of the origins of behaviour labelled criminal) and practically (where the evolutionary approach can be utilised to inform crime control policy and practice). An evolutionary lens is applied to diverse criminological topics such as the origins of criminal law, female crime, violence, and environmental factors involved in crime causation.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|11 pages

Crime and evolution: strange companions?

chapter 2|15 pages

People who need people?

chapter 3|14 pages

Theory of Mind, empathy and criminal behaviour

chapter 4|10 pages

The sense of fairness and the emergence of criminal justice

chapter 5|11 pages

Violence

chapter 6|12 pages

Crime: it’s a man thing?

chapter 7|21 pages

Beyond the proximal: evolution, environments and criminal behaviour

chapter 8|5 pages

The ultimate mystery of inheritance

chapter 9|5 pages

So what?

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