ABSTRACT

There are more than 20 theories that explain crime. Each theory has weaknesses, and no scholar knows which theory is best. To remedy this unsatisfactory situation a new research program of comparative theory testing is proposed. Comparing the theories with each other has not yet been successful. The alternative, suggested in this book, is to show how criminological theories must be modified if they are compared with a general behavioral theory. The book shows under which conditions the major criminological theories provide valid explanations of crime. The latter thus become integrated as parts of the general theory.

The general theory that is chosen is a version of the theory of rational action. This is not the problematic version discussed in the literature, but states the real conditions of decision making and, thus, explains when people actually violate the law or remain law-abiding.

The general theory is a component of a theoretical approach that explains individual behavior in interaction with societal (macro) conditions. This micro-macro approach is summarized in a proposed structural-cognitive model. This is part of the new program of Analytical Criminology. It suggests empirical theory comparison, process explanations, and micro-macro explanations.

The book is not only written for readers who are interested in theories of crime and deviant behavior. It is also a treatise in "analytical" (i.e., rigorous) theory construction and empirical theory comparison.

chapter 1|5 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|7 pages

The theory chaos in criminology

chapter 4|48 pages

The explanation of individual behavior in the social context

The wide version of rational choice theory as the theoretical foundation of Analytical Criminology

chapter 5|16 pages

How criminological theories can and should be integrated

The program of comparative theory integration and theory testing

chapter 6|20 pages

Linking individual and society

Structural individualism and micro-macro modeling

chapter 7.2|11 pages

Anomie theory

chapter 7.3|12 pages

General strain theory

chapter 7.6|15 pages

Self-control theory

chapter 7.7|14 pages

Some propositions of the labeling approach

chapter 7.9|16 pages

Situational action theory

chapter 8|7 pages

Analytical Criminology

Core elements of a research program