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      Social Control and Self-Control Theories of Crime and Deviance
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      Social Control and Self-Control Theories of Crime and Deviance

      DOI link for Social Control and Self-Control Theories of Crime and Deviance

      Social Control and Self-Control Theories of Crime and Deviance book

      Social Control and Self-Control Theories of Crime and Deviance

      DOI link for Social Control and Self-Control Theories of Crime and Deviance

      Social Control and Self-Control Theories of Crime and Deviance book

      ByL.Edward Wells
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2011
      eBook Published 25 October 2017
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315087900
      Pages 550
      eBook ISBN 9781315087900
      Subjects Social Sciences
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      Wells, L.E. (2011). Social Control and Self-Control Theories of Crime and Deviance (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315087900

      ABSTRACT

      Control theories have dominated criminological theory and research since the 1969 publication of Hirschi's seminal work on the social bond. Social control and self-control theorists are unique in suggesting that patterns in criminal behaviors are better explained by variations in social constraints rather than by individual motivational impulses, thus indicating that their main concerns are the explication and clarification of the techniques, processes, and institutions of informal social control. The four major sections of this volume focus on: the similarities and differences among the major contributors to the early developmental stage of social control theory; the central importance of parents, peers, and schools in the creation of informal control mechanisms and their link to crime and delinquency; the theoretical underpinnings of self-control theory, including empirical tests and criticisms; and theoretical integrations of social control and self-control theories with various motivational theories of crime and delinquency.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      part |2 pages

      Part I Early Developments in Social Control Theory

      chapter 1|12 pages

      Albert J. Reiss Jr (1951), 'Delinquency as the Failure of Personal and Social Controls', American Sociological Review, 16, pp. 196-207

      chapter 2|6 pages

      Jackson Toby (1957), 'Social Disorganization and Stake in Conformity: Complementary Factors in the Predatory Behavior of Hoodlums', Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology and Police Science, 48, pp. 12-17

      chapter 3|8 pages

      Gresham M. Sykes and David Matza (1957), 'Techniques of Neutralization: A Theory of Delinquency' ,American Sociological Review, 22, pp. 664-70

      chapter 4|6 pages

      Walter C. Reckless (1961), 'A New Theory of Delinquency and Crime', Federal Probation, 25, pp. 42-6

      chapter 5|12 pages

      Scott Briar and Irving Piliavin (1965), 'Delinquency, Situational Inducements, and Commitments to Conformity', Social Problems, 13, pp. 35-45

      part |2 pages

      Part II Sources of Social Control

      chapter 6|22 pages

      Joseph H. Rankin and Roger Kern (1994), 'Parental Attachments and Delinquency', Criminology, 32, pp. 495-515

      chapter 7|24 pages

      L. Edward Wells and Joseph H. Rankin (1989), 'Direct Parental Controls and Delinquency', Criminology, 26, pp. 263-85

      chapter 8|14 pages

      Håkan Stattin and Margaret Kerr (2000), 'Parental Monitoring: A Reinterpretation', Child Development, 71, pp. 1072-85

      chapter 9|18 pages

      Mark Warr (1993), 'Parents, Peers and Delinquency', Social Forces, 72, pp. 247-64

      chapter 10|28 pages

      Allison Ann Payne (2008), 'A Multilevel Analysis of the Relationships among Communal School Organization, Student Bonding, and Delinquency', Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 45, pp. 429-55

      part |2 pages

      Part III Self-Control Theory

      chapter 11|34 pages

      Travis C. Pratt and Francis T. Cullen (2000), 'The Empirical Status of Gottfredson and Hirschi's General Theory of Crime: A Meta-Analysis', Criminology, 38, pp. 931-64

      chapter 12|42 pages

      Alexander T. Vazsonyi, Lloyd E. Pickering, Marianne Junger and Dick Hessing (2001), 'An Empirical Test of a General Theory of Crime: A Four-Nation Comparative Study of Self-Control and the Prediction of Deviance', Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 38, pp. 91-131

      chapter 13|26 pages

      Harold G. Grasmick, Charles R. Tittle, Robert J. Bursik, Jr and Bruce J. Arneklev (1993), 'Testing the Core Empirical Implications of Gottfredson and Hirschi's General Theory of Crime', Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 30, pp. 5-29

      chapter 14|18 pages

      Kevin M. Beaver, John Paul Wright and Matt Delisi (2007), 'Self-control as an Executive Function: Reformulating Gottfredson and Hirschi's Parental Socialization Thesis', Criminal Justice and Behavior, 34, pp. 1345-61

      chapter 15|44 pages

      Callie Harbin Burt, Ronald L. Simons and Leslie G. Simons (2006), 'A Longitudinal Test of the Effects of Parenting and the Stability of Self-Control: Negative Evidence for the General Theory of Crime', Criminology, 44, pp. 353-96

      chapter 16|20 pages

      Gilbert Geis (2000), 'On the Absence of Self-Control as the Basis for a General Theory of Crime: A Critique', Theoretical Criminology, 4, pp. 35-53

      chapter 17|16 pages

      Travis Hirschi and Michael R. Gottfredson (2000), 'In Defense of Self-Control', Theoretical Criminology, 4, pp. 55-69

      part |2 pages

      Part IV Theory Integration

      chapter 18|18 pages

      Travis Hirschi and Michael Gottfredson (1990), 'Substantive Positivism and the Idea of Crime', Rationality and Society, 2, pp. 412-28

      chapter 19|30 pages

      Terence P. Thornberry (1987), 'Toward an Interactional Theory of Delinquency', Criminology, 25, pp. 863-91

      chapter 20|24 pages

      Douglas Longshore, Eunice Chang, Shih-chao Hsieh and Nena Messina (2004), 'Self-Control and Social Bonds: A Combined Control Perspective on Deviance', Crime and Delinquency, 50, pp. 542-64

      chapter 21|20 pages

      Robert J. Sampson and John H. Laub (1990), 'Crime and Deviance over the Life Course: The Salience of Adult Social Bonds', American Sociological Review, 55, pp. 609-27

      chapter 22|30 pages

      Daniel S. Nagin and Raymond Paternoster (1993), 'Enduring Individual Differences and Rational Choice Theories of Crime', Law and Society Review, 27, pp. 467-96

      chapter 23|28 pages

      John Hagan, A.R. Gillis and John Simpson (1985), 'The Class Structure of Gender and Delinquency: Toward a Power-Control Theory of Common Delinquent Behavior', American Journal of Sociology, 90, pp. 1151-78

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