ABSTRACT

Comprehensive, critical and accessible, Criminology: A Sociological Introduction offers an authoritative overview of the study of criminology, from early theoretical perspectives to pressing contemporary issues such as the globalisation of crime, crimes against the environment, terrorism and cybercrime.

Authored by an internationally renowned and experienced group of authors in the Department of Sociology at the University of Essex, this is a truly international criminology text that delves into areas that other texts may only reference. It includes substantive chapters on the following topics:

• Histories of crime;

• Theoretical approaches to crime and the issue of social change;

• Victims and victimisation;

• Crime, emotion and social psychology;

• Drugs, alcohol, health and crime;

• Criminal justice and the sociology of punishment;

• Green criminology;

• Crime and the media;

• Terrorism, state crime and human rights.

The new edition fuses global perspectives in criminology from the contexts of post-Brexit Britain and America in the age of Trump, and from the Global South. It contains new chapters on cybercrime; crimes of the powerful; organised crime; life-course approaches to understanding delinquency and desistance; and futures of crime, control and criminology.

Each chapter includes a series of critical thinking questions, suggestions for further study and a list of useful websites and resources. The book also contains a glossary of the criminological terms and concepts used in the book. It is the perfect text for students looking for a broad, critical and international introduction to criminology, and it is essential reading for those looking to expand their ‘criminological imagination’.

part 1|50 pages

The criminological imagination

chapter chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

chapter chapter 2|17 pages

Histories of crime

chapter chapter 3|22 pages

Researching crime

part 2|133 pages

Thinking about crime

chapter chapter 4|18 pages

The Enlightenment and early traditions

chapter chapter 5|23 pages

Early sociological ­thinking about crime

chapter chapter 6|29 pages

Radicalising traditions

Marxism, feminism and Foucault

chapter chapter 7|23 pages

Crime, social theory and social change

chapter chapter 8|15 pages

Crime, place and space

chapter chapter 9|24 pages

Victims and victimization

part 3|176 pages

Doing crime

chapter chapter 10|16 pages

Life course criminology

chapter chapter 11|26 pages

Theft, fraud and other property crimes

chapter chapter 12|29 pages

Crime, sexuality and ­gender

chapter chapter 13|19 pages

Crime, the emotions and social psychology

chapter chapter 14|21 pages

Organised crime

chapter chapter 15|25 pages

Corporate crime and crimes of the powerful

chapter chapter 16|38 pages

Drugs, alcohol, health and crime

part 4|114 pages

Controlling crime

chapter chapter 17|27 pages

Thinking about ­punishment

chapter chapter 18|27 pages

The criminal justice process

chapter chapter 19|29 pages

The police and policing

chapter chapter 20|29 pages

Prisons and imprisonment

part 5|126 pages

Globalising crime

chapter chapter 21|30 pages

Green criminology and environmental crime

chapter chapter 22|21 pages

Crime and the media

chapter chapter 23|14 pages

Digital criminology and cybercrime

chapter chapter 24|27 pages

Political violence, terrorism and counter-terrorism

chapter chapter 25|23 pages

State crime and war crime

chapter Chapter 26|10 pages

Criminological futures