ABSTRACT

A comprehensive one-stop reference text, The Routledge Companion to Criminological Theory and Concepts (the ‘Companion’) will find a place on every bookshelf, whether it be that of a budding scholar or a seasoned academic. Comprising over a hundred concise and authoritative essays written by leading scholars in the field, this volume explains in a clear and inviting way the emergence, context, evolution and current status of key criminological theories and conceptual themes.

The Companion is divided into six historical and thematic parts, each introduced by the editors and containing a selection of accessible and engaging short essays written specifically for this text:

  • Foundations of criminological thought and contemporary revitalizations
  • The emergence and growth of American criminology
  • From appreciation to critique
  • Late critical criminologies and new directions
  • Punishment and security
  • Geographies of crime

Comprehensive cross-referencing between entries will provide the reader with signposts to later developments, to critiques and to associated theoretical developments explored within the book, and lists of further reading in every entry will encourage independent thinking and study. This book is an essential reference work for criminology students at all levels and is the perfect companion for courses on criminological theory.

chapter |5 pages

A rendezvous subject? A fragmented discipline?

An introduction to The Routledge Companion to Criminological Theory and Concepts

part 1|85 pages

Foundations of criminological thought and contemporary revitalizations

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 1.1|5 pages

Religion, spirituality and crime

chapter 1.2|4 pages

Classical criminology

chapter 1.3|4 pages

Utilitarianism

chapter 1.4|5 pages

Positivism

chapter 1.5|5 pages

Biological criminology

chapter 1.6|5 pages

Pathology

chapter 1.7|4 pages

Psychopathy

chapter 1.8|4 pages

Learning theory

chapter 1.9|4 pages

Personality theory

chapter 1.10|5 pages

Psychoanalytic perspectives

chapter 1.11|5 pages

Biosocial theory

chapter 1.12|5 pages

Developmental criminology

chapter 1.13|4 pages

Life-course theory

chapter 1.14|5 pages

Experimental criminology

chapter 1.15|4 pages

Forensic psychology

chapter 1.16|5 pages

Neurocriminology

chapter 1.17|4 pages

Deterrence

chapter 1.18|5 pages

Rational choice

part 2|52 pages

The emergence and growth of American criminology

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 2.1|4 pages

Chicago School

chapter 2.3|5 pages

Anomie

chapter 2.4|5 pages

Differential association

chapter 2.5|5 pages

Social learning theory

chapter 2.6|5 pages

Control theories

chapter 2.7|5 pages

Techniques of neutralization

chapter 2.8|5 pages

Market society and crime

chapter 2.9|5 pages

General strain theory

chapter 2.10|5 pages

Relative deprivation

part 3|80 pages

From appreciation to critique

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 3.1|4 pages

Appreciative criminology

chapter 3.3|4 pages

Critical criminologies

chapter 3.4|5 pages

Defiance theory

chapter 3.5|4 pages

Drift

chapter 3.6|5 pages

Feminist criminologies

chapter 3.7|4 pages

Folk devils

chapter 3.8|4 pages

Labelling theory

chapter 3.9|4 pages

Marxist criminologies

chapter 3.10|4 pages

Moral panic

chapter 3.11|4 pages

Newsmaking criminology

chapter 3.12|4 pages

Peacemaking in criminology

chapter 3.13|4 pages

Radical feminism

chapter 3.14|5 pages

Realism and left idealism

chapter 3.15|4 pages

Social constructionism

chapter 3.16|4 pages

Stigma

chapter 3.17|5 pages

Subculture

chapter 3.18|4 pages

Symbolic interactionism

part 4|192 pages

Late critical criminologies and new directions

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 4.1|4 pages

Anarchist criminology

chapter 4.2|4 pages

Chaos criminology

chapter 4.4|5 pages

Convict criminology

chapter 4.5|5 pages

Corporate crime

chapter 4.6|5 pages

Crimmigration

chapter 4.7|4 pages

Critical race theory

chapter 4.8|5 pages

Cultural criminology

chapter 4.9|5 pages

Deviant knowledge

chapter 4.10|4 pages

Emotions

chapter 4.11|4 pages

Environmental justice and victimology

chapter 4.12|4 pages

Financial crime

chapter 4.13|5 pages

Genocide and ecocide

chapter 4.14|4 pages

Globalization

chapter 4.15|4 pages

Gothic criminology

chapter 4.16|4 pages

Green criminology

chapter 4.17|5 pages

Hate crime

chapter 4.18|5 pages

Indigenous criminology

chapter 4.20|5 pages

Intersectionality

chapter 4.22|4 pages

Narrative criminology

chapter 4.23|4 pages

(Neo)-conservative criminology

chapter 4.24|5 pages

Neoliberalism

chapter 4.25|4 pages

Organized crime

chapter 4.26|5 pages

Patriarchy and crime

chapter 4.27|5 pages

Postcolonial criminology

chapter 4.30|5 pages

Psychosocial criminology

chapter 4.31|5 pages

Public criminology

chapter 4.32|5 pages

Queer criminology

chapter 4.33|4 pages

Social harm/zemiology

chapter 4.34|5 pages

Southern theory

chapter 4.36|5 pages

State crime

chapter 4.37|5 pages

State-corporate crime

chapter 4.38|5 pages

Ultra-realism

chapter 4.39|5 pages

Victimology

chapter 4.40|4 pages

Visual criminology

chapter 4.41|4 pages

White-collar crime

part 5|83 pages

Punishment and security

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 5.1|5 pages

Abolitionism

chapter 5.2|4 pages

Antisocial behaviour

chapter 5.3|4 pages

Community corrections

chapter 5.4|4 pages

Community policing

chapter 5.5|4 pages

Decarceration

chapter 5.6|4 pages

Desistance

chapter 5.7|4 pages

Fear of crime

chapter 5.8|4 pages

Governmentality

chapter 5.9|4 pages

Incapacitation

chapter 5.10|4 pages

The new penology

chapter 5.11|4 pages

Panopticism

chapter 5.12|4 pages

Penology

chapter 5.13|4 pages

Recidivism

chapter 5.14|5 pages

Reintegrative shaming

chapter 5.15|5 pages

Restorative justice

chapter 5.16|5 pages

Retribution

chapter 5.17|4 pages

Security and counter-security

chapter 5.18|4 pages

Social control

chapter 5.19|4 pages

Surveillance

part 6|52 pages

Geographies of crime

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 6.1|4 pages

Broken windows

chapter 6.2|4 pages

Community safety

chapter 6.3|4 pages

Crime science

chapter 6.4|4 pages

Cybercrime

chapter 6.5|4 pages

Defensible space

chapter 6.6|5 pages

Opportunity theory

chapter 6.7|5 pages

Risk

chapter 6.8|4 pages

Routine activity theory

chapter 6.9|4 pages

Rural criminology

chapter 6.10|5 pages

Space, place and crime

chapter 6.11|6 pages

Spatial crime modelling and analysis