1st Edition

Comparative Criminology A Textbook

By Hermann Mannheim Copyright 1965
    452 Pages
    by Routledge

    452 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is Volume I of fifteen in a series on the Sociology of Law and Criminology. Originally published in 1965, this textbook is part one of two, meant for students and deals more fully than usual with such fundamental matters as the very concepts of crime and criminology and especially with the highly complex relationship between crime, the criminal law and certain burning moral issues of our time. It also includes several chapters on the methodsof research used in criminological and penological investigations.

    VOLUME ONE: PART ONE: INTRODUCTORY THE NATURE, SCOPE AND OBJECTS OF CRIMINOLOGY CRIME: ITS MEANING IN RELATION TO LAW, RELIGION, CUSTOM AND MORALS PART TWO: RESEARCH AND METHODOLOGY RESEARCH PART THREE: FACTORS AND CAUSES RELATED TO CRIME PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS Section One: The Physical Side of Crime 11 PHYSICAL-ANTHROPOLOGICAL-BIOLOGICAL ASPECTS I: GEOGRAPHY AND PHYSICAL HEALTH 12 ANTHROPOLOGICAL-BIOLOGICAL ASPECTS II: THE POSITIVIST SCHOOL 13 POST-LOMBROSIAN DEVELOPMENTS. HEREDITY. TWINS AND GLANDS. THE CRIMINO-BIOLOGICAL SCHOOL 14 MENTAL DISORDERS I: PSYCHOSES. ALCOHOLISM AND DRUG ADDICTION 15 MENTAL DISORDERS II: NEUROSES AND PSYCHOPATHY MENTAL DEFICIENCY AND ITS OPPOSITE 16 THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE NORMAL OFFENDER 17 THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF PSYCHD-ANALYSIS. FREUD, ADLER, JUNG 18 THE CRIMINAL LAW AND THE MENTALLY ABNORMAL OFFENDER

    Biography

    Hermann Mannheim, Criminology, University of London