1st Edition

Heavy Business Commercial Burglary and Robbery

By Dermot Walsh Copyright 1986
    202 Pages
    by Routledge

    202 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1986. Based on interviews with men in prison, this study takes two groups of convicted criminals: men convicted of robbery, and, for comparison, a sample of men convicted for breaking into commercial premises. It focuses on how victims are chosen, the decision-making processes involved, and the characteristics of those selected and those rejected as unsuitable potential victim material. Also described are the pattern of the crime (time, place, gain), and the ways in which people become involved in it. Allowing several convicted robbers describe in their own way why they did it and what they thought and felt about it, Dermot Walsh presents a disquieting picture, in which robbery appears to be an attractive proposition to several different groups of men, facing quite different circumstances, and for different reasons.

    Preface  1. Burglars: Personnel  2. Burglaries: Events  3. Robbers: Personnel  4. Robberies: Events  5. Robberies: Victims and Aftermath  6. Conclusions.  Notes and references

    Biography

    Dermot Walsh was lecturer in sociology at the University of Exeter.