1st Edition

Comparative Criminology A Textbook

By Hermann Mannheim Copyright 1965
    384 Pages
    by Routledge

    384 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is Volume II of fifteen in a series on the Sociology of Law and Criminology. Originally published in 1965, this textbook is part two 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 methods of research used in criminological and penological investigations.

    VOLUME TWO: PART FOUR: THE SOCIOLOGY OF CRIME 19 OUR CRIMINOGENIC SOCIETY I: A PRELIMINARY SURVEY 20 OUR CRIMINOGENIC SOCIETY 11: SOCIAL CLASS AND CLASS CONFLICT: THEIR CRIMINOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS 21 OUR CRIMINOGENIC SOCIETY m: WHITE COLLAR AND OTHER 'NON-WORKING-CLASS' CRIMES 22 CLASS-ORIENTED THEORIES OF CRIMINAL SOCIOLOGY. IN PARTICULAR: ANOMIE AND THE CRIMINAL SUBCULTURE 23 NON-CLASS-ORIENTED THEORIES. IN PARTICULAR: THE ECOLOGICAL THEORY. CULTURE CONFLICT. RACIAL AND OTHER MINORITIES. ECONOMIC FACTORS. THE EFFECT OF WARS AND OTHER CRISES.DIFFERENTIAL ASSOCIATION 24 GROUPS AS FACTORS IN CRIME I: A. PRIMARY GROUPS: FAMILY AND SCHOOL. 25 GROUPS AS FACTORS IN CRIME 11: B. ASSOCIATIONS IN CRIME: OCCASIONAL CO-OPERATION OF A FEW. THE CROWD. ORGANIZED CRIME: ADULT AND ADOLESCENT GANGS. THE VICTIM OF CRIME 26 AGE AND SEX FACTORS IN CRIME

    Biography

    Hermann Mannheim, Criminology, University of London