Academic literature on the topic 'Historical Criminology'

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Journal articles on the topic "Historical Criminology"

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Churchill, David. "Towards Historical Criminology." Crime, Histoire & Sociétés, Vol. 21, n°2 (December 31, 2017): 379–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/chs.2056.

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Yeomans, Henry. "Historical context and the criminological imagination: Towards a three-dimensional criminology." Criminology & Criminal Justice 19, no. 4 (November 11, 2018): 456–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1748895818812995.

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It is widely claimed that criminologists should exercise a ‘criminological imagination’ by connecting individual experiences of crime to social structures and historical context. Despite such claims, criminology is often guilty of a ‘presentism’ that sees the past neglected, ignored or misunderstood. So why and how should criminological research be contextualized historically? This article identifies and examines the functions and forms of historical research within criminology. The article’s significance rests partly in the formulation of an original matrix of forms and functions and its practical utility as a framework for supporting historical contextualization. Additionally, it is ultimately intended that this framework will help construct a more historically sensitive criminology, as attuned to historical context as it is to individual lives and social structures. The creation of this three-dimensional criminology would entail a fuller realization of the criminological imagination, thus significantly enhancing the analytical and socially transformative properties of criminological research broadly.
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Guzik-Makaruk, Ewa M., and Emil W. Pływaczewski. "Polish Criminology from Historical and Current Perspective." Internal Security 11, no. 2 (February 17, 2020): 85–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0013.8208.

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The article on Polish Criminology from Historical and Current Perspective is divided into four parts. There are: Introduction — historical Perspective, Białystok School of Criminology, National Forum of Young Criminologists, International Centre for Criminological Research and Expertise. In the final part of article the authors stressed, that activities of Białystok School of Criminology have much more broad-spectrum, than described. The International Centre of Criminological Research and Expertise conducts interdisciplinary basic research and development works serving both internal security and justice. The Centre aims at entering into cooperation with the State authorities, private sector entities and NGOs, within the country and abroad, along with preparation of expert opinions at their request. It will also conduct publishing and popularizing activities. The representatives of Białystok School of Criminology are also members of such scientific initiatives like: the Academic Forum — Legal and Medical Aspects of Human Health and the Academic Forum — Podlasie — Warmia and Mazury. As a result of these initiatives, in May 2015 there was the international conference Legal, Criminological and medical aspects of social exclusion attended by over 200 people. The scholars from Białystok School of Criminology are open to cooperation, especially of international character. The broad spectrum of research on issues of science criminology in many institutions, centres and academic institutions is an eloquent proof of the dynamic development of criminology in Poland.
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Zhegalov, Evgeny A. "Moral and Historical School of Criminalistics." Juridical Science and Practice 16, no. 2 (2020): 82–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/2542-0410-2020-16-2-82-86.

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The article considers ways to overcome corruption in the investigation and inquiry bodies by improving the course of criminology and establishing and implementing a moral and historical school. Named origins and pioneers of the ethical-historical school of criminology, given their views on the quality of justice investigator from the psychological side: integrity, strong moral convictions, skill in complex conflict situations, to remain master of their feelings and aspirations, to remain faithful to the moral principles of intolerance to evil, the pursuit of justice, ethical behavior in relations with the suspect, accused, witness, excluding physical or mental violence. It is argued that the communication of the investigator with the accused should not be based on deception and immorality; in such a profession necessary moral fortitude, and perseverance of the investigator in an atmosphere of total temptation and corruption, the ability to effectively resist illegal pressure, selfless dedication in any environment, selflessness, and humanism. The abovementioned application of the content of ethical-historical school of criminology, such as: the development and adoption of a code of ethics for CSI, the CSI oath, improvement or adoption of such codes for various categories of employees of law enforcement bodies and subjects of law enforcement; the implementation of the educational process on criminology interactive exploration of film documents on the history of the sections and fields of criminology, political processes, the Nuremberg trials, investigation and conviction of Nazi criminals and their accomplices, the investigation of disasters, terrorist attacks, the death of political and cultural figures, investigation of resonant crimes from different eras and in recent years, return to the detailed development and implementation in the training of lawyers clear criteria of admissibility of tactics; creation of self-regulating communities in state and law enforcement agencies that can be contacted in cases of corruption pressure. Scientific results demonstrate an extremely low knowledge of the recent history of criminology and the Nuremberg trials by law school graduates. The results are new and have not been published before.
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Peter, Emah Saviour. "Historical criminology: the interdisciplinary divergence and convergence." Foresic Research & Criminology International Journal 6, no. 6 (November 28, 2018): 445–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.15406/frcij.2018.06.00242.

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Bertrand, Marie-Andrée. "Perspectives traditionnelles et perspectives critiques en criminologie." Théories et recherches 19, no. 1 (August 16, 2005): 97–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/017228ar.

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Is critical criminology “passée”? Have its fathers, the British and American sociologists who wrote Critical Criminology in the mid seventies exhaust its potential interest and flavour? It would be too bad because critical criminology never really took place. There never was a serious and rigorous attempt at unfolding the historical, epistemological, socio-political roots of the discipline, a critical look at it that took nothing for granted. Reminding the readers of the very serious and highly publicised debate around Traditional and Critical Theory in the late thirties launched by the sociologists and philosophers of the Frankfurt School, the author shows that, far from being outdated, critical theory is of the utmost practicality in criminology, even more so because its founding fathers have taken, since, a less partisan and doctrinaire view of it. The applications of their intellectual and socio-political orientations to criminology are numerous, calling for a serious socio-historical analysis of the discipline and of its academic origins that should throw light on where it is going and its impotence at developing a paradigm.
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Lawrence, Paul. "Historical criminology and the explanatory power of the past." Criminology & Criminal Justice 19, no. 4 (August 16, 2018): 493–511. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1748895818794237.

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To what extent can the past ‘explain’ the present? This deceptively simple question lies at the heart of historical criminology (research which incorporates historical primary sources while addressing present-day debates and practices in the criminal justice field). This article seeks first to categorize the ways in which criminologists have used historical data thus far, arguing that they are most commonly deployed to ‘problematize’ the contemporary rather than to ‘explain’ it. The article then interrogates the reticence of criminologists to attribute explicative power in relation to the present to historical data. Finally, it proposes the adoption of long time-frame historical research methods, outlining three advantages which would accrue from this: the identification and analysis of historical continuities; a more nuanced, shared understanding of micro/macro change over time in relation to criminal justice; and a method for identifying and analysing instances of historical recurrence, particularly in perceptions and discourses around crime and justice.
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Gilsinan, James F. "Public policy and criminology: An historical and philosophical reassessment." Justice Quarterly 8, no. 2 (June 1, 1991): 201–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07418829100091001.

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Stamatel, Janet P. "Incorporating Socio‐Historical Context into Quantitative Cross‐National Criminology." International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice 30, no. 2 (September 2006): 177–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01924036.2006.9678752.

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Maltsev, Oleg. "HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE KILLER PSYCHOMODEL: PRAXEOLOGICAL ANALYSIS." International Humanitarian Journal – Sophia Prima: dialogue of eternal recurrence 2, no. 1(3) (2020): 48–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.34170/2707-370x-2020-48-56.

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The problem of the identity of the offender (the one who attacks, robs and\or murders) is one of the most complex in criminology. The individual is a key element of crime in general and of a specific crime in particular, since it has subjective causes which, when they interact with the environment, lead to the commission of the crime. If it comes to killing contract, whether it’s for hire or money, it’s more complicated than that. The purpose of the following scientific exploration is to represent a systematic review of the socio-historical background of so-called killer psychomodel - the phenomenon yet neither revealed, nor scientifically thoroughly researched. One of the innovative approaches to developing this psychomodel is that the killer (or hired assassin) is praxeologically viewed from a professional perspective (i.e., who is killer regarding ‘killer’ as a profession). Ontological analysis of the ‘killer’ phenomenon is provided regarding the philosophical dispositions of such a person, the psychological background of such an individual, his specific living conditions, the special conditions created by the organizers aiming these people to continue their ‘killer’ routine activities throughout their lives. Keywords: psychomodel, prototypology, criminology, memory studies, killer as a profession, killer, psychological portrait.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Historical Criminology"

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Marsh, Ian. "Conceptualising media representations of crime and justice within historical and contemporary criminology." Thesis, University of Sunderland, 2014. http://sure.sunderland.ac.uk/5100/.

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This doctoral thesis is intended to demonstrate that my research, scholarship and publications have made a significant and coherent contribution to the development of criminology as a popular discipline in the higher education sector. My growing interest and research into the relationship between the media and crime and criminal justice is reflected in the structuring of this thesis, with the major substantive sections being examples of my work in this area (chapters 2 to 8). This interest has also been driven by an essentially realist position and belief that crime is a real issue for both people and society. This submission consists of a brief contextualizing introduction to my research, scholarship, writing and publication in relation to my own career in higher education and to the development of the discipline of criminology plus a number of chapters containing specific examples from my publications. The final section continues from the commentary provided in the introduction, reviewing the body of my work in relation to my academic career generally as it moved from sociology to criminology as that discipline emerged and grew within the higher education sector. Here I have attempted to summarise my theoretical stance; this is not a straightforward task as I have been involved in scholarship, research, writing and publishing in sociology and criminology for well over thirty years, as well as teaching and developing courses and programmes at undergraduate and postgraduate levels; and it is difficult to step outside of this work to envisage it as an academic journey. Nevertheless, I feel in recent years that my work has come to represent almost a complete circle, or at the least to have a recognisable path and pattern, which is really the impetus behind this submission. The submission is based around my more recent scholarship and writing on the media, crime and criminal justice; this work is a development and to some extent culmination of my academic career as a researcher, scholar, lecturer and writer. Although I have written quite widely on social theory, sociology and particularly criminology and criminal justice, my more recent research and writing has been to examine and analyse the importance of the media’s representation of crime and justice. In doing this, and in the body of my writing and publishing, there has been what might be termed a theoretical style or thread which I feel indicates a certain coherence and also provides a cogent case for this doctoral submission. Overall, my argument is that my work generally and as evidenced in this submission particularly, has helped to conceptualise how media representations have played a key role in helping develop a greater understanding of crime, criminals and justice. Furthermore, and while adopting an objective and critical approach, how such representations deserve to be accepted as real and therefore legitimate and important areas of examination. I have tried to argue that the academic study of crime and justice, in all its forms, should take account of the importance of the media, both historically and throughout its development, in helping an understanding of the extent and form of, and also the explanations for, crime and the control of it.
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Bretherick, Diana. "The Devil's Daughters : criminology and the female offender in historical crime fiction." Thesis, University of Southampton, 2017. https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/415840/.

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This PhD thesis consists of two sections, each supported by a bibliography. The critical commentary reflects on the research and writing process I embarked upon for my doctoral novel and how I drew upon criminological theory and research to inform it. Also examined is how contemporary writers of crime fiction might best use the resources offered by criminological research. I chose to write a historical rather than contemporary novel about criminology to explore the influence that historical ideas about crime might have on the way we perceive it today; to examine, challenge and critique dominant nineteenth-century theories about the female offender and their present day legacy, specifically by creating strong female characters including plausible female villains and basing my characterization on the history and theory of criminology; and to look at the beginnings of the modern ‘scientific’ approach to crime, as typified by one of my central real life characters, the ‘father’ of modern criminology, Cesare Lombroso (1835-1909). My intention was to use Lombroso’s second major study, La Donna Deliquente (or Criminal Woman) with a view to considering how criminology can be used in writing crime fiction. Drawing on relevant examples from both criminological literature and fiction, the critical commentary begins by discussing Lombroso’s ideas together with the scientific and cultural context of those ideas and their legacy and their influence on my writing of the novel. Lombroso’s work and that of his contemporaries is then further explored through the representations of the female offender in nineteenth-century fiction and historical crime fiction set in the period that I drew on when researching the novel. The writing of The Devil’s Daughters is then examined, focusing on the roles of its female characters and how criminological theories informed my own creative process. I conclude by discussing examples of criminological theories that have featured in contemporary crime fiction and making suggestions of how they might be drawn on in the future, thus enriching both forms. The Devil’s Daughters, my doctoral novel, set in Turin in 1888, is a historical crime thriller that describes an investigation into a series of murders of young women. I introduce the work of Cesare Lombroso and his assistant Salvatore Ottolenghi (also a character in the novel), and make extensive use of Lombroso’s work in framing the story including quotations at the beginning of each chapter. As well as a young Scottish hero, there are several strong female characters who play dominant roles in the narrative, either as detectives or perpetrators thus challenging late nineteenth century attitudes towards female offenders.
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de, Pretis Maura. "Women, politics and political violence in Northern Ireland : a study in historical feminist criminology." Thesis, University of Bristol, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.368719.

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Rollins, Mikael. "Psychopathy and Narcoterrorism| A Comparative Historical Analysis of Pablo Escobar and "El Chapo" Guzman." Thesis, California Baptist University, 2017. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10286826.

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This study analyzes the psychosocial aspects of narcoterrorism reflected by two of the most notorious drug lords in recent Columbian and Mexican history: Pablo Escobar and Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman. It questions whether the psychological factors which influenced and shaped their criminal identities are, in fact, based entirely on psychoanalytic theory (narcissism, borderline personality, etc.) or if they are also products of cultural ideology. This research examines the social and political concept of “narcoculture” as the main premise to view the context in which criminal psychopathy may be fostered and developed. As part of a historical analysis of the narcoculture phenomenon, Escobar and “El Chapo" will be analyzed, diagnosed and compared in order to clarify the psychological and cultural parallels that reflect a distinct psychological profile. By referencing psychological, social, political, and cultural studies, the aim of this project is to reveal specific psychological characteristics as correlates of extreme and violent criminal behavior.

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Lin, Jonathan. "The historical development of criminological thought and theory as a series of successive periods." Thesis, McGill University, 2012. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=110732.

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In this thesis I examine the historical development of criminological thought and theory. I argue that criminology's history generally follows the structure of history advanced by Thomas Kuhn in his The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. As such, I argue that the history of criminological development is a history of successive periods, punctuated by periods of crisis. Specifically, criminology's historical development is characterized by four successive periods, which are as follows: (1) a pre-paradigm period in which at least three different paradigms exist, in competition for dominance in the field; (2) a paradigm period characterized by the dominance and universal acceptance of positivism by the scientific community of criminologists; (3) a period of crisis in which critical criminology, an alternative paradigm, successfully challenged the positivist paradigm and pushed the discipline into a state of crisis; and (4) a period characterized by, on the one hand, the triumph of the positivist paradigm over its challengers, and on the other hand, by a period in which alternative paradigms, confined to the fringes, nevertheless incessantly challenge the foundations and first principles of the positivism paradigm. My one caveat is that we view the fourth historical period of criminology as a stage rather than what Kuhn terms a paradigm. Stage is a term invoked in order to extend the limits of Kuhn's model and to develop it further.
Dans cette thèse, j'examine le développement historique de la pensée et de la théorie criminologique. Je soutiens que l'histoire de la criminologie suit généralement la structure de l'histoire avancée par Thomas Kuhn dans son livre La Structure des Révolutions Scientifiques. Je soutiens que l'histoire du développement criminologique est une histoire de périodes successives, ponctuée par des périodes de crise. Plus précisément, nous pouvons identifier quatre périodes successives le développement historique de la criminologie: (1) une période de pré-paradigme dans lequel au moins trois paradigmes différents sont en concurrence pour la domination dans le domaine; (2) une période de paradigme caractérisé par la domination et l'acceptation universelle du positivisme par la communauté scientifique des criminologues; (3) une période de crise dans laquelle la criminologie critique, en tant que paradigme alternatif, a remis en question le paradigme positiviste et poussé la discipline dans un état de crise, et (4) une période caractérisée par, d'une part, le triomphe du paradigme positiviste sur ses concurrents, et d'autre part, par une période durant laquelle des paradigmes alternatifs, confinés a la périphérie, mais ne cessant néanmoins de remettre en question les fondements et les principes premiers du paradigme du positivisme. La problématique que j'identifie est de dire nous voyons la quatrième période historique de la criminologie comme une étape au lieu de la voir comme ce que Kuhn a appelé un paradigme. Le terme 'étape' est invoqué afin d'étendre les limites du modèle de Kuhn et de le développer davantage.
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Payne, Tamika L. "Domestic Violence Recidivism: Restorative Justice Intervention Programs for First-Time Domestic Violence Offenders." ScholarWorks, 2017. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/3819.

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Domestic violence impacts millions of Americans annually and, in spite of the use of rehabilitative programs, recidivism in domestic violence continues to be more likely than in any other offense. To date, batterer intervention programs (BIPs) have not proven to be consistently impactful in reducing recidivism in cases of domestic violence. The purpose of this quasi-experimental, quantitative study was to examine differences in recidivism for first-time male domestic violence offenders who have participated in a BIP and a more recently developed alternative: victim-offender mediation (VOM). The theories of restorative justice and reintegrative shaming frame this study to determine if offenders take accountability for their actions and face the victim in mediation, there can be a reduction in recidivism. Archival data from records of first-time male, domestic violence offenders, between the ages of 18 and 30, who participated in either a VOM or BIP in a county in the Midwest were examined for recidivism 24-months postintervention, and analyzed with an ANCOVA analysis while controlling for age. The findings revealed no significant difference in recidivism for first-time male offenders 24-months post participation in a BIP or a VOM intervention while controlling for age F (1,109) =.081, p = .777. The findings provide support for the notion that restorative justice interventions may be an additional intervention used in cases of domestic violence deemed appropriate for the intervention. The findings from this study can add to the body of research examining interventions to address the high recidivism in cases of domestic violence, which impacts victims, offenders, and communities.
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Olatunji, Sunday O. "Understanding the Perceptions and Decision-Making Behaviors of First Responders in the Context of Traumatic Events and PTSD." ScholarWorks, 2018. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/5924.

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Previous researchers have indicated that first responders are in an ever-changing environment, and unfortunately, the prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among first responders is increasing. This study sought to better understand first responders' perceptions of emergency preparedness protocols and training, as well as the prevalence of PTSD. This study also examined first responders' thoughts, decision making processes, and protective actions information, communications necessary during situations of emergency preparedness for traumatic events, and how PTSD impacted this process. A sample of 16 first responders of various ages was recruited for the purpose of this study. The participants were made up of firefighters, police officers, and emergency medical services. This study drew from protection-motivation theory, the theory of planned behavior, sensemaking theory, and decision making theory. The researcher used a 15-question, semi-structured interview. Interpretive phenomenological analysis was used for qualitative analysis. The following themes emerged: (a) emergency preparedness is perceived as critical; (b) emergency preparedness is perceived as inadequate; (c) first responders are unlikely to seek treatment; (d) the development of psychological disorders is perceived as likely; (e) there can be hesitation or feelings of "freezing" during emergencies; (f) there can be numbness and distraction during emergencies; and (g) first responder training helps to make decision making automatic. Implications, suggestions for future research are discussed, and the need for additional studies in first responder training that consider the location of first-responders as well as the need for first responders' trainings to promote positive social change.
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Lang, Kenneth. "Valuation of Ex-Offender Motivation for Participation in a Restorative Justice Praxis." ScholarWorks, 2019. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/6599.

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Restorative justice (RJ) is an emerging concept of justice in the American penal system that seeks equality for all stakeholders involved. While RJ is vastly under researched--especially concerning RJ and violent offenses--current studies have only focused on determining victims' motivations for participating in RJ. Determining and evaluating offender motivations for participating in RJ remains unexplored. The purpose of this study was to explore the possible motivations of criminal offenders and their willingness to participate in RJ. The social construction framework and the narrative policy framework were employed to understand the social context. A mixed-method approach was used that began with a semistructured interview of 12 ex-offenders and concluded with all the participants completing a brief questionnaire capturing their demographical information. Participants were previously convicted criminal offenders (i.e., 7 nonviolent and 5 violent) who were no longer under the authority of the judiciary system. The semistructured interviews were analyzed qualitatively and identified six motivations: (a) concern for their reputation, (b) understanding the impact of their crime, (c) explanation of actions, (d) making the victim whole, (e) apologizing to the victim, and (f) apathy towards the victim. MANOVA analysis revealed no significance difference between the groups, except with Motive 3 (explanation of actions) and whether the participant had siblings. However, observed power for this analysis varied at low intervals where only 12 participants were involved. Regardless, the results of this study could have a significant impact on positive social change in RJ because the data informs practitioners how to facilitate RJ interventions better, bringing about efficacy with offenders.
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Rocha, Thiago de Oliveira. "A PENA, A EXECUÇÃO PENAL E O SISTEMA CAPITALISTA: UMA APROXIMAÇÃO NECESSÁRIA." Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Goiás, 2015. http://localhost:8080/tede/handle/tede/3448.

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Submitted by admin tede (tede@pucgoias.edu.br) on 2016-09-05T13:17:06Z No. of bitstreams: 1 THIAGO DE OLIVEIRA ROCHA.pdf: 874826 bytes, checksum: a6977953c6b44feb78cab2c6db92eba6 (MD5)
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The dissertation talks about the necessity of doing a reflection about the criminal enforcement out of merely dogmatic delimitations, in other words, there is a necessity of doing analysis of the criminal enforcement and its relation with the capitalism, essencially how the production’s relations influence to make decisions in a criminal system enforcement. Such connection has been estudied firmely based on Critical Criminology and developed in three chapters. On Chapter I, there is a demonstration of the punishment by a historical view with theirs transformation’s results. On Chapter II, there is an approach about the historical materialism in the same way of the critical view by Kichheimer and Rusche that examine the prision system related to class conflict and its relation with the capitalist system.At last, the chapter III shows a criticism about the jail as a way to make the prisioner to be reintegrated to the capitalism by the relations between the punitive system and the capitalism system based on Michel Foucault, Melossi and Pavarini reference works. increments
A dissertação versa sobre a necessidade de se refletir a execução penal fora de contornos puramente dogmáticos, ou seja, requer a análise da execução penal e sua relação com o capitalismo, essencialmente sobre como as relações de produção influenciam na tomada de decisões em um sistema de execução penal. Tal relação é explorada com base na Criminologia Crítica e desenvolvida em três capítulos. No capítulo I, há a demonstração da pena sob uma perspectiva histórica com as suas consequentes transformações. No capítulo II, existe a abordagem sobre o materialismo histórico nos termos da abordagem crítica inaugurada em Kichheimer e Rusche que analisam o sistema carcerário no contexto da luta de classes e sua consequente relação com o sistema capitalista. Por último, o capítulo III apresenta uma crítica ao cárcere como meio socialização do preso para o capitalismo por meio das relações entre o sistema punitivo e o sistema capitalista fundamentadas nas obras de Michel Foucault e Melossi e Pavarini.
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Clarke, Fern H. "Black Male Probationers' Perceptions of Juvenile Probation Officers' Role in Reducing Recidivism." ScholarWorks, 2017. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/4207.

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The high recidivism rate of Black male juvenile offenders is a problem in the United States that continues to be of great concern. Probation has gained popularity as being a means of addressing and reducing the high recidivism rates of juvenile offenders. However, there is a lack of research regarding Black male juvenile probationers' perceptions of their probation officers' role in reducing their recidivism. This study examined the following: a) the predictive relationships between Black male probationers' perceptions of their probation officers, their perceptions of the probation officers' job, and their recidivism within 3 years of being place on probation; and (b) Black male probationers' perceptions of their probation officers, their perceptions of the probation officers' job, and their ratings of the probation officer's effectiveness in deterring their recidivism. Ecological systems theory was used as the theoretical foundation for guiding this research. Results from a logistic regression analysis showed that Black male probationers' perceptions of their probation officers and the job of their probation officers did not predict their recidivism. The study has implications for social change because the results provide empirical evidence regarding Black male probationer's perceptions of their probation officers and recidivism. Human services professionals, leaders in the criminal justice field, and policy makers could use findings from the study to advocate for the need to develop training programs for probation officers that foster positive relationship building between probationers and probation officers. The positive relationships may subsequently bring social change by reducing recidivism among Black juvenile male offenders.
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Books on the topic "Historical Criminology"

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Leps, Ando. Criminology in Estonia: Research and teaching in a historical perspective. Tallinn: Estonian State Police, 1993.

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1966-, Lu Hong, ed. Punishment: A comparative historical perspective. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2005.

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Nocella, Anthony J., and Mark Seis. Classic Writings in Anarchist Criminology: A Historical Dismantling of Punishment and Domination. Edited by Anthony J. Nocella, Mark Seis, and Jeff Shantz. Chico, USA: AK Press Distribution, 2020.

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Baggoley, Martin. Scottish Murders. New York: The History Press, 2013.

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John, Williams. Silver threads: A life alone. London: BBC Books, 1994.

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Brown, Robert P. Some gave all: A history of Baltimore police officers killed in the line of duty 1808-2007. Baltimore: Fraternal Order of Police Memorial Fund, 2007.

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Deflem, Mathieu. Policing world society: Historical foundations of international police cooperation. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.

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8

Dugan, Mark. The Grey Fox: The true story of Bill Miner, last of the old-time bandits. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1992.

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9

Heritage crime: Progress, prospects and prevention. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.

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10

Historical Criminology. Taylor & Francis Group, 2021.

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Book chapters on the topic "Historical Criminology"

1

Knepper, Paul. "Historical Criminology." In Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 2081–87. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5690-2_672.

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Churchill, David, Henry Yeomans, and Iain Channing. "Historical thinking." In Historical Criminology, 19–51. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429196911-2.

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Churchill, David, Henry Yeomans, and Iain Channing. "Conclusion." In Historical Criminology, 148–65. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429196911-6.

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Churchill, David, Henry Yeomans, and Iain Channing. "Pasts and futures." In Historical Criminology, 118–47. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429196911-5.

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Churchill, David, Henry Yeomans, and Iain Channing. "Theory and concepts." In Historical Criminology, 90–117. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429196911-4.

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Churchill, David, Henry Yeomans, and Iain Channing. "Time and method." In Historical Criminology, 52–89. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429196911-3.

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Churchill, David, Henry Yeomans, and Iain Channing. "Introduction." In Historical Criminology, 1–18. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429196911-1.

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Georgoulas, Stratos. "A Dialogue with Historical Criminology." In The Origins of Radical Criminology, Volume III, 183–200. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-05925-4_10.

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Natali, Lorenzo. "The Contribution of Green Criminology to the Analysis of Historical Pollution." In Historical Pollution, 21–55. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-56937-6_2.

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Dwyer, Angela, and Stephen Tomsen. "The Past Is the Past? The Impossibility of Erasure of Historical LGBTIQ Policing." In Queering Criminology, 36–53. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137513342_3.

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Conference papers on the topic "Historical Criminology"

1

Markov, Vladimir Petrovich. "TRENDS IN THE TRANSFORMATION OF CRIME DURING THE FORMATION OF THE INFORMATION SOCIETY." In Themed collection of papers from Foreign International Scientific Conference «Trends in the development of science and Global challenges» Ьу HNRI «National development» in cooperation with AFP. June 2022. Crossref, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37539/man3.2022.25.76.009.

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Abstract:
It is important for criminology and criminology to understand the trends that characterize the changing forms of crime in the information society. The article attempts to determine the qualitative parameters of crime by fixing historical stages. The author identifies the main trends in the psychological characteristics of crime and the ways of committing crimes for each stage. Leading trends are highlighted for each period.
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