Criminology

Höfundur Tim Newburn

Útgefandi Taylor & Francis

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9781138643123

Útgáfa 3

Útgáfuár 2017

9.890 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Detaild contents
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Acronyms
  • Part 1 Understanding crime and criminology
  • 1 Understanding crime and criminology
  • What is criminology?
  • An interdisciplinary subject
  • Defining criminology
  • Understanding crime
  • Crime and the criminal law
  • Crime as a social construct
  • Historical variation
  • Criminology in Britain
  • Further reading
  • 2 Crime and punishment in history
  • Introduction
  • Emergence of a modern criminal justice system
  • Policing
  • The ‘new police’
  • Resistance and reform
  • Into the twentieth century
  • The victim and prosecution
  • Formalisation of the prosecution process
  • The courts
  • Decline of the profit motive
  • Punishment
  • Capital punishment
  • Transportation
  • Imprisonment
  • Probation
  • Crime and violence in history
  • Levels of crime
  • Perceptions of crime
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 3 Crime data and crime trends
  • Introduction
  • Measuring crime
  • Official statistics
  • England and Wales: Criminal Statistics
  • United States: Uniform Crime Reports
  • Assessing official statistics
  • Impact of legislation
  • Understanding ‘attrition’
  • Limitations of official statistics
  • Victimisation surveys
  • The Crime Survey for England and Wales
  • Local crime surveys
  • Other victimisation surveys
  • Assessing victimisation surveys
  • Comparing official statistics and victimisation surveys
  • Crime trends
  • Data on offenders
  • Self-report studies
  • Assessing the self-report method
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 4 Crime and the media
  • Introduction
  • Academic study of the media
  • Media representations of crime
  • Newsworthiness
  • The crime content in the media
  • Violent crime in the news
  • Are the media criminogenic?
  • Media effects
  • Media and fear of crime
  • Moral panics
  • Mods and rockers
  • Drug use and deviancy amplification
  • Mugging
  • Criticisms of moral panic theory
  • Policing and the media
  • The relationship between the police and the media
  • The representation of policing
  • Crime and the internet
  • Policing cybercrime
  • Representing terror
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 5 The politics of crime and its control
  • Introduction
  • The advent of ‘penal welfarism’
  • End of the first bipartisan consensus
  • Managerialism
  • Centralisation
  • The politics of crime and punishment in the USA
  • The ‘war on drugs’
  • Willie Horton and Michael Dukakis
  • Penal populism in the UK
  • Coalition and post-Coalition politics
  • Conclusion
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • Part 2 Understanding crime: theories and concepts
  • 6 Classicism and positivism
  • Introduction
  • Classical criminology
  • Beccaria
  • Jeremy Bentham
  • The impact of classicism
  • Positivism and criminology
  • Defining positivism
  • Cesare Lombroso
  • Ferri and Garofalo
  • Charles Goring
  • Somatyping
  • The impact of positivism
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 7 Biological positivism
  • Introduction
  • Genetic factors
  • Eugenics and ‘feeble-mindedness’
  • Twin studies
  • Adoption
  • Chromosomal anomalies
  • Genetics and offending
  • Biochemical factors
  • Central nervous system
  • ADHD and brain dysfunction
  • Neurotransmitters
  • Laterality
  • Autonomic nervous system
  • Hormones/testosterone
  • Nutrition
  • Assessing biological positivism
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 8 Psychological positivism
  • Introduction
  • Psychoanalysis and crime
  • Bowlby and ‘maternal deprivation’
  • Learning theories
  • Differential association
  • Operant learning
  • Social learning theory
  • Rational choice
  • Routine activity theory
  • Cognitive theories
  • Yochelson and Samenow
  • Piaget, Kohlberg, moral development and offending
  • Eysenck’s biosocial theory
  • Intelligence and offending
  • Assessing psychological positivism
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 9 Durkheim, anomie and strain
  • Introduction
  • Durkheim and criminology
  • Durkheim and social change
  • Durkheim, suicide and anomie
  • Assessing Durkheim
  • Merton and anomie
  • Anomie and the ‘American dream’
  • Assessing Merton’s anomie theory
  • Later strain theory
  • Cloward and Ohlin
  • General strain theory
  • Messner and Rosenfeld
  • Assessing strain theory
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 10 The Chicago School, subcultures and cultural criminology
  • Introduction
  • The Chicago School
  • Social ecology
  • Chicago School and crime
  • The zonal hypothesis
  • Shaw and McKay: cultural transmission
  • Chicago Area Project
  • Differential association
  • Differential reinforcement
  • Assessing the Chicago School
  • Cultures and subcultures
  • Albert Cohen
  • Cloward and Ohlin
  • David Matza
  • Subcultural theory
  • American subcultural theory
  • British subcultural theory
  • Assessing subcultural theory
  • Cultural criminology
  • Crime as culture
  • Culture as crime
  • Media dynamics of crime and control
  • A critique of cultural criminology
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 11 Interactionism and labelling theory
  • Introduction
  • The emergence of labelling theory
  • Primary and secondary deviance
  • Becker’s outsiders
  • Moral entrepreneurship
  • ‘Becoming a marijuana user’
  • Stigma
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Deviancy amplification
  • Folk Devils and Moral Panics
  • Braithwaite and ‘shaming’
  • Assessing labelling theory
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 12 Control theories
  • Introduction
  • Reckless’s containment theory
  • Inner containment
  • Neutralisation and drift theory
  • Drift
  • Social bond theory
  • Four elements of the social bond
  • Testing social bond theory
  • Gottfredson and Hirschi’s general theory of crime
  • Low self-control
  • Assessing the general theory of crime
  • Tittle’s control-balance theory
  • Relating control-balance to crime
  • Assessing control theory
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • 13 Radical and critical criminology
  • Introduction
  • Crime and the underdog
  • Marx and Marxism
  • Willem Bonger
  • American radicalism
  • Vold and criminalisation
  • Austin Turk
  • William Chambliss
  • From conflict to peacemaking
  • Radical criminology in Britain
  • The new criminology
  • Contemporary radical criminology
  • Zemiology and social harm
  • Assessing radical criminology
  • Teleology
  • Determinism
  • Idealism
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 14 Realist criminology
  • Introduction
  • Left realism
  • The critique of ‘left idealism’
  • The nature of left realism
  • What Is To Be Done about Law & Order?
  • Left realism and method
  • Assessing left realism
  • Right realism
  • Thinking about Crime
  • Distinguishing left and right realism
  • Wilson and Herrnstein
  • Murray and the ‘underclass’
  • Assessing right realism
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 15 Contemporary classicism
  • Introduction
  • Rational choice theory
  • Clarke and Cornish
  • Bounded rationality
  • Crime scripts
  • Routine activity theory
  • Routine activity and crime trends
  • Routine activity theory elaborated
  • Situational crime prevention
  • Defensible space and problem-oriented policing
  • Problem-oriented policing
  • Crime and opportunity
  • Crime science
  • Assessing contemporary classicism
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 16 Feminist criminology
  • Introduction
  • Early criminology and the female offender
  • Lombroso and Ferrero
  • W.I. Thomas and Otto Pollak
  • Sociological criminology and the continued invisibility of women
  • Development of modern feminist criminology
  • Female emancipation and crime
  • Carol Smart and feminist criminology
  • Contemporary feminist criminology
  • Understanding women’s involvement in crime
  • Women, prison and punishment
  • The nature of women’s imprisonment
  • Criminalisation of women
  • A feminist methodology?
  • Feminist victimology
  • Assessing feminist criminology
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 17 Late modernity, governmentality and risk
  • The transition to late modernity
  • Surveillance
  • Changes in property relations
  • A new regulatory state?
  • Foucault and governmentality
  • Discipline and Punish
  • Governmentality theory
  • The dispersal of discipline
  • The discipline of Disney World
  • Risk and the new culture of control
  • Garland and The Culture of Control
  • Risk, crime and criminal justice
  • Assessing governmentality, the new penology and risk
  • Governmentality
  • The new penology
  • Risk
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • Part 3 Understanding crime: types and trends
  • 18 Victims, victimisation and victimology
  • Understanding victims and victimology
  • The victim of crime
  • The emergence of victimology
  • Victim-precipitation
  • Victim-blaming
  • Approaches to victimology
  • Positivist victimology
  • Radical victimology
  • Critical victimology
  • The nature of victimisation
  • The extent of victimisation
  • Repeat victimisation
  • Victimisation and the vulnerable
  • Victimisation and the homeless
  • Victimisation and the elderly
  • The impact of victimisation
  • Physical impact
  • Behavioural impact
  • Emotional and psychological impact
  • Financial impact
  • Fear of crime
  • Victims policy
  • Criminal injuries compensation
  • Court-ordered compensation
  • Feminism and ‘secondary victimisation’
  • Child abuse
  • Victim Support
  • Victims’ rights?
  • One-stop shop and victim statements
  • Victim personal statements
  • Rebalancing the criminal justice system?
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 19 White-collar and corporate crime
  • Introduction
  • Edwin Sutherland and white-collar crime
  • Distinguishing between white-collar and corporate crime
  • Exploring white-collar crime
  • Theft at work
  • Fraud
  • Employment offences
  • Consumer offences
  • Food offences
  • Environmental crime
  • State-corporate crime
  • Explaining white-collar and corporate crime
  • Differential association
  • Self-control
  • Neutralisation
  • Critical theory
  • Shaming
  • Understanding white-collar crime
  • White-collar offenders
  • Victims of white-collar crime
  • The extent of white-collar crime
  • The impact of white-collar crime
  • Understanding impact: the qualitative dimension
  • Controlling white-collar crime
  • Regulating white-collar crime
  • Self-regulation
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 20 Organised crime
  • Defining organised crime
  • Traditional forms of organised crime
  • The Mafia
  • Triads
  • The Yakuza
  • Organised crime in America
  • The organisation of organised crime
  • An alien conspiracy theory
  • The ethnic succession thesis
  • How organised was American organised crime?
  • Organised crime in Britain
  • Transnational organised crime
  • Human trafficking and migrant smuggling
  • Drug trafficking
  • Transnational crime control
  • Transnational policing
  • Europol
  • Understanding organised crime
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 21 Violent and property crime
  • Understanding violent crime
  • Types of violent crime
  • Homicide
  • Trends in homicide
  • Homicide offenders
  • Victims of homicide
  • Motive and relationship
  • Use of weapons
  • Homicide and social status
  • Serial killers
  • Robbery
  • Armed robbery
  • Street robbery
  • Sexual offences
  • Stalking
  • Monitoring sex offenders
  • Violent crime and weapons
  • Trends in violent crime
  • Contemporary trends
  • Riots
  • Hate crime
  • The emergence of ‘hate crime’
  • Extent of hate crime and the criminal justice response
  • What is the motivation behind hate crime?
  • Why hate crime?
  • Property crime
  • Trends in property crime
  • Burglary
  • Trends in burglary
  • Distraction burglary
  • Burglars on burglary
  • Crimes against retail and manufacturing premises
  • Car crime
  • Injuries and deaths on the road
  • Measuring car crime
  • Joyriding
  • Thinking about violent and volume crime
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 22 Drugs and alcohol
  • Introduction
  • What are drugs?
  • Changing official attitudes toward drugs
  • Who uses drugs?
  • Trends in drug use
  • The normalisation debate
  • Drugs and crime
  • Drug use causes crime
  • Crime causes drug use
  • A common cause?
  • A reciprocal relationship?
  • No causal relationship?
  • Drugs and criminal justice
  • Drug testing
  • Drugs and policing
  • Alcohol
  • Patterns of consumption
  • Young people and alcohol
  • Young people, alcohol and moral panic
  • Alcohol, crime and criminal justice
  • The legal situation
  • Alcohol and crime
  • Costs of alcohol misuse and alcohol-related crime
  • Government alcohol policy
  • Drugs, alcohol and crime
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • Part 4 Understanding criminal justice
  • 23 Penology and punishment
  • What is punishment?
  • Utilitarian or consequentialist approaches
  • Deterrence
  • General deterrence
  • Individual deterrence
  • Rehabilitation
  • Incapacitation
  • Retributivism
  • Just deserts
  • The sociology of punishment
  • Émile Durkheim
  • Max Weber
  • Marxism
  • Norbert Elias
  • Michel Foucault
  • The impact of Foucault
  • Conclusion: an era of mass incarceration?
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 24 Understanding criminal justice
  • Government and criminal justice
  • Home Office
  • Home Secretary
  • Ministry of Justice
  • Attorney General’s Office
  • The criminal justice system
  • Major agencies, organisations and actors
  • The police
  • Crown Prosecution Service (CPS)
  • Probation
  • Youth Offending Teams
  • Prisons
  • Criminal courts
  • Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC)
  • Community Safety Partnerships (CSPs)
  • Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority (CICA)
  • Forensic Science Service (FSS)
  • Parole Board
  • Volunteers in the criminal justice system
  • Criminal justice in Scotland
  • Is it really a system?
  • The criminal justice process
  • Fixed penalty notices
  • Expenditure and employment
  • Management and oversight in criminal justice
  • New public management
  • Youth Justice Board
  • Inspectorates
  • Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary for England, Wales and Northern Ireland (HMIC)
  • Her Majesty’s Crown Prosecution Service Inspectorate (HMCPSI)
  • Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Prisons for England and Wales (HMIP)
  • Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Probation for England and Wales (HMI Probation)
  • Prisons and Probation Ombudsman
  • Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC)
  • Politics and criminal justice reform
  • Understanding criminal justice
  • Adversarial versus inquisitorial systems
  • Due process versus crime control
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 25 Crime prevention and community safety
  • Defining crime prevention
  • Crime prevention as a policy issue
  • ‘Five Towns’ and ‘Safer Cities’
  • Neighbourhood Watch
  • From crime prevention to community safety
  • Crime and Disorder Act 1998
  • From community safety to crime reduction
  • Reviewing the Crime and Disorder Act
  • Anti-social behaviour
  • ‘Broken Windows’
  • The anti-social behaviour and respect agendas
  • Crime prevention in practice
  • Situational crime prevention
  • Displacement
  • Social and community crime prevention
  • Criminality prevention
  • Risk-focused prevention
  • The Perry Pre-School Project
  • Cognitive-behavioural interventions with young people
  • Community approaches and prevention
  • Operation Ceasefire
  • Mentoring
  • Analysis for crime prevention
  • Hot spots
  • Repeat victimisation
  • Kirkholt Burglary Prevention Project
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 26 Policing
  • The organisation of policing
  • Understanding policing
  • What do the police do?
  • Criminal investigation
  • National Intelligence Model (NIM)
  • Investigation and forensics
  • Police powers
  • Stop and search
  • Arrest
  • Detention at the police station
  • Right to silence
  • Models of policing
  • Community policing
  • Problem-oriented policing
  • Intelligence-led policing
  • A brief history of policing
  • Emergence of the ‘new police’
  • The Royal Commission on the Police
  • Problems of legitimacy
  • Centralisation
  • Key themes in policing
  • Police culture
  • Zero-tolerance policing
  • Police corruption
  • The causes of police corruption
  • Police governance
  • Plural policing
  • A revolution in policing?
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 27 Criminal courts and the court process
  • Introduction
  • The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS)
  • Sufficient evidence
  • The public interest
  • Downgrading of charges
  • Discontinuance
  • Magistrates’ courts
  • The magistracy
  • The Crown Court
  • The judiciary
  • Juries
  • Pre-trial decisions
  • Bail and remand
  • Bail
  • Remand
  • Offending while on bail
  • Mode of trial decision
  • Defendants’ rights
  • Pleas and bargaining
  • Charge bargaining
  • Plea bargaining
  • Evidence
  • Disclosure
  • Exclusion
  • Appeals
  • Miscarriages of justice
  • Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC)
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 28 Sentencing and non-custodial penalties
  • Introduction
  • Types of sentence
  • Discharges
  • Fines and other financial penalties
  • Community punishment
  • The community rehabilitation order
  • The community punishment order
  • The community order
  • The suspended sentence of imprisonment
  • Sentencing policy
  • The Criminal Justice Act 1991
  • Sentencing reform after the 1991 Act
  • The Crime (Sentences) Act 1997
  • Sentencing reform under New Labour
  • The Auld Review of Criminal Courts
  • The Halliday Review
  • Justice for All
  • Criminal Justice Act 2003
  • Sentencing reform under the Coalition government
  • Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012
  • Offender Rehabilitation Act 2014
  • Trends in non-custodial sentencing
  • Probation
  • Punishment in the community
  • Crime, Justice and Protecting the Public
  • New Labour and probation
  • The probation service and ‘what works’
  • A national probation service
  • The Carter Review and the emergence of NOMS
  • The Coalition and Transforming Rehabilitation
  • Conclusion
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 29 Prisons and imprisonment
  • The rise of the prison
  • Imprisonment in Britain
  • Prison security
  • Strangeways and Woolf
  • Trends in imprisonment
  • Imprisonment and penal politics
  • International trends
  • Capital punishment
  • The prison system
  • Types of prison
  • Private prisons
  • Life on the inside
  • Prisoners
  • Incarceration and social exclusion
  • Violence in prison
  • Prison officers
  • Release from prison
  • Governance, accountability and human rights
  • Independent inspection
  • Grievance or complaints procedures
  • Human rights and imprisonment
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 30 Youth crime and youth justice
  • Youth crime
  • Persistent young offenders
  • Trends in youth crime
  • Ethnic minority youth and crime
  • Drug use and crime
  • Victimisation
  • Youth justice
  • Childhood and punishment
  • Emergence of a juvenile justice system
  • The tide turns
  • The punitive shift
  • The rise of managerialism
  • A new youth justice?
  • Youth Offending Teams (YOTs)
  • Non-custodial penalties
  • Anti-social behaviour
  • Restorative justice and referral orders
  • Youth justice after New Labour
  • Young people and the 2011 riots
  • Contemporary youth justice
  • Anti-social behaviour
  • Young people and imprisonment
  • Young offenders, custody and vulnerability
  • Community alternatives
  • Referral orders and restorative youth justice
  • Young people, crime and justice
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 31 Restorative justice
  • Introduction
  • Conflicts as property
  • Criminal justice and restorative justice
  • Defining restorative justice
  • The objectives of restorative justice
  • Victim involvement
  • Community involvement
  • Offender reintegration
  • Types of restorative justice
  • Court-based restitutive and reparative measures
  • Victim-offender mediation (VOM)
  • Restorative conferencing
  • Healing and sentencing circles
  • Healing circles
  • Sentencing circles
  • Citizens’ panels and community boards
  • Assessing restorativeness
  • The limits of restorative justice?
  • Restorative justice and corporate crime
  • Restorative justice and violence against women
  • Assessing restorative justice
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • Part 5 Critical issues in criminology
  • 32 Race, crime and criminal justice
  • Introduction
  • Sources of data
  • Ethnicity and victimisation
  • Victimisation and risk
  • Fear of crime
  • Racist hate crimes
  • Racist offenders
  • Community, conflict and cohesion
  • Ethnicity and offending
  • Self-reported offending
  • Anti-social behaviour
  • Drug use
  • Experience of the criminal justice system
  • Stop and search
  • Racism and stop and search
  • Ethnicity and policing
  • From Scarman to Lawrence
  • Cautioning, arrest and sentencing
  • Ethnicity and imprisonment
  • Treatment in custody
  • Deaths in custody
  • Views of the criminal justice system
  • Minority representation in the criminal justice system
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 33 Gender, crime and justice
  • Female and male offending
  • Reasons for offending
  • Women and the criminal justice process
  • Cautioning, arrest and prosecution
  • The use of custody
  • Women in prison
  • Mothers in prison
  • Understanding women and criminal justice
  • Women in the criminal justice system: the future
  • Victimisation
  • Fear of crime
  • Violence against women
  • Domestic violence
  • The perpetrators
  • Policing rape and domestic violence
  • Policy changes
  • Attrition
  • Women’s role in social control
  • Women in the police
  • Women in the probation and prison services (NOMS)
  • Women and the legal professions
  • Masculinity, men and victimisation
  • Male victimisation
  • Conclusion
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 34 Criminal and forensic psychology
  • Psychology and criminology
  • History of psychology and criminology
  • Individual factors in crime
  • Risk and protective factors
  • Individual risk factors
  • Family factors
  • Socio-economic, peer, school and community factors
  • Risk factors and crime prevention
  • Developmental or life course criminology
  • Sampson and Laub
  • Moffitt’s theory of offending types
  • Farrington’s ICAP theory
  • Mental disorder and crime
  • The prevalence of mental disorders
  • Mental disorder and offending
  • Understanding mental disorder and crime
  • Policing and psychology
  • Offender profiling
  • Assessing profiling
  • Legal and ethical issues
  • Crime analysis
  • Investigative interviewing
  • Confessions
  • Lying and lie detection
  • Statement validity analysis
  • The courtroom and psychology
  • Recall/eyewitness testimony
  • Vulnerable witnesses
  • Children as witnesses
  • Juries
  • Juries and evidence
  • Juries and other influences
  • Jury composition
  • Decision-making
  • Treatment of offenders and ‘what works’
  • Cognitive skills programmes
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 35 Green criminology
  • Introduction
  • Theoretical concerns
  • Late modern capitalism and neo-liberalism
  • Globalisation and risk
  • Thinking about environmental harm
  • Environmental harms
  • Air pollution
  • Deforestation
  • Water pollution
  • Resource depletion
  • Climate change
  • Animal abuse
  • A green victimology?
  • State, organised crime and the environment
  • Regulation and control
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 36 Globalisation, terrorism and human rights
  • Globalisation
  • Globalisation and criminology
  • Criminalising migration
  • Terrorism
  • What is terrorism?
  • Terrorism in Britain
  • The new international terrorism
  • Special powers for special circumstances?
  • Control orders and the PATRIOT Act
  • Terrorism and the ‘new wars’
  • Private military industry
  • Privatised security in Iraq
  • State crime
  • Genocide
  • Cambodia
  • Rwanda
  • Bosnia
  • War as crime and war crimes
  • Human rights
  • Origins of human rights
  • Human rights in the twentieth century
  • Human rights in Britain
  • The Human Rights Act 1998
  • The impact of the Human Rights Act
  • Criminology and human rights
  • Dealing with human rights abuses
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • Part 6 Doing criminology
  • 37 Understanding criminological research
  • Introduction
  • Research methods
  • Surveys
  • Questionnaire design
  • Interviews
  • Focus groups
  • Ethnography
  • Documentary analysis
  • Case studies
  • Sampling
  • Random (or probability) sampling
  • Stratified sampling
  • Quota sampling
  • Purposive sampling
  • Convenience sampling
  • Snowball sampling
  • Statistics
  • Descriptive statistics
  • Numerical and categorical data
  • Normal distribution
  • Correlation
  • Probability and significance
  • Controversy: evaluation and experimentation
  • Experimental methods
  • Quasi-experimental methods
  • Evaluation research
  • Questions for further discussion
  • Further reading
  • Websites
  • 38 Doing criminological research
  • Introduction
  • Choosing a topic
  • Doing a literature review
  • Selecting methods
  • Theory and research
  • Hypothetico-deductive theory
  • Grounded theory
  • Negotiating access
  • Research governance/ethics
  • Pilot research
  • Writing
  • Beginning to write
  • Write clearly
  • Decent prose
  • Plagiarism
  • Time management
  • Further reading
  • Publisher’s acknowledgements
  • Glossary
  • Bibliography
  • Index

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