Crime in Canadian Context: Debates and Controversies

앞표지
Oxford University Press, 2011 - 262페이지
Crime in Canadian Context: Debates and Controversies, 2/e, is a concise, accessible introduction to criminology. Building on the success of the first edition, author William O'Grady continues to cover the fundamentals of the field while responding to changes in the discipline with updated statistics and revised content throughout.

Well-balanced and even-handed, this book aims to avoid promoting one particular approach to crime over others. Students will study how crime is defined, presented, and perceived before moving on to comprehensive chapters outlining measurement and analysis of crime, non-sociological explanations of crime, criminological theory, social inequality and crime, organizational crime, and intersections with the law and the criminal justice system.

Providing a vivid look at the statistics, research, and policies that form the Canadian context, this text will be appreciated by students for its succinct style, brevity, and relevance at every turning point. New material includes expanded discussions on policy, youth justice, and correlates of crime (age, gender, race, social class), as well as criminal law, crime and global and media issues, and recommended films and documentaries.

기타 출판본 - 모두 보기

저자 정보 (2011)

William O'Grady teaches in the Criminal Justice and Public Policy Program at the University of Guelph, where he has been a faculty member for over ten years. He is a member of the Canadian Homeless Research Network and an advisory member of Raising the Roof's Advisory Board of Youth Works. His research interests include street-involved youth, crime, and social exclusion, and he has published extensively on crime in Canadian society.

도서 문헌정보