Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Kaufman, Joanne M

Title Anomie, Strain and Subcultural Theories of Crime
Published Florence : Taylor and Francis, 2010

Copies

Description 1 online resource (523 pages)
Series The Library of Essays in Theoretical Criminology
Library of essays in theoretical criminology.
Contents Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Content; Acknowledgements; Series Preface; Copy Right; Introduction; PART I THE ORIGINS OF STRAIN, ANOMIE AND SUBCULTURAL THEORY: CLASSIC STATEMENTS; 1 Emile Durkheim (1951 [1897]), 'Anomic Suicide', in Suicide, trans. John A. Spaulding and George Simpson, New York: Free Press, pp. 246-58. 3; 2 Robert K. Merton (1938), 'Social Structure and Anomie', American Sociological Review, 3, pp. 672-82. 17; 3 Richard A. Cloward (1959), 'Illegitimate Means, Anomie, and Deviant Behavior', American Sociological Review, 24, pp. 164-76. 29
4 Albert K. Cohen (1965), 'The Sociology of the Deviant Act: Anomie Theory and Beyond', American Sociological Review, 30, pp. 5-14. 43PART II THE DEVELOPMENT OF STRAIN THEORY; 5 Thomas J. Bernard (1984), 'Control Criticisms of Strain Theories: An Assessment of Theoretical and Empirical Adequacy', Journal o f Research in Crime and Delinquency, 21, pp. 353-72. 55; 6 David F. Greenberg (1977), 'Delinquency and the Age Structure of Society', Contemporary Crises, 1, pp. 189-223. 75; PART III GENERAL STRAIN THEORY
7 Robert Agnew (1992), 'Foundation for a General Strain Theory of Crime and Delinquency', Criminology, 30, pp. 47-87. 1138 Lisa Broidy and Robert Agnew (1997), 'Gender and Crime: A General Strain Theory Perspective', Journal o f Research in Crime and Delinquency, 34, pp. 275-306. 155; 9 Robert Agnew (2001), 'Building on the Foundation of General Strain Theory: Specifying the Types of Strain Most Likely to Lead to Crime and Delinquency', Journal o f Research in Crime and Delinquency, 38, pp. 319-61. 187; PART IV THE DEVELOPMENT OF SUBCULTURAL THEORY
10 David J. Bordua (1961), 'Delinquent Subcultures: Sociological Interpretations of Gang Delinquency', Annals o f the American Academy o f Political and Social Science, 338, pp. 119-36. 23311 Jock Young (2010), 4Sub-Cultural Theory: Virtues and Vices'. From http://www.malcolmread.co.uk/JockYoung/ 251; PART V CONTEMPORARY SUBCULTURAL THEORIES; 12 Thomas J. Bernard (1990), 'Angry Aggression among the "Truly Disadvantaged'", Criminology, 28, pp. 73-96. 279; 13 Elijah Anderson (1994), 'The Code of the Streets', Atlantic Monthly, 273, pp. 81-94. 303
14 Jody Miller (1998), 'Up It Up: Gender and the Accomplishment of Street Robbery', Criminology, 36, pp. 37-65. 313PART VI THE DEVELOPMENT OF ANOMIE THEORY; 15 Steven F. Messner (1988), 'Merton's "Social Structure and Anomie": The Road Not Taken', Deviant Behavior, 9, pp. 33-53. 345; 16 Nikos Passas (2000), 'Global Anomie, Dysnomie, and Economic Crime: Hidden Consequences of Neoliberalism and Globalization in Russia and Around the World', Social Justice, 27, pp. 16̂4. 367; PART VII INSTITUTIONAL-ANOMIE THEORY
Notes 17 Steven F. Messner and Richard Rosenfeld (1997), 'Political Restraint of the Market and Levels of Criminal Homicide: A Cross-National Application of Institutional-Anomie Theory', Social Forces, 75, pp. 1393̂16. 399
Print version record
Form Electronic book
Author Agnew, Robert
Henry, Stuart, 1949-
ISBN 9781351957977
135195797X