Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book

Title The nurture versus biosocial debate in criminology : on the origins of criminal behavior and criminality / Kevin M. Beaver, J.C. Barnes, Brian B. Boutwell, editors
Published Los Angeles : SAGE, 2014

Copies

Description 1 online resource (x, 460 pages) : illustrations (black and white)
Contents THE NURTURE VERSUS BIOSOCIAL DEBATE IN CRIMINOLOGY-FRONT COVER -- THE NURTURE VERSUS BIOSOCIAL DEBATE IN CRIMINOLOGY -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE -- INTRODUCTION: WHY WE NEED A NATURE/NURTURE BOOK IN CRIMINOLOGY -- PART I: KEY CRIMINOLOGICAL CORRELATES -- CHAPTER 1: SOCIOLOGICAL EXPLANATIONS OF THE GENDER GAP IN OFFENDING -- CHAPTER 2: A BIOSOCIAL EXPLANATION FOR MALE-FEMALE DIFFERENCES IN CRIMINAL INVOLVEMENT -- CHAPTER 3: SOCIOLOGICAL VIEWPOINT ON THE RACE-CRIME RELATIONSHIP -- CHAPTER 4: HUMAN BIODIVERSITY AND THE EGALITARIAN FICTION -- CHAPTER 5: A SOCIOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF SOCIAL CLASS -- CHAPTER 6: THE ROLE OF INTELLIGENCE AND TEMPERAMENT IN INTERPRETING THE SES-CRIME RELATIONSHIP -- PART II: THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES -- CHAPTER 7: LEARNING THEORIES OF CRIME -- CHAPTER 8: THE INTEGRATION OF BIOLOGICAL AND GENETIC FACTORS INTO SOCIAL LEARNING THEORY -- CHAPTER 9: SELF-CONTROL AND CRIME: A SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE -- CHAPTER 10: LOW SELF-CONTROL IS A BRAIN-BASED DISORDER -- CHAPTER 11: THE ROLE OF THE SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT IN GENERAL STRAIN THEORY -- CHAPTER 12: GENERAL STRAIN THEORY AND BIOSOCIAL CRIMINOLOGY: PATHWAYS TO SUCCESSFUL THEORETICAL INTEGRATION -- CHAPTER 13: SOCIAL BONDING AND CRIME -- CHAPTER 14: A BIOSOCIAL VIEW OF SOCIAL BOND THEORY -- PART III: SPECIFIC TYPES OF ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIORS -- CHAPTER 15: WHEN VIOLENCE IS THE NORM: SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE -- CHAPTER 16: SOME KIND OF MADNESS: THE BIOSOCIAL ORIGINS OF INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE -- CHAPTER 17: PARENTS, PEERS, AND SOCIALIZATION TO INSTITUTIONS IN CHILDHOOD AND ADOLESCENCE: IMPLICATIONS FOR DELINQUENT BEHAVIOR -- CHAPTER 18: A BIOSOCIAL REVIEW ON CHILDHOOD ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR -- CHAPTER 19: SOCIOLOGICAL CRIMINOLOGY AND DRUG USE: A REVIEW OF LEADING THEORIES -- CHAPTER 20: DRUG ABUSE, ADDICTION, AND CRIME: A CELL TO SOCIETY PERSPECTIVE
PART IV: TRENDS, CURRENT ISSUES, AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS -- CHAPTER 21: A SOCIOLOGICAL EXPLANATION OF CRIME RATES AND TRENDS -- CHAPTER 22: DARWIN, DAWKINS, WRIGHT, PINKER, AND THE REASONS THAT CRIME DECLINED -- CHAPTER 23: THE AGE AND CRIME RELATIONSHIP: SOCIAL VARIATION, SOCIAL EXPLANATIONS -- CHAPTER 24: THE PUZZLING RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR: A BIOSOCIAL CRITIQUE OF THE CRIMINOLOGICAL STATUS QUO -- CHAPTER 25: POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF SOCIOLOGICAL THEORIES OF CRIME: WHY ARE THEY SO SELDOM CONSIDERED OR DISCUSSED? -- CHAPTER 26: POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF BIOSOCIAL CRIMINOLOGY: CRIME PREVENTION AND OFFENDER REHABILITATION -- INDEX -- ABOUT THE EDITORS
Summary This book facilitates an open and honest debate about criminal behaviour between the more traditional criminologists who focus primarily on environmental factors and contemporary biosocial criminologists who examine the interplay between biology/genetics and environmental factors. It provides a contemporary approach by bringing to the table a new debate: the nurture vs. biosocial debate
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Audience Specialized
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Criminal behavior -- Physiological aspects
Criminal behavior -- Genetic aspects.
Criminal psychology.
Crime -- Sociological aspects.
Crime -- Sociological aspects
Criminal behavior -- Genetic aspects
Criminal psychology
Form Electronic book
Author Beaver, Kevin M., editor
Barnes, James C. (James Christopher), editor.
Boutwell, Brian B., editor
ISBN 9781483349114
148334911X
1483322653
9781483322650
1483311767
9781483311760