Test Bank for Criminology: Theories, Patterns and Typologies 13th Edition

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  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1337091847
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1337091848
  • Author: Larry J. Siegel
  • The bestselling text on the market and now in its thirteenth edition, CRIMINOLOGY: THEORIES, PATTERNS, AND TYPOLOGIES, delivers the most comprehensive, in-depth analysis of criminological theory and crime typologies available — showing you how criminology relates to criminal justice policy. Renowned for his unbiased presentation of theories, issues, and controversies, Dr. Siegel encourages you to weigh the evidence and form your own conclusions. The text includes cutting-edge seminal research, up-to-the-minute policy, hundreds of new references, and new material on the legalization of marijuana, ISIL and terrorism, mass shootings, cybercrime, green crime, and transnational crime. It also maximizes your study efforts through chapter objectives, end-of-chapter reviews, key concepts, concepts summary tables, and newsworthy examples that help you see how what you are learning applies in the real world, thereby equipping you with the tools you need to succeed.

Table Of Contents:

  1. Part One: Concepts Of Crime, Law, And Criminology
  2. Chapter 1: Crime And Criminology
  3. What Is Criminology?
  4. Criminology And Criminal Justice
  5. Criminology And Deviant Behavior
  6. What Criminologists Do: Criminology In Action
  7. Criminal Statistics And Crime Measurement
  8. Socio-Legal Studies
  9. Theory Construction And Testing
  10. Criminal Behavior Systems And Crime Typologies
  11. Punishment, Penology, And Social Control
  12. Victimology: Victims And Victimization
  13. How Criminologists View Crime
  14. The Consensus View Of Crime
  15. The Conflict View Of Crime
  16. The Interactionist View Of Crime
  17. Defining Crime
  18. Crime And The Law
  19. A Brief History Of The Law
  20. Common Law
  21. The Law In Contemporary Society
  22. Shaping The Criminal Law
  23. The Substantive Criminal Law
  24. The Elements Of Criminal Law
  25. Criminal Defenses
  26. The Evolution Of Criminal Law
  27. Ethical Issues In Criminology
  28. Who To Study?
  29. What To Study?
  30. How To Study?
  31. Chapter 2: The Nature And Extent Of Crime
  32. Primary Sources Of Crime Data
  33. Official Records: The Uniform Crime Report
  34. Compiling The Uniform Crime Report
  35. Are The Uniform Crime Reports Valid?
  36. The National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS)
  37. Survey Research
  38. The National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)
  39. Self-Report Surveys
  40. Evaluating The Primary Sources Of Crime Data
  41. Secondary Sources Of Crime Data
  42. Cohort Research
  43. Experimental Research
  44. Observational And Interview Research
  45. Meta-Analysis And Systematic Review
  46. Data Mining
  47. Crime Mapping
  48. Crime Trends
  49. Official Crime Trends
  50. Victimization Trends
  51. Trends In Self-Reporting
  52. International Crime Trends
  53. What The Future Holds
  54. Crime Patterns
  55. The Ecology Of Crime
  56. Use Of Firearms
  57. Social Class, Socioeconomic Conditions, And Crime
  58. Age And Crime
  59. Co-offending And Crime
  60. Gender And Crime
  61. Race And Crime
  62. Cultural Bias
  63. Economic And Social Disparity
  64. Immigration And Crime
  65. Chronic Offenders/Criminal Careers

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