Similar words: criminology, technologist, terminological, endocrinology, biologist, ecologist, geologist, apologist. Meaning: [‚krɪmɪ'nɒlədʒɪst] n. a specialist in criminology.
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1. Sociologists have challenged the findings of criminologists on the behaviour of prisoners.
2. Criminologist Dr Ann Jones has linked the crime to social circumstances.
3. Criminologists, too, have largely neglected the prisons.
4. Criminologists have long argued that one of the chief causes of crime is fear of crime.
5. Home Office criminologists stress that the rise in violent crime is largely made up of an explosion in acquaintance violence.
6. Alex Stevens, a criminologist at the University of Kent, points out that the capital generally leads drug trends.
7. Cesare Lombroso (1835–1909) was an Italian anthropologist, criminologist and jurist.
8. French anthropologist and criminologist who devised the Bertillon system ( 1880 ).
9. The influential criminologist cited trials in Indianapolis and Kansas City that suggested that violent crime can be cut drastically through campaigns to locate and confiscate illegal guns.
10. Northeastern University criminologist Fox that the aging population and continued high rates of incarceration can be made to reduce the U. S. crime rate.
11. Rob Gordon, a criminologist at Simon Fraser University(sentencedict.com/criminologist.html), says attempts at creating an agency to curb the gangs have repeatedly failed.
12. Criminologist Greg Newbold says that crime rates spiral up and down in unexplained cycles and there are no easy solutions to reducing crime.
13. Stated in the words of a famous criminologist, "When men first come into contact with crime, they abhor it."
14. However, criminologist Newbold argues that zero-tolerance policing is a dangerous fad that risks creating an arrogant police force because it gives police extraordinary powers.
15. In 1983, with the inter- national criminologist Pat Carlen, she founded Women in Prison (WIP).
16. Prof Adrian Raine, a British criminologist, argued that abnormal physical brain make-up could be a cause of criminality.
17. In doing so I will be making frequent reference to the empirical research findings of criminologists working mostly in the positivist tradition.
18. The parlors became a key source of income for some district and family organizations in Chinatown and eventually for street gangs, said Ko-lin Chin, a Rutgers University criminologist.
19. The Crime and The Modernization is the representative work of Sherri who is a criminologist in United States today.
20. "Copycat crimes do occur, " said Jeffrey Ian Ross, a criminologist at the University of Baltimore.
21. "I don't like the term crime—it's such a big, fat, imprecise word," says the renowned University of Oslo criminologist.
22. Many people believe the serious punishments can stop crimes . but even the criminologist has done the detail research about this issue , still cannot find evidence to support it .
23. That will make its complete destruction more difficult, according to Kenneth James Ryan, a criminologist and terrorism expert at California State University, Fresno.
24. He was not only a great calligrapher, but also a phonology expert, historian, geographer, criminologist, Buddhist scholar and translator.
More similar words: criminology, technologist, terminological, endocrinology, biologist, ecologist, geologist, apologist, neurologist, philologist, archeologist, psychologist, entomologist, gynecologist, ornithologist, meteorologist, climatologist, archaeologist, anthropologist, epidemiologist, paleontologist, neologism, apologise, logistic, chronological, technological, criminal, logistics, technologically, criminal law.