Similar words: endocrinology, terminological, phonology, demonology, volcanology, technology, chronology, criminal. Meaning: [‚krɪmɪ'nɒlədʒɪ] n. the scientific study of crime and criminal behavior and law enforcement.
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(1) The reasons cited range from demographics to criminology.
(2) Rationality According to classical criminology we mostly behave in a rational manner.
(3) Criminology, like crime control, tends to focus on males and marginalise females or render them invisible.
(4) A radical criminology which appears to deny this will be seen as callous and rightly rejected.
(5) A radical criminology which appears to deny this will be seen as naive and rightly rejected.
(6) Positivist criminology, on the other hand, seemed scarcely to recognise it at all.
(7) Hence the extent to which Conservative criminology is here to stay depends on more than mere changes of political parties.
(8) To the extent that positivist criminology incorporates a realistic, manageable version of determinism, it becomes compatible with its classical predecessor.
(9) The new socialist criminology of the 1960s and 1970s, however, marked a return to the more romantic view.
(10) Conservative criminology is part of the ideological background of economic liberalism.
(11) Classical criminology did not assume that existing legal definitions of crime and the way they are enforced necessarily constitute this objective category.
(12) On criminology, there are two aspects about the reasons.
(13) Remote sensing techniques have been applied in criminology.
(14) Are you fascinated by criminology, forensics, and detective work?
(15) In a wide sense of the word(http://sentencedict.com), criminology includes penology.
(16) He is interested in the issues of crime and criminology.
(17) The replacement of free will with scientific determinism was consequently the crucial starting point for the new positivist criminology.
(18) I think this has been well illustrated in the previous chapters - particularly in the case of positivist criminology.
(19) Marxist theories Marxist-based studies of crime are sometimes referred to under the titles of radical or critical criminology.
(20) The first two of these have, for different reasons, dissociated themselves from the causal-corrective concerns of traditional criminology.
(21) Hirschi's control theory seems also to fill an important gap that was noted earlier in relation to the original formulation of classical criminology.
(22) Introduction InPart One I have briefly outlined the origins and fate of the classical perspective in criminology.
(23) I will briefly outline the nature of this reaction, and then consider its implications for classical criminology.
(24) I need not pause to explain that crime is not a disease. It is criminology that is a disease. G.K. Chesterton
(25) The implications of such a view were potentially disastrous for positivist criminology.
(26) Nevertheless, in conjunction with the classical themes of interactionism, it seemed to offer the basis for a new, resurgent classical criminology.
(27) His apparent heresy is not that of the smooth talking cleric, but the statistician specialising in the field of criminology.
(28) It also helps us understand the ethnocentric and ruling-class view of much conservative criminology.
(29) However, thiskind of research model has neither been recognized nor been paidenough attention by Chinese criminology.
(30) The study on crime of insurance fraud is very meaningful in the field of criminology.
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