This book on crime and justice is motivated primarily by the idea that individual behaviour is influenced both by self-interest and by conscience, or by a sense of community responsibility. Forst has assembled a collection of authors who are writing in four parts: (1) the philosophical foundations and the moral dimension of crime and punishment; (2) the sense of community and the way it influences the problem of crime; (3) on offenders and offences; and (4) on the response of the criminal justice system.
1: Socio-Economics, Crime, and Justice; I: Foundations; 2: Justice and Punishment: Philosophical Basics; 3: Economic Perspectives on Criminality: An Eclectic View; 4: The Limits of Legal Sanctions; II: The Community in the Human; 5: Crime, Conscience, and Family; 6: Crime and Ethnicity; 7: Women, Crime, and Justice; III: Offenders and Offenses; 8: Juvenile Delinquency, Juvenile Justice; 9: Community Responses to Crime and Fear of Crime; 10: Social Structure and Spouse Assault; 11: School Violence and the Breakdown of Community Homogeneity; IV: The Criminal Justice System; 12: Good Policing; 13: The Prosecutor and the Public; 14: The Honest Politician's Guide to Sentencing Reform
Brian Forst, Jack R. Greene, James P. Lynch, Washington DC) Forst, Brian (American University, Boston) Greene, Jack R. (Northeastern University, City University of New York) Lynch, James P. (John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Brian Forst, Jack R. Greene, James P. Lynch, Washington DC) Forst, Brian (American University, Boston) Greene, Jack R. (Northeastern University, City University of New York) Lynch, James P. (John Jay College of Criminal Justice