Tag: Criminological

An Introduction to Criminological Theory and the Problem of Causation


Free Download Jason Warr, "An Introduction to Criminological Theory and the Problem of Causation"
English | ISBN: 3319474456 | 2016 | 105 pages | EPUB | 1096 KB
This text offers a novel contribution to the literature on core criminological theory by introducing the complex issues relating to the structuring and analysing of causation. This text traces the paradigm shift, or drift, that has occurred in the history of criminology and shows how the problem of causation has been a leading factor in these theoretical developments. This short book is the first of its kind and is an introductory text designed to introduce both seasoned criminologists as well as students of criminology to the interesting intersections between the fields of criminology and the philosophy of the social sciences.

(more…)

Public Sector Criminological Research The Australian Institute of Criminology, 1972-2022


Free Download Russell G. Smith, "Public Sector Criminological Research: The Australian Institute of Criminology, 1972-2022"
English | ISBN: 3031283554 | 2023 | 539 pages | PDF | 14 MB
This book explores the role and development of criminological research in the public sector during the last half-century. It identifies the benefits such research has provided and assesses whether the community has received value for the funds expended. The Australian Institute of Criminology is used as a case study to illustrate the challenges and pressures facing those who have sought to carry out independent crime and justice research in the public sector, to assess what fifty years of work has achieved and to determine whether or not there remains a need for criminologists to be employed by governments. The book is based on extensive archival research, administrative data analysis, interviews with current and previous staff and the perspectives of scholars in comparable institutions globally. It presents new historical information as well as current and future critical perspectives on crime and justice research in a unique Australian government organization.

(more…)