100% de satisfacción garantizada Inmediatamente disponible después del pago Tanto en línea como en PDF No estas atado a nada 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Resumen

Summary Conceptlist Introduction into Criminology

Puntuación
-
Vendido
-
Páginas
13
Subido en
28-10-2024
Escrito en
2024/2025

Volledig uitgewerkte conceptenlijst

Institución
Grado









Ups! No podemos cargar tu documento ahora. Inténtalo de nuevo o contacta con soporte.

Escuela, estudio y materia

Institución
Estudio
Grado

Información del documento

Subido en
28 de octubre de 2024
Número de páginas
13
Escrito en
2024/2025
Tipo
Resumen

Temas

Vista previa del contenido

Week 1. What is criminology?
Crime & Criminology: definitions, biases & assumptions

 Criminology is the study of crime, justice and law and order issues and the broader
dynamics of societies in terms of informing how those things exist and are experienced

 In criminology we tend to overly focus on a certain kind of offender (criminological gaze)



Week 2. Tenets of criminological thought
Legal definition of crime

 An intentional act or omission in violation of criminal law (statutory and case law),
committed without defence or justification, and sanctioned by the state as a felony or
misdemeanor



Sociological definition

 Search for universalities in norms and rule transgression: what things do societies
generally believe to be ‘wrong’?

 Moral/social component: crime as a sociological problem

 Deviant behavior as a topic of study



Social constructivists definitions

 Social groups create deviance by making rules whose infraction creates deviance and by
applying those rules to particular people and labeling them as outsiders

- Abolitionism

 ‘Categories of ‘crime’ are given by the criminal justice system rather than by victims of
society in general. This makes it necessary to abandon the notion of ‘crime’ as a tool in the
conceptual framework of criminology. Crime has no ontological reality and is not the object
but the product of criminal policy



Human rights definition

 All behaviour that goes against human rights is considered criminal according to this
definition. This definition includes, for example, not doing anything against poverty,
nowadays we call this social justice

, Harm definition

 Crime is a legal construct (power) and is anthropocentric (too much focused on the
human species)

 Crime is the harms done to the environment, animals etc



Classical school

 Late 18th and 19th century: what was happening then?

 Cesare Beccaria, Jeremy Bentham

 Crime is a result of free will, decision based on circumstances

 Hedonistic calculation & Utilitarianism



Positivism (individual vs sociological)

 Late 19th and early 20th centuries: what was the societal context?

 Focusing on the belief that criminal behavior can be understood and addressed through
scientific methods and empirical research.

 People engage in offending because they are influences by sources outside of their own
control

 Internal forces of biology/psychology (individual positivism) or external forces of social
conditions (sociological positivism



Marxism (political economy of crime)

 This perspective focuses on the intersections between crime, power, and economic
interests, emphasizing that crime is often a reflection of broader social and economic
inequalities



Week 3. Philosophies of Punishment
Punishment: legitimacy to punish & social contract

 State as the “human community that (successfully) claims the monopoly of the
legitimate use of physical force” (Weber 1918)
$7.25
Accede al documento completo:

100% de satisfacción garantizada
Inmediatamente disponible después del pago
Tanto en línea como en PDF
No estas atado a nada

Conoce al vendedor
Seller avatar
yarumverheul

Conoce al vendedor

Seller avatar
yarumverheul Universiteit Utrecht
Seguir Necesitas iniciar sesión para seguir a otros usuarios o asignaturas
Vendido
0
Miembro desde
4 año
Número de seguidores
0
Documentos
1
Última venta
-

0.0

0 reseñas

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recientemente visto por ti

Por qué los estudiantes eligen Stuvia

Creado por compañeros estudiantes, verificado por reseñas

Calidad en la que puedes confiar: escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron y evaluado por otros que han usado estos resúmenes.

¿No estás satisfecho? Elige otro documento

¡No te preocupes! Puedes elegir directamente otro documento que se ajuste mejor a lo que buscas.

Paga como quieras, empieza a estudiar al instante

Sin suscripción, sin compromisos. Paga como estés acostumbrado con tarjeta de crédito y descarga tu documento PDF inmediatamente.

Student with book image

“Comprado, descargado y aprobado. Así de fácil puede ser.”

Alisha Student

Preguntas frecuentes