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Samenvatting

Criminology & Criminal Justice – Complete Exam-Focused Summary (2025–2026)

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This document contains a complete and exam-focused summary of the course Criminology & Criminal Justice (2025–2026). It covers all key theories, concepts, and debates in a clear and well-structured format, organised per lecture week. Used successfully for exam preparation — final grade: 7.5/10. Ideal for exam preparation and revision for law and criminology students, providing a concise yet comprehensive overview of the entire course.

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Geüpload op
18 december 2025
Aantal pagina's
70
Geschreven in
2025/2026
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Samenvatting

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

CRIMINOLOGY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE
2025-2026



Week 1 – Introduction to Criminology & Social Construction
1. What is the Object of Study in Criminology?

• Criminology has never had one universally accepted definition of what it should study.
Instead, there are ongoing debates about what counts as criminological knowledge.

Main debates:

• Should criminology study only crimes in the criminal law?
• Should it also study:
o Corporate crime
o State crime
o Environmental harm
o Uncriminalized but harmful behaviour?
• Should criminology focus:
o Only on individuals?
o Or also on corporations, governments, and ecosystems?
• Key idea: Crime is not a fixed or “natural” category — it is socially, politically and historically
constructed.

Mainstream view (Van Dijk)

• Criminology =
o “The science that studies the nature and causes of human behaviour that violates
criminal law, and society’s reactions to it.”
• In practice, mainstream criminology focuses on:
o Street crime
o Property crime
o Violence
o Drug crime
• BUT… this approach is criticized because:
o Many harmful acts are not criminalised
o Administrative/regulatory violations can cause more damage than street crime
o Powerful actors (corporations, states) often avoid criminalization

, Criminology and Criminal Justice


2. The Crime vs Harm Debate

• Many harmful actions are not considered “crime”.
• Types of harm:
o Physical harm
o Financial / economic harm
o Emotional & psychological harm
o Environmental harm
o Harm to cultural safety (freedom, autonomy, growth, access to resources)
• Problem:
o We cannot include all harm in criminology
o Some behaviour is criminalized even if it’s not harmful (e.g. drug use)
o Some harmful behaviour is perfectly legal (e.g. pollution, exploitation)
• Agnew’s Solution
o Robert Agnew says criminology should focus on:
§ “Blameworthy harms that are purposively caused by individuals or legal
entities”
o The act is intentional
o Someone is responsible
o Harm is caused

3. The Three Major Expansions of Criminology

• Criminology expanded beyond “street crime” into three new areas:

1. White-Collar Crime – Edwin Sutherland

• Definition:
o “Crime committed by a person of respectability and high social status in the course of
their occupation.”
• Key points:
o Only 2% of prisoners come from the upper class
o Corporate crime costs far more than street crime
o Upper-class crimes are often ignored or treated lightly
o His book criticised the 70 largest US corporations
o Publisher was pressured to anonymise names




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, Criminology and Criminal Justice


2. State Crime

• Definition:
o Crimes or harms committed by governments or officials that violate:
§ National law
§ International law
§ Human rights
§ Or harm populations
• Examples:
o Genocide
o Torture
o Illegal surveillance
o Political repression

3. Green Criminology

• Studies harm against:
o Animals
o Ecosystems
o Nature
o The biosphere
• Includes:
o Pollution
o Wildlife trafficking
o Climate degradation
o Legal but harmful behaviour

4. How Do Societies Decide What is Criminal?

A. Philosophical Approach (liberty-limiting principles)

• John Stuart Mill – Harm Principle:
o People can only be restricted if they harm others.
• Feinberg added:
o Paternalism – protect people from themselves
o Moralism – ban what society finds immoral
o Offense Principle – ban behaviour that deeply offends others
• Problems:
o What counts as “harm” is subjective
o Societies disagree
o Only a few behaviours are universally condemned:
§ Stealing
§ Violence
§ Lying
§ Incest
Page 3

, Criminology and Criminal Justice


B. Sociological Approach (more realistic)

• Based on symbolic interactionism:
o Herbert Blumer: Meaning comes from interaction
o Thomas Theorem:
§ “If people define situations as real, they are real in their consequences.”
• Crime is socially produced, not natural



5. What is Social Construction?

Social norms

• A social norm = A rule that says what people should or should not do in a given situation.
• Norms are created and changed by society
• Large societies can’t constantly redefine → so norms become culture
• Laws are formalised social norms
• To simplify reality, society uses frames
o A frame is a simplified version of complex reality

6. Definition Setting (How norms and crimes are decided)

• This is a continuous process of deciding what is “normal” or “deviant”.

Who defines norms?

• Politicians
• Institutions
• Media & social media
• Religious groups
• Scientists
• Corporations
• Activists

Problems:

• Power is unequal:
o Rich and powerful groups influence laws more
o Marginalised groups have less voice
• Increased complexity due to:
o Globalisation
o Digital bubbles (echo chambers)
o Social media influence

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