Criminology

Titel Veröffentlichungsdatum Sprache Zitate
SERIOUS VIOLENT OFFENDERS: ONSET, DEVELOPMENTAL COURSE, AND TERMINATION—THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY 1993 PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS*1994/02/01English383
UNDERSTANDING CRIME DISPLACEMENT: AN APPLICATION OF RATIONAL CHOICE THEORY1987/11/01English379
INTEGRATING CELERITY, IMPULSIVITY, AND EXTRALEGAL SANCTION THREATS INTO A MODEL OF GENERAL DETERRENCE: THEORY AND EVIDENCE*2001/11/01English363
GENDER AND IMPRISONMENT DECISIONS1993/08/01English352
LIFE‐COURSE TRAJECTORIES OF DIFFERENT TYPES OF OFFENDERS*1995/02/01English349
PERCEPTIONS OF RACIAL PROFILING: RACE, CLASS, AND PERSONAL EXPERIENCE*2002/05/01English344
SOCIAL DISORGANIZATION OUTSIDE THE METROPOLIS: AN ANALYSIS OF RURAL YOUTH VIOLENCE*2000/02/01English344
THE IMPRISONMENT PENALTY PAID BY YOUNG, UNEMPLOYED BLACK AND HISPANIC MALE OFFENDERS2000/02/01English341
A TEST OF GENERAL STRAIN THEORY*2001/02/01English339
INCARCERATION, SOCIAL CAPITAL, AND CRIME: IMPLICATIONS FOR SOCIAL DISORGANIZATION THEORY*1998/08/01English338
DEVELOPMENTAL AND LIFE‐COURSE CRIMINOLOGY: KEY THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL ISSUES‐THE 2002 SUTHERLAND AWARD ADDRESS*2003/05/01English335
PUBLIC COOPERATION WITH THE POLICE IN GHANA: DOES PROCEDURAL FAIRNESS MATTER?*2009/11/01English325
DOES CRIME JUST MOVE AROUND THE CORNER? A CONTROLLED STUDY OF SPATIAL DISPLACEMENT AND DIFFUSION OF CRIME CONTROL BENEFITS*2006/08/01English322
CRIMINAL CAREER RESEARCH: ITS VALUE FOR CRIMINOLOGY*1988/02/01English320
PROBLEM‐ORIENTED POLICING IN VIOLENT CRIME PLACES: A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED EXPERIMENT*1999/08/01English316
CONTRIBUTIONS OF FAMILIES AND PEERS TO DELINQUENCY*1985/02/01English311
FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS AND DELINQUENCY *1987/05/01English310
EXTENDING SOCIAL DISORGANIZATION THEORY: MODELING THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN COHESION, DISORDER, AND FEAR*2001/05/01English306
UNSTRUCTURED SOCIALIZING AND RATES OF DELINQUENCY2004/08/01English303
STRUCTURAL COVARIATES OF U.S. COUNTY HOMICIDE RATES: INCORPORATING SPATIAL EFFECTS*2001/08/01English303
POLICING CRIME AND DISORDER HOT SPOTS: A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL*2008/08/01English293
PREDICTING WHO REOFFENDS: THE NEGLECTED ROLE OF NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXT IN RECIDIVISM STUDIES*2006/02/01English292
LOW SELF‐CONTROL AND OPPORTUNITY: TESTING THE GENERAL THEORY OF CRIME AS AN EXPLANATION FOR GENDER DIFFERENCES IN DELINQUENCY*1999/02/01English289
SOCIAL INTERACTION AND COMMUNITY CRIME: EXAMINING THE IMPORTANCE OF NEIGHBOR NETWORKS1997/11/01English288
GANGS, DRUGS, AND DELINQUENCY IN A SURVEY OF URBAN YOUTH*1993/11/01English282
THE DYNAMICS OF DELINQUENT PEERS AND DELINQUENT BEHAVIOR*1998/05/01English282
THE INFLUENCE OF DELINQUENT PEERS: WHAT THEY THINK OR WHAT THEY DO?*1991/11/01English281
LABELING, LIFE CHANCES, AND ADULT CRIME: THE DIRECT AND INDIRECT EFFECTS OF OFFICIAL INTERVENTION IN ADOLESCENCE ON CRIME IN EARLY ADULTHOOD*2003/11/01English278
PARENTING, SELF‐CONTROL, AND DELINQUENCY: A TEST OF SELF‐CONTROL THEORY*2001/08/01English277
RACIAL TYPIFICATION OF CRIME AND SUPPORT FOR PUNITIVE MEASURES2004/05/01English276