1 / 14

Introduction to “Canadian Criminology”

Introduction to “Canadian Criminology”. Instructor: Office hours: Tel/e-mail:. “when there is crime in society there is no justice” Plato. Criminology: Its nature and structure – WHAT IS A…? Criminal Crime Deviant act Criminologist victim. Setting the stage…. Has crime increased?

lindley
Télécharger la présentation

Introduction to “Canadian Criminology”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to “Canadian Criminology” Instructor: Office hours: Tel/e-mail:

  2. “when there is crime in society there is no justice” Plato Criminology: Its nature and structure – WHAT IS A…? • Criminal • Crime • Deviant act • Criminologist • victim

  3. Setting the stage… • Has crime increased? • Who commits the most crime? • Does capital punishment work? • What are the most serious crimes today? • Can we control crime?

  4. The crime-deviance continuum • Figure 1-1 • Define consensus vs. conflict crimes • Examples of: • Social diversions • Social deviations • Crime as relative and evolutive • Importance of frame of reference

  5. A call for Canadian Criminology • Crime is universal… so! • Differences that count • Minorities, law enforcement, sentencing, culture, politics, etc. • Significant theoretical and practical contributions • Review Canadian criminologists in Appendix 4 (also see Appendix 1)

  6. “Father of Canadian Criminology” with author

  7. The Changing Face of Crime and Criminology • Brief history • “criminology” and P. Topinard (1879) • Initial interest punishment and treatment • Secondary evolution of the study of penology • Reformers (C. Becarria & J. Bentham)

  8. The subject matter of criminology has been “blurred by shifts of both meaning and focus” N. Walker ‘87 • 1920: Maurice Parmalee’s (sociologist) contribution vs. • E. Sutherland • See Appendix 2 – variety of criminology/criminal justice journals

  9. The Criminological Enterprise • Criminal statistics • Sociology of law • Theory construction • Types of criminal behaviour • Criminal justice system • victimology

  10. The Diversity of Criminology • Sociology: social structure, social process, to social organization (Ch.7) • Psychology: science of individual behaviour (Ch. 6) • Biology: chemical, genetic, and/or neurological influences (Ch. 5) • Economics: “money the root of all evil”

  11. Geography/Environment: crime rates a by-product of physical and environmental factors • Political science: the importance of social policy (contrast European and N.A. criminologists)

  12. Integrated and Interdisciplinary approach • “paradigm shift” from unidiscipline to multi/interdisciplinary perspectives • Calls for • Integration of social sciences • Recognition of the complexity of human behaviour • Bridges specific and general aspects of crime

  13. “every man is guilty of all the good he didn’t do” - Voltaire • Criminology requires bridging theory and policy • Social and political challenges • Policy in the absence of theory is ‘guess work’ • BUT… serious ethical issues • Punish or treat • A crime or deviant act

  14. Summary • Crime is a global issue • Canada has its own unique concerns • Criminology burgeoning in Canada • Discipline rapidly evolving in a systematic and objective fashion • Criminology an applied science that resembles a living organism

More Related