Measuring Crime and Criminality
Herausgeber: Macdonald, John
Measuring Crime and Criminality
Herausgeber: Macdonald, John
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Measuring Crime and Criminalityfocuses on how different approaches to measuring crime and criminality are used to test existing criminological theories
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Measuring Crime and Criminalityfocuses on how different approaches to measuring crime and criminality are used to test existing criminological theories
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Advances in Criminological Theory
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 403
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Oktober 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 151mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 596g
- ISBN-13: 9781138511965
- ISBN-10: 113851196X
- Artikelnr.: 57051119
- Advances in Criminological Theory
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 403
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. Oktober 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 151mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 596g
- ISBN-13: 9781138511965
- ISBN-10: 113851196X
- Artikelnr.: 57051119
John MacDonald
Introduction: The Measurement of Crime and Estimating Treatment Effects in Criminology
1. The Self-Report Method and the Development of Criminological Theory
2. Socially Desirable Response Bias in Criminology: An Example of Its Effect in Testing the Effects of Self-Control
3. How Do We Measure the Severity of Crimes? New Estimates of the Cost of Criminal Victimization
4. Communities and Crime Theories: Construct Validation Deficits
a Paucity of Comparisons
and a Boudon-Coleman Metamodel Resolution
5. The Coming of a Networked Criminology?
6. What Can Genetically Informed Research Tell Us about the Causes of Crime?
7. Bounding Disagreements about Treatment Effects with an Application to Criminology
8. Randomized Experiments and the Advancement of Criminological Theory
9. Causal Inference via Natural Experiments and Instrumental Variables: The Effect of "Knifing Off" from the Past
10. Criminal Career Research: A Statistical and Substantive Comparison of Growth Modeling Approaches
11. Understanding Desistance: Theory Testing with Formal Empirical Models
12. Meta-Analysis and the Relative Support for Various Criminological Theories
Contributors
Index
1. The Self-Report Method and the Development of Criminological Theory
2. Socially Desirable Response Bias in Criminology: An Example of Its Effect in Testing the Effects of Self-Control
3. How Do We Measure the Severity of Crimes? New Estimates of the Cost of Criminal Victimization
4. Communities and Crime Theories: Construct Validation Deficits
a Paucity of Comparisons
and a Boudon-Coleman Metamodel Resolution
5. The Coming of a Networked Criminology?
6. What Can Genetically Informed Research Tell Us about the Causes of Crime?
7. Bounding Disagreements about Treatment Effects with an Application to Criminology
8. Randomized Experiments and the Advancement of Criminological Theory
9. Causal Inference via Natural Experiments and Instrumental Variables: The Effect of "Knifing Off" from the Past
10. Criminal Career Research: A Statistical and Substantive Comparison of Growth Modeling Approaches
11. Understanding Desistance: Theory Testing with Formal Empirical Models
12. Meta-Analysis and the Relative Support for Various Criminological Theories
Contributors
Index
Introduction: The Measurement of Crime and Estimating Treatment Effects in Criminology
1. The Self-Report Method and the Development of Criminological Theory
2. Socially Desirable Response Bias in Criminology: An Example of Its Effect in Testing the Effects of Self-Control
3. How Do We Measure the Severity of Crimes? New Estimates of the Cost of Criminal Victimization
4. Communities and Crime Theories: Construct Validation Deficits
a Paucity of Comparisons
and a Boudon-Coleman Metamodel Resolution
5. The Coming of a Networked Criminology?
6. What Can Genetically Informed Research Tell Us about the Causes of Crime?
7. Bounding Disagreements about Treatment Effects with an Application to Criminology
8. Randomized Experiments and the Advancement of Criminological Theory
9. Causal Inference via Natural Experiments and Instrumental Variables: The Effect of "Knifing Off" from the Past
10. Criminal Career Research: A Statistical and Substantive Comparison of Growth Modeling Approaches
11. Understanding Desistance: Theory Testing with Formal Empirical Models
12. Meta-Analysis and the Relative Support for Various Criminological Theories
Contributors
Index
1. The Self-Report Method and the Development of Criminological Theory
2. Socially Desirable Response Bias in Criminology: An Example of Its Effect in Testing the Effects of Self-Control
3. How Do We Measure the Severity of Crimes? New Estimates of the Cost of Criminal Victimization
4. Communities and Crime Theories: Construct Validation Deficits
a Paucity of Comparisons
and a Boudon-Coleman Metamodel Resolution
5. The Coming of a Networked Criminology?
6. What Can Genetically Informed Research Tell Us about the Causes of Crime?
7. Bounding Disagreements about Treatment Effects with an Application to Criminology
8. Randomized Experiments and the Advancement of Criminological Theory
9. Causal Inference via Natural Experiments and Instrumental Variables: The Effect of "Knifing Off" from the Past
10. Criminal Career Research: A Statistical and Substantive Comparison of Growth Modeling Approaches
11. Understanding Desistance: Theory Testing with Formal Empirical Models
12. Meta-Analysis and the Relative Support for Various Criminological Theories
Contributors
Index