Synopsis
A comprehensive, provocative overview of the origins and present state of issues and perspectives in criminal justice and criminology from leading scholars in the field.
In this important book, essays explore the gamut of topics in criminal justice and criminology, examining both historical and contemporary material to illustrate the past and present of each topic covered. Drawing on a wide range of sources, the book illustrates the breadth of research, policy, and practice implications in key areas of the field, such as crime theory, law enforcement, jurisprudence, corrections, and organizations. The coverage of concepts, insights, voices, and perspectives is geared toward students with a background in criminal justice or criminology courses to challenge them to synthesize what they have learned, to question standard interpretations, and to begin to create new directions and visions for their future careers as professionals in the field.
Key Features
- Some of the most creative, original, and respected names in the field share their expertise in contributed chapters, bringing the history, practice, hot-button issues, and current directions in contemporary criminal justice to life
- This book explores with rigorous discourse a broad spectrum of criminal justice theories, cases, laws, and policies that have been shaped in the larger social, cultural, and historical context, and provides more than a simple rehashing of already learned principles
- Comprehensive coverage of all major topic areas making it useful for critical issues or capstone courses
- Contemporary topics and interesting approaches serve as a springboard for class discussion and student research activities