List of Contributors
1. Crime and Criminal Justice (Michael Tonry)
2. Crime Trends (Eric Baumer)
3. Evidence-based Crime Policy (Brandon C. Welsh and David P.
Farrington)
Purposes and Functions
4. Punishment (Michael Tonry)
5. Crime Prevention (Brandon C. Welsh)
6. Treatment and Rehabilitation (Frank T. Cullen and Paula
Smith)
7. General Deterrence (Robert Apel and Daniel Nagin)
8. Reparation and Restoration (Kathy Daly and Gitana
Proietti-Scifoni)
9. Reassurance, Reinforcement, and Legitimacy (Matt Matravers)
Problems and Priorities
10. Drugs and Crime (Jonathan P. Caulkins and Mark A. R.
Kleiman)
11. Race, Ethnicity, and Crime (Cassia Spohn)
12. Sex, Gender, and Crime (Rosemary Gartner)
13. Immigrants and Crime (Sandra Bucerius)
14. Guns and Crime (Charles Wellford)
15. Work and Crime (Aaron Chalfin and Steven Raphael)
Police and Policing
16. Police Organization (Stephen D. Mastrofski and James J.
Willis)
17. Police and Crime Control (Lawrence W. Sherman)
18. Community and Problem-oriented Policing (Michael D. Reisig)
19. Legitimacy and Lawful Policing (Sanja Kutnjak Ivkovic)
Juvenile Justice
20. Juvenile Justice (Barry C. Feld and Donna M. Bishop)
Prosecution and Sentencing
21. Prosecution (Candace McCoy)
22. Sentencing (Brian Johnson)
23. Mandatory Penalties (Michael Tonry)
24. Capital Punishment (Ray Paternoster)
Community and Institutional Corrections
25. Jails and Pretrial Release (Brandon Applegate)
26. Probation and Community Penalties (Stan C. Proband)
27. Drug and Other Specialty Courts (Ojmarrh Mitchell)
28. Prisons (Yvonne Jewkes)
29. Women's Prisons (Candace Kruttschnitt)
30. Parole and Prisoner Reentry (Joan Petersilia)
Michael Tonry is Sonosky Professor of Law and Public Policy at the University of Minnesota
"[The Handbook] provides an invaluable resource for beginning to
understand criminology and criminal justice's history in order to
better understand its present. It also illuminates avenues into the
future-paths criminologists can take to avoid the pitfalls of the
past and learn from its lessons Finally, the authors of the
chapters almost always bring their discussion back to the present.
This is important, as it connects the past to the present. In this
way,
criminology and criminal justice can proceed with a strong
foundation of what has happened in the field, why it might have
happened the way it did, and what we can do better moving
forward."--
Contemporary Sociology
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |