Moyer takes a multidimensional approach to the subject by including "new" theorists such as W. E.
B. Du Bois, Pauline Tarnowsky, Frank Tannenbaum, Ruth Shonle Cavan, and Sally Simpson, often allowing the theorists'
original source material to speak for them. Chapters are devoted to recently developed perspectives, particularly
from women and people of color, which provide readers with a broader understanding of crime and criminal behavior."
Criminological Theories is organized in a chronological order, beginning with the 18th-century classical school
- focusing on Beccaria and Bentham - and ending with the late 20th-century peacemaking perspective. In each chapter
Moyer analyzes the assumptions the theorists have made about people and society and includes discussions of the
cultural and historical settings in which the theories were developed, along with biographies of specific theorists
and their lifetime contributions.
Table of Contents
Ch. 1. The Expansion of Criminological Theory
Ch. 2. The Classical School
Ch. 3. The Positivist School
Ch. 4. The Functionalist Perspective
Ch. 5. The Chicago School1
Ch. 6. The Control Theorists
Ch. 7. The Interactionist School
Ch. 8. Conflict/Radical/Marxist Theory
Ch. 9 Feminist Criminology
Ch. 10. Peacemaking in Criminology
References
Index
About the Authors