ABSTRACT

In recent years, the lifecourse perspective has become a popular theoretical orientation toward crime. Yet despite its growing importance in the field of criminology, most textbooks give it only cursory treatment. Crime and the Lifecourse: An Introduction by Michael L. Benson provides a comprehensive overview of contemporary research and theory on the life-course approach to crime. The book emphasizes a conceptual understanding of this approach. A special feature is the integration of qualitative and quantitative research on criminal life histories. This book:

  • provides an overview of the life course approach and describes the major concepts and issues in lifecourse theory as it applies to criminology
  • reviews evidence on biological and genetic influences on crime
  • reviews research on the role of the family in crime and juvenile delinquency
  • provides a detailed discussion of the criminological lifecourse theories of Moffitt, Hagan, Sampson and Laub, and others
  • discusses the connections between youthful crime and adult outcomes in education, occupation, and marriage
  • presents an application of the lifecourse approach to white-collar crime
  • discusses how macro sociological and historical developments have influenced the shape of the lifecourse in American society as it relates to patterns in crime.

chapter Chapter 1|31 pages

An Overview of Life Course Theory and Research

chapter Chapter 2|28 pages

Biology and Behavior: The Launch Pad

chapter Chapter 3|17 pages

The Family: Initial Trajectories

chapter Chapter 4|44 pages

Adolescence and Crime: Continuity and Change

chapter Chapter 5|26 pages

Adulthood: Desistance, Persistence, and Human Agency

chapter Chapter 6|28 pages

History, Social Change, and the Life Course

chapter Chapter 7|12 pages

What Can Be Done?: Intervening in the Life Course

chapter Chapter 8|5 pages

Crime and the Life Course: Summing Up