Available Formats
Criminology as a Moral Science
By (Author) Anthony E Bottoms
Edited by Jonathan Jacobs
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
3rd April 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Crime and criminology
Criminal law: procedure and offences
Methods, theory and philosophy of law
364
Paperback
336
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book proposes an explicit recognition of criminology as a moral science: a philosophically textured appreciation of the presence and role of values in peoples reasoning and motivation, set within an empirically rigorous social-scientific account. This endeavour requires input from both criminologists and philosophers, and careful dialogue between them. Criminology as a Moral Science provides such a dialogue, not least about the so-called fact-value distinction, but also about substantive topics such as guilt and shame. The book also provides philosophically-informed accounts of morality in practice in several criminological contexts: these include whistleblowing practices within a police service; the dilemmas of mothers about who and what to tell about a partners imprisonment; and how persistent offenders begin to try to turn their lives around to desist from crime. The issues raised go to the heart of some currently pressing topics within criminology, notably the development of evidence-based practice, which requires some kind of stable bridge to be built between research evidence (facts) and proposals for policy (evaluative recommendations).
Anthony E Bottoms is Emeritus Wolfson Professor of Criminology at the University of Cambridge, UK. Jonathan Jacobs is Director of the John Jay College of Criminal Ethics at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York, USA.