African American Criminologists, 1970-1996: An Annotated Bibliography
By (Author) Lee Ross
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
16th April 1998
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Anthropology
Bibliographies, catalogues
016.36408996073
Hardback
144
To this date, efforts to document the scholarly contributions of exclusively African American criminologists are nonexistent. This is a reference work which offers contemporary Afrocentric perspective on critical issues of crime and justice by focusing on the contributions of African American criminologists whose interests and responses to crime arguably differ from those of mainstream white criminologists. This reference will be of interest to undergraduate and graduate students and faculty in criminal justice and practitioners in policy making. Most of the abstracts can be cross-referenced to publications within mainstream criminal justice journals. In addition, selected books, manuscripts, and an array of state and government documents, are included and provide rare Afrocentric perspectives on issues of crime and justice. In the process, it credits many caucasians and ethnic minorities as important contributors to a given publication. This reference book consists of five chapters: (1) an introductory article on issues that define (and confront) African American criminologists, 2) an alphabetical listing of published abstracts for each contributing author, (3) selected references to each publication, (4) an appendix containing titles to doctoral dissertations for all contributing African American scholars, and (5) an author and subject index.
A valuable addition to criminal justice literature, this work brings together annotated bibliographic entries representing the recent work of many African American criminologists. It provides both the opportunity to gain familiarity with the research of experts who claim African ancestry, and to become aware of issues important to this group of scholars....Recommended for all criminal justice scholars.-Choice
"A valuable addition to criminal justice literature, this work brings together annotated bibliographic entries representing the recent work of many African American criminologists. It provides both the opportunity to gain familiarity with the research of experts who claim African ancestry, and to become aware of issues important to this group of scholars....Recommended for all criminal justice scholars."-Choice
LEE E. ROSS is Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where he teaches courses on victimology, domestic violence, research methods, and race, crime, and justice.