Experiments in Criminology and Law: A Research Revolution
By (Author) Christine Horne
Edited by Michael J. Lovaglia
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
6th December 2007
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Jurisprudence and general issues
364.0724
Paperback
208
Width 154mm, Height 228mm, Spine 17mm
313g
Experiments in Criminology and Law: A Research Revolution illustrates how experimental methods, particularly laboratory experiments, can be useful for researchers studying crime, deviance, and law. Scholars in these areas have typically relied on data from surveys, ethnographies, and government records. While such research has produced evidence regarding correlations, it has not been as successful at increasing our understanding of the mechanisms responsible for those correlations. This book makes the case that laboratory experiments can help. Their strengths complement those of traditional methods and field experiments.
Experiments in Law and Criminology cogently argues for the benefits of using laboratory experiments in testing, refining, and extending theories of deviance and social control. Moreover, this collection is useful as a primer on how, when, and why to use expirements, and argues that only coordination of multiple methods - of laboratory experiments with case studies, surveys, official archives, and field experiments - promises to accelerate growth of our understanding of law and criminology. Brilliantly conceived to exemplify what it advocates, Experimental Studies is an exciting mix of creative theory, ingenious experiment, and illuminating dialogue with and among noted theorists and researchers. -- Morris Zelditch, professor emeritus of sociology at Stanford University., and coeditor of New Directions in Contemporary Sociological Theory
This groundbreaking anthology of experimental law and criminology raises important issues for the development of criminology as an experimental science. With commentaries by well-know criminologists and legal scholars, including Travis Hirschi and Chris Uggen, Experiments in Criminology and Law: A Research Revolution is a highly useful and insightful text. -- Darrell Steffensmeier, professor of sociology and criminology at Penn State University, is coauthor of Confessions of a Dying Thief: Understanding Crim
Christine Horne is associate professor of sociology at Washington State University and coeditor of Theories of Social Order.
Michael J. Lovaglia is professor of sociology at the University of Iowa and the author of Knowing People: The Personal Use of Social Psychology, 2nd Edition.