Pearson+

Crime Control in America: What Works?, 4th edition

  • John L. Worrall
loading

Learn more, spend less

  • Study simpler and faster

    Use flashcards and other study tools in your eTextbook

  • Listen on the go

    Learn how you like with full eTextbook audio

  • Find it fast

    Quickly navigate your eTextbook with search

  • Stay organized

    Access all your eTextbooks in one place

  • Easily continue access

    Keep learning with auto-renew

Crime Control in America: What Works? is a balanced, comprehensive introduction to crime control in the US. The text provides comprehensive coverage of what works in policing, prosecution, courts and legislative methods of crime control. It also moves beyond the justice system and examines the effectiveness of crime control at the individual, family, school and community levels. Finally, it covers environmental criminology and explanations of large-scale crime trends.

The 4th Edition includes several new sections covering the most current and controversial topics in crime control. Topics include the alleged Ferguson effect, immigration enforcement, raising the age of majority, and mass shootings.

Published by Pearson (July 14th 2021) - Copyright © 2019

ISBN-13: 9780137515622

PART 1: INTRODUCTION

1. Identifying and Evaluating Crime Control
Crime Control and Prevention
The Crime Problem in America
Types of Crimes
The Ever-Expanding Criminal Law
Incidence of Crime
Costs of Crime and Criminals
Is Fear of Crime Worse Than Crime Itself?
Laws
Official Policies, Written and Unwritten
Unofficial Approaches
Defining the Crime Problem
Defining the Solution
Defining the Desired Outcome
The Hard and Soft Sciences
The Elusive Criminal Justice Experiment
You Can Prove Anything with Statistics
Qualitative and Quantitative Research
Macro- and Micro-Level Crime Control
Measuring Displacement and Diffusion
The Measures Used
When New Data Become Available
Alternative Settings: The Generalization Problem
Other Concerns
Academic Crusaders and Bandwagon Science
Effective Does Not Always Mean Best
Guns and Drugs: The Real Attention Getters

Your questions answered