Confessions of a Dying Thief

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A01=Darrell J. Steffensmeier
Author_Darrell J. Steffensmeier
Beck Boy
Category=DNB
Category=DNXC
Cosa Nostra
Criminal Capital
Criminal Careers
Criminal Enterprise
Criminal Entrepreneurs
Criminal Opportunities
Criminal Social Capital
criminological theory
Darrell J. Steffensmeier
deviant behavior analysis
Differential Association
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethnographic research
Good Burglar
Good Safeman
Good Thieves
illegal enterprise networks
Jeffery T. Ulmer
Larceny Sense
Legit Businesses
Local Clique
Ordinary Joe Blow
Ordinary Thief
organized crime studies
pathways into criminal careers
Rank Shit
Sam's Criminal Career
Sam's Narrative
Sam’s Criminal Career
Sam’s Narrative
Seasoned Thieves
Secondhand Dealers
social learning theory
Tylers Ville
Vice Versa
Warm Stuff

Product details

  • ISBN 9780202307602
  • Weight: 771g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2005
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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*Recipient of the American Society of Criminology's 2006 Michael J. Hindelang Award for a book, published within the past three calendar years, that is "the most outstanding contribution to research in criminology."

*Nominated for the 2007 Outstanding Book Award of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences.

Sam Goodman, was a long-time thief, fence, and quasi-legitimate businessman. He had a criminal career that spanned fifty years, beginning in his mid-teens and ending with his death when he was in his mid-sixties. Confessions of a Dying Thief is an in-depth ethnographic study of Sam and his world based on continuous contact with him for many years, on multiple interviews with his network of associates in crime and business, and on a series of interviews with him shortly before he died.

The book updates and greatly expands the case study of Sam Goodman's fencing activity found in Steffensmeier's award-winning 1986 book The Fence: In the Shadow of Two Worlds. It combines Sam's colorful narrative accounts with substantive commentary by the authors to provide a more nuanced portrayal of criminal careers, illegal enterprise, and the broad landscape comprising the entity called "crime." To more fully understand pathways into and out of crime as well as the social organization of illegal enterprise, the authors propose an integrative learning-opportunity-commitment framework that combines differential association/social learning theory and an extended conceptualization of criminal opportunity with a three-fold theory of commitment to crime. This framework offers an integrated and more complete way of understanding mechanisms that underlie criminal offending and criminal careers. It also recognizes the complexity and scope of the criminal landscape and its embeddedness in the fabric of the larger society, including its criminal justice system.

Sam's illness and death are a sobering backdrop throughout the whole book. However, Confessions is not just a dying thief's intimate confessions. Rather, it is a rare and penetrating journey into the dynamics of criminal careers and the social organization of criminal enterprise, as experienced by a veteran thief and fence and his network of key associates.

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