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A01=Aleksandra Jordanoska
A01=David Friedrichs
A01=Isabel Schoultz
Aleksandra Jordanoska
American Sociological Society
Author_Aleksandra Jordanoska
Author_David Friedrichs
Author_Isabel Schoultz
Category=JKV
Category=JKVC
Category=JKVK
Corporate Crime
crime control policy
Crimes of the Powerful
criminological theory
Criminology Textbook
critical criminology
Differential Association
differential association theory
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
History of Criminological Thought
Isabel Schoultz
Michael Adler Report
Principles of Criminology
Professional Thief
Prominent Criminologists
Sexual Psychopath Laws
sociological approach
State Corporate Crime
Sutherland Award
Sutherland Legacy
Sutherland's Book
Sutherland's Criminology
Sutherland's Death
Sutherland's Differential Association Theory
Sutherland's Life
Sutherland's Theory
Sutherland's Time
Sutherland's Work
Sutherland’s Book
Sutherland’s Criminology
Sutherland’s Death
Sutherland’s Differential Association Theory
Sutherland’s Life
Sutherland’s Theory
Sutherland’s Time
Sutherland’s Work
The Professional Thief
twentieth century criminology legacy
UK Financial Market
White Collar Crime
White Collar Crime Concept
White Collar Criminal
White Collar Offenders
white-collar offences
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367481889
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Jul 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Edwin H. Sutherland is widely identified as the single most important and influential criminologist of the twentieth century. He is especially well-known for his path-breaking criminology textbook (first published in 1924), his promotion of a sociological (and scientific) approach to the understanding of crime and its control, his theory of differential association, and his work over his final ten years on white-collar crime, a term he is credited with having introduced.

This book explores the contemporary meaning of Edwin Sutherland and considers why criminologists today should continue to engage with his work. What can and should Sutherland mean to future 21st century criminologists, those working in the field say between 2021 and 2050, or some one hundred years after the 1921 to 1950 period that encompassed Sutherland’s criminological career? Which dimensions of Sutherland’s work have best survived the march of time and which are most likely to – and deserve to – survive going forward?

Making the case that Sutherland is important to both mainstream and critical criminologists, to positivistic criminologists and those who study crimes of the powerful, this book is essential reading for both students and scholars interested in exploring the enduring legacy of this key thinker in criminology.

David Friedrichs is Distinguished Professor of Sociology, Criminal Justice and Criminology at the University of Scranton (Pennsylvania, USA). He is the author of Trusted Criminals: White Collar Crime in Contemporary Society 4E (Cengage, 2010) and Law in Our Lives: An Introduction 3E (OUP, 2012), co-author (with Dawn Rothe) of Crimes of Globalization (Routledge, 2015) and editor of State Crime I & II (Ashgate, 1998). He is a former President of the White-Collar Crime Research Consortium, and a recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award of the Division of Critical Criminology (ASC).

Isabel Schoultz holds a PhD in Criminology from the Department of Criminology at Stockholm University, and is currently employed as a researcher at the Sociology of Law Department, Lund University. She has published academic papers on a variety of topics, including denials of corporate crime, state crime in street-level bureaucracy and access to justice in the European Court.

Aleksandra Jordanoska is Lecturer at the School of Law, the University of Manchester. She has research expertise in the area of regulatory enforcement and corporate crime in the financial markets, and has published papers on complex fraud, financial crime, and arts in prisons. She completed her PhD in Law and Criminology in the School of Law, Queen Mary University of London, and her MPhil in Criminology at the Institute of Criminology, Cambridge University.