Generality of Deviance

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Abbreviated Injury Scale
Accident Liability
adolescent delinquency
Antisocial Behavior
behavior
behavioral risk factors
Carolyn Uihlein
Category=JKVC
Chester L. Britt
Childhood Misbehavior
criminological psychology
Data Set
David W.M. Sorensen
Delinquent Friends
deviant
DUI Offender
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fatal Motor Vehicle Accidents
gender differences crime
George C. Strand
GPA
Grade Point Average
Grand Rapids Study
Harvard Law School Library
High GPA
John H. Laub
Large Families
Leonore M. J. Simon
low
Low Self-control
Marianne Junger
Mary Ann Zager
Maximum Abbreviated Injury Scale
Michael R Gottfredson
Michael S. Garr
National Youth Survey
Parental Makeup
Restraint Theories
Robert J. Sampson
self-control
self-control theory
self-regulation and deviant behavior
substance abuse research
Substantive Positivism
Tobit Estimates
Unofficial Delinquency
Victim Offender Relationship
Victor Larragoite
Work Habits
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138515949
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Generality of Deviance advances the idea that all forms of deviant, criminal, reckless, and sinful behavior have one thing in common: the tendency to pursue immediate benefits without concern for long-term costs. The editors argue, and the contributors confirm, that such disparate behaviors as smoking, auto accidents, burglary, and rape are similar in that they all involve disregard for their inevitable consequences: poor health, injury, loss of freedom, shame, or disrepute. The chapters here show how various forms of deviance relate to one another and can be explained by a common theory involving self-management.The editors illustrate how the idea of self-control challenges the psychological concept of aggression and provides a more useful alternative for understanding deviant behavior. They also apply the theory to the family, showing how this institution is central to crime control. Other contributors bring fresh perspectives to a variety of topics: the uncanny similarities between victims of car accidents and perpetrators of crime; the connection between drugs and crime; feminist explanations of rape; gender differences in crime rates; drunk drivers among high school students; and the progression of a delinquent's life from adolescence to adulthood.In short, this book makes a convincing case that it is a waste of intellectual effort and public funds to treat different forms of crime and deviant behavior as distinct problems. Studied collectively, various crimes may be seen to have the same causes and, hence, one cure. The Generality of Deviance will be a significant and provocative addition to the libraries of criminolegists, psychologists, and sociologists, those attempting to solve as well as to identify problems.

Travis Hirschi (Edited by) Michael R. Gottfredson (Edited by)