History & crime : a transdisciplinary approach
Revealing the cross utility potential of multiple disciplines to advance knowledge in crime studies, History & Crime showcases new research into crime from across the interdisciplinary perspectives of early modern and modern history, criminology, forensic psychology, and legal studies. Authored...
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| Other Authors | , |
|---|---|
| Format | Electronic eBook |
| Language | English |
| Published |
Bingley, U.K. :
Emerald Publishing Limited,
2021.
|
| Series | Emerald advances in historical criminology
|
| Subjects | |
| Online Access | Full text |
| ISBN | 9781801177009 |
| DOI | 10.1108/9781801176989 |
| Physical Description | 1 online resource (242 pages). |
Cover
Table of Contents:
- Chapter 1. Making sense of history and crime through a synthesized framework / Thomas J. Kehoe and Jeffrey E. Pfeifer Part I. Historical Research on Crime
- Chapter 2. Killing in secret: State and popular perceptions of infanticide in early modern Europe / Una McIlvenna
- Chapter 3. A public claim to madness: Restoring context to forensic psychiatry in late-nineteenth century victoria / Georgina Rychner
- Chapter 4. Towards a history of deviance: policing drunkenness in mid-nineteenth-century new South Wales / Matthew Allen
- Chapter 5. The dazed and dangerous delinquents of sin city: policing and detaining juvenile delinquents in 20th century las vegas / Doris Morgan Rueda
- Chapter 6. Containing the undesirables: Discretion and the sentencing of habitual criminals in australian supreme courts in the twentieth century / Lisa Durnian
- Chapter 7. The history of forensic psychology in australia through a legal adjudication narrative lens: cases from the court of criminal jurisdiction / Jeffrey E. Pfeifer
- Part II. Crime research from a historical perspective
- Chapter 8. Historical criminology as a field for interdisciplinary research and trans-disciplinary discourse / Paul Bleakley and Thomas J. Kehoe
- Chapter 9. Status quotidian: Microhistory and the study of crime / Alex Tepperman
- Chapter 10. Breaking down the blue wall: using historical criminology to map entrenched networks of police corruption / Paul Bleakley
- Chapter 11. Historical methods in the critical study of drug policy / Natalie Thomas
- Chapter 12. Making the case for a feminist historical criminology: Female homicide offending in victoria 1860-1920 / Vicky Nagy
- Chapter 13. "Winning hearts and minds": a historically-motivated model for reactions to occupation strategy / Thomas J. Kehoe and Paul Bleakley
- Chapter 14. History, crime studies, and the use of history for impact-based research / Thomas J. Kehoe and Jeffrey E. Pfeifer.