Ideal for use, either as a second text in a standard criminology course, or for a discrete course on biosocial perspectives, this book of original chapters breaks new and important ground for ways today's criminologists need to think more broadly about the crime problem.
List of Illustrations
List of Contributors
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part Ⅰ An Overview of the B iosocial Approach
1 Introduction to Biosocial Criminology
Anthony Walsh and Kevin M. Beaver
2 Criminal Behavior from Heritability to Epigenetics: How Genetics Clarifies the Role of the Environment
Anthony Walsh
3 Molecular Genetics and Crime
Kevin M. Beaver
4 The Ghost in the Machine and Criminal Behavior:Criminology for the 21 st Century
John Paul Wright, Danielle Boisvert,Kim Dietrich, and M. Douglas Ris
5 Evolutionary Psychology and Crime
Satoshi Kanazawa
Part Ⅱ Major Correlates of Crime
6 Gender and Crime: An Evolutionary Perspective
Anne Campbell
7 Inconvenient Truths: Science, Race, and Crime
John Paul Wright
8 Crazy by Design: A Biosocial Approach to the Age-Crime Curve
Anthony Walsh
9 Substance Abuse and Crime: Biosocial Foundations
Michael G. Vaughn
10 Testosterone and Violence among Young Men
Allan Mazur
Part Ⅲ Serious Violent Criminals and Biosocial Approaches to Crime Prevention
11 Neuroscience and the Holy Grail: Genetics and Career Criminality
Ma tt DeL isi
12 Psychopathy
Richard R Wiebe
13 No Longer Taboo: Crime Prevention Implications of Biosocial Criminology
Matthew Robinson
Glossary/Index