<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Now in an updated second edition, this book continues to explore the links between psychology and crime, taking the reader through psychological explanations of crime and the use of psychology within the criminal justice system.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><em>′Criminologists have been waiting a very long time for a psychology of crime that speaks their language. Finally it has arrived.′ - <strong>Dr David Gadd, Keele University</strong></em><br/> <br/> Now in an updated second edition, this book explores the links between psychology and crime, taking the reader through psychological explanations of crime and the use of psychology within the criminal justice system. The book aims to demystify some of the myths of psychological criminology and situates the subject within its historical and theoretical foundations, whilst maintaining a contemporary outlook and critical awareness of the field's advantages and limitations.</p> This second edition includes: </p> <ul> Four new chapters, on ′Psychological perspectives and their approach to crime′, ′Mentally disordered offenders′, ′The Criminal Courts and the role of the Jury′, and ′Victims, Fear of Crime and Offender Management′. </li> Improved coverage of the issues around interpersonal violence, sexual violence and deviancy, the psychology of crime in groups, and war crimes. </li> Increased analysis of psychology and the criminal justice system. </li> </ul> Essential reading for students in criminology, sociology and psychology.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>Craig Webber has achieved a rare feat; a book that connects psychology and crime in a way that honours the rich history of sociological approaches to crime with current insights from psychology. It reads well, is well structured and combines the fields of criminology and psychology in a most engaging fashion. The many students who take a combination of psychology with criminology will thank him for this book.</p> <p> </p> <br/>--Francis Pakes (8/27/2019 12:00:00 AM)<br><br><p>This second edition retains all the strengths of the first while adding fresh insight to contemporary issues. Craig Webber's knowledge of the field and his openness to a wide range of approaches has resulted in an indispensable guide to criminological psychology. Psychology & Crime provides a lively, thought provoking and authoritative introduction to a rapidly growing area and succeeds in stretching thinking beyond current orthodoxies.</p> <br/>--Eamonn Carrabine<br><br>Praise for the previous edition: <br/> <br/> Criminologists have been waiting a very long time for a psychology of crime that speaks their language. Finally it has arrived. Craig Webber brings together a wealth of psychological research that students of criminology ignore at their peril. He also documents the significant in-roads criminologists are now making with regard to matters of the mind too often treated as ′off-limits′ by many social scientists, psychologists included.<br/> <strong>Dr David Gadd<br/> Keele University</strong> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p>Webber has pulled off a unique feat by writing a book on the psychology of crime that will appeal equally to sociologists and criminologists. The book provides up-to-date and scholarly coverage of the investigative psychology literature on policing serial offending and mass murderers, but also integrates sophisticated discussions of Stan Cohen′s theory of denial, the Birmingham School of cultural studies, and Green Criminology. This exciting theoretical integration bodes very well for the future of criminal psychology.<br/> <strong>Professor Shadd Maruna<br/> Queen′s University Belfast</strong></p> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p>Craig Webber's <em>Psychology and Crime</em> does a good job of opening up psychology to criminologists...Webber's book is 'criminological' in its starting position and psychology is not approached as the stand-alone discipline it is often thought to be. That sets it apart from other texts. For that reason criminologists may well find this one particularly accessible... The book as a whole does a good job in cautiously welcoming psychology into the criminological mainstream. For those initially apprehensive of psychology, this is a good choice of text that should find its way onto readings lists in particular for psychology-related modules within criminology courses. That is a readership for whom this text should be particularly valuable.<br/> <strong>Dr Francis Pakes<br/> Internet Journal of Criminology</strong></p>--Reviews<br>
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