Introduction John E. Conklin’s New Perspectives in Criminology (1995, ed.) gathers influential 1990s scholarship to reframe how crime, offenders, victims, and social responses are understood. Rather than presenting a single thesis, the volume assembles diverse essays that push criminology beyond narrow typologies toward interdisciplinary, structural, and life-course approaches. This essay synthesizes the book’s central contributions, highlights key themes and representative chapters, evaluates methodological and theoretical advances, and considers ongoing implications for research and policy.
Bibliographic note Conklin, John E., ed., New Perspectives in Criminology (Pearson, 1995) — anthology of essays from leading scholars of the 1990s (use for citation and deeper reading).
Introduction John E. Conklin’s New Perspectives in Criminology (1995, ed.) gathers influential 1990s scholarship to reframe how crime, offenders, victims, and social responses are understood. Rather than presenting a single thesis, the volume assembles diverse essays that push criminology beyond narrow typologies toward interdisciplinary, structural, and life-course approaches. This essay synthesizes the book’s central contributions, highlights key themes and representative chapters, evaluates methodological and theoretical advances, and considers ongoing implications for research and policy.
Bibliographic note Conklin, John E., ed., New Perspectives in Criminology (Pearson, 1995) — anthology of essays from leading scholars of the 1990s (use for citation and deeper reading).
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