Criminology, the discipline that informs our understanding of crime
and justice, is facing an identity crisis. Long dominated by
sociology’s view of crime and its causes, criminology has recently
witnessed the rise of a new cadre of academics who feel free to
explore other explanations. Fairness and Crime: A Theory offers a
comprehensive new perspective on criminal behavior that will
reinvigorate the field and help us understand why we consider some
acts criminal as well as why and how society should respond to those
acts. In this book, Mark S. Davis connects the challenges of
understanding crime and administering justice to common norms that
guide behavior in everyday life. He contends that the exchanges
society defines as criminal work basically the way all other
exchanges, and when offenders rob banks, bilk investors, or fabricate
scientific data, they engage in a violation of fairness norms. Davis
offers a theory that is informed by insights from game theory
research, anthropology, law, industrial/organizational psychology,
personality/social psychology, and sociology. He utilizes examples
drawn from everyday life to illustrate the theory’s concepts in
detail. Fairness and Crime: A Theory provides a platform from which to
explore the purposes of the criminal justice system. What are we
trying to accomplish when we prosecute criminal suspects? While one
answer is that we are trying to vindicate the moral order and deter
future offending, another is that we are attempting to restore equity
for victims caused by offenders’ exploitative or retaliatory
behavior. Davis contends that addressing unfairness is what the
criminal justice system should be about. In rehabilitation, we should
be trying to inculcate fairness norms where they are absent or where
they have been compromised.
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A Theory
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780429679056
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter