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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Specialisation in offending behaviour

Youngs, Donna January 2001 (has links)
The criminological literature remains unclear on whether criminals are specialists, having predilections to commit only certain types of crime or are versatile such that whether they commit one type of crime rather than another is a product of situation and opportunity. These divergent views have implications both for explanations of offending and for appropriate interventions with offenders, yet, extensive empirical effort has failed to establish whether criminals are specialists or not (e.g. Britt 1996, Mak 1993, Blumstein et al. 1988, Farrington et al. 1988). One approach to resolving this debate lies in the appropriate conceptualisation of consistency within criminal behaviour. The notion of the specialist offender implies a set of restrictive assumptions about the quality and form of any consistent patterns within an individual's offending behaviour. Consideration of the possible theoretical bases of criminal specialisation leads to the development of a number of alternative proposals based on Social Cognitive theory (Bandura 1986) for the form and substantive nature of any specialisation tendencies and the variations which there may be across offenders. In exploring specialisation within criminal behaviour, the present research examines the evidence for these different ideas about how specialisation may exist. Patterns of co-occurrence within 42 offending behaviours as self-reported by 185 convicted young offenders are investigated. Tendencies towards specialisation are examined in three stages. In the first stage, multidimensional scaling analyses are used to identify distinct styles of crime within a general structure of criminal differentiation. The second stage is an exploration of the consideration of the social, psychological and criminal context in which the distinct styles are set, through consideration of their patterns of correlates. In the third stage of analysis the offenders' patterns of behaviour in relation to the differentiated styles are then examined for evidence of specialisation. The analyses reveal some tendency towards specialisation within the criminal behaviour of the offenders. The form of these specialised tendencies is not consistent with the ideas implicit in the specialist metaphor. Rather, the structure of criminal differentiation revealed in the multidimensional scaling analyses suggests that the offending behaviours co-occur in a way which reflects multiple sources of variation,such that the overall structure of offending behaviour is best described in terms of a system of interrelating components, rather than in terms of distinct parts. Within this systemic model of crime distinct patterns of offending behaviour are differentiated in the form of broad subsystems of activity. Two components of offending behaviour provide the basis for the differentiation of these offending styles. One is the type of gain for the offender which could be associated with the offending behaviours. Three trends relating to Bandura's (1986) Sensory, Power and Material general behaviour incentives are differentiated. The second component of offending behaviour underlying the differentiation is the degree of gain associated with the offending behaviour such that broad trends towards high or low gain behaviours are identified. The distinct styles relating to the Sensory, Power and Material incentives emerge at a higher level of gain, while low gain criminal activity remains undifferentiated. Examination of behaviour patterns within these high gain subsystems reveals specialisation which is relative rather than absolute, meaning that offenders tend to report some involvement in all subsystems, but tend to show higher levels of activity within one particular subsystem. Analysis of the offenders' profiles of activity across the High-Material gain, High-Power gain and High-Sensory gain styles reveals offending patterns which vary in both the type and the degree of specialisation. With regard to type of specialisation, the key distinction is between involvement in either the Sensory or the Power specialism, while Material offending plays a more central role featuring 10 the majority of offending profiles. The degree of specialisation revealed within the offending patterns varies such that while some offenders specialise in one high gain offending style, others are versatile showing a diverse involvement in all styles. Drawing on Social Cognitive principles (Bandura 1986) a model of criminal specialisation is proposed within which this range of offending profiles may be understood. It is argued that the variations in the breadth of activity across the 3 styles of offending may reflect developmental stages in the offender's criminal career, which relate to the extent of the offender's criminal social learning. The proposal is then that with increased experience of diverse criminal models offenders move from no high gain activity to a 'specialised' involvement in one high gain style through a broader involvement in two of the high gain styles to a diverse involvement in all offending styles. Both the rate of progress along such a path and how far an offender progresses will relate to the details of the offender's exposure to these criminal models. The profiles of offending activity which emerge in the present study suggest that there may be 4 distinct paths which an offender may follow depending on the particular pattern of criminal social learning experienced. Examination of the characteristics of the offenders carrying out the different behaviour profiles reveals a pattern of correlates which is consistent with the proposed model of criminal specialisation. In sum, the question of whether criminals are specialists or not has been confused by a lack of clarity on how any such consistencies may exist. Certainly there is little support for the conceptualisation of consistency within criminal behaviour in terms of the stereotypical ideas about specialists. Rather, the present study shows that criminal specialisation relates to different types of gain, at a high level of gain only, with versatility in relation to low gain offending activities. At the higher level of gain specialisation is revealed as a tendency towards relatively higher levels of activity within broad subsystems of offending behaviour. Within the present sample this specialisation emerges for some offenders only; other offenders show partial specialisation, while still others are versatile. A Social Cognitive developmental model of specialisation is proposed within which these variations in specialisation reflect different stages along paths of criminal social learning. Criminal behaviour, then, is best understood not in terms of 'specialisms', but in terms of distinct developmental paths along which specialisation is one stage. The implications of this model of criminal specialisation and versatility are discussed.
32

Alternative treatment concepts for juvenile delinquents

Wilson, Samuel Mason, III 30 June 1980 (has links)
The major objective of this document is to give one insight into the area of various treatment concepts, as they relate to juvenile delinquents. An attempt has been made to show various reasons for inadeQuacies of treatment as well as setting out the different types of treatment such as, non-legal versus legal methods and experimental programs in the field. There are four different reasons expounded upon in this document relating to the inadequacies of treatment in this area. The document sets out six various methods of which are referred to as legal methods. The document further sets out six different experimental types of programs in the field, as well as setting out certain principles which should govern the treatment of delinquents. The primary source of information was obtained from various books, periodicals and leaflets which have been published in the course of identifying the problems in this area.
33

Examining the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Serostatus in male prostitutes in Atlanta, Georgia

Williams, Demetrice Bernard Tyler 01 May 1996 (has links)
No description available.
34

The effectiveness of new dimension community treatment center: correlation of success and failure

Willingham, Kimberlyn Quovodice 01 May 1992 (has links)
This study examined the success and failure rates among noninstitutionalized black male delinquents aged 13 through 17 years from the Atlanta New Dimension Community Treatment Center of Georgia. Those who succeeded and those who failed were compared along the following dimensions: (1) family structure; (2) educational achievement; (3) social class; (4) seriousness of offense; and (5) alcohol-drug use. The data required for this study were collected using 50 successful case files and 50 failure case files. The study sample was drawn from one Atlanta community treatment center (CTC). The study findings disclose: (1) Those delinquents coming from an Intact family are more likely to succeed; (2) those with higher educational achievement will be more likely to succeed; (3) those who are products of middle class are more likely to succeed; (4) those delinquents with less serious offenses are more
35

Drug abuse violation arrest rates by age, time period, and cohort, 1965-1984

Wilson, Angela Denise 01 July 1987 (has links)
This thesis examines the relationship of drug abuse violations of three variables: age, time period, and cohort over a 20-year period. By utilizing drug abuse violation statistics from the Uniform Crime Reports, this study tests Richard Easterlin’s cohort hypothesis. Easterlin’s hypothesis suggests that crime rates will fluctuate according to the relative size of age cohorts. That is, large cohorts will generate higher arrest rates than small cohorts. This hypothesis was tested as it applied to arrest rates for drug abuse violations. The findings disclosed that both age and cohort, but not period, had a significant relationship to arrest rates for drug abuse violations. The variable age had a more significant relationship to arrest ates for drug abuse violations than did cohort. Therefore, Easterlin’s hypothesis is not confirmed.
36

Rehabilitation at Andromeda: a community transitional center for male offenders

Ruff, Michael Jerome 01 July 1983 (has links)
For more than one hundred and fifty years, the primary societal response to criminal behavior has been incarceration. Now, there are those who believe that while institutionalization may be necessary for a certain percentage of the criminal population, there is indeed a substantial number of individuals who are being incarcerated unnecessarily. The most significant and major thrust of corrections today is its move toward community-based corrections. This move is a clear indicator that society will no longer continue to tolerate the ever-increasing costs of imprisonment to support a system that utilizes mass custody without effective treatment as its primary focus. This descriptive and exploratory study is about Andromeda, community-based program that offers offenders the opportunity to re-evaluate themselves and their situation. It is hoped that by using such an approach the offender will leave the correctional system with a more positive feeling of self-esteem and worth than when he first entered.
37

Fate management: the real target of modern criminal law

Kennedy, William Brian January 2004 (has links)
There are a number of criminal law doctrines that evade the �doctrine of conjunction�1 � the precondition for culpability that the commission of a prohibited act be proven as accompanied by the intention to achieve the unlawful consequence.2 In general, they do so by ignoring, presuming, imputing or fictionally creating either actus reus or mens rea. This thesis contends that these are techniques which are deliberately constructed to manage incidental harm3 and which, together with the inchoate or anticipatory offences, form a patchwork of methods to supervise the citizen�s choices to inflict risks. It further argues that, by artificially converting secondary or incidental intention into malice, the doctrines disguise that modern criminal law has fate-management as its primary focus. The thesis illustrates that there are significant gaps in this regime. For instance, the inchoate offences can generally only address direct intention,4 and the outcome-based prohibitions cannot intercept fate. The thesis also maintains that fictions such as objective and constructive liability offend the rule of law, in that they modify fact rather than place values on it.5 The work suggests that current criminal law is an interim step towards a fully subjective fate-managing law. It proposes a radical revision to the existing approach: that the core criminal offence be �conscious disproportionate endangerment of the legal rights of others�.
38

Die Verwirkungen von Verfahrensrügen im Strafprozess /

Kiderlen, Karl Götz. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität Tübingen.
39

Die Reform des Strafverfahrensrechts im Dritten Reich : unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des StVO-Entwurfs 1939 : ein Beitrag zur Strafrechtsgeschichte /

Koch, Wolf-Peter, January 1972 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, 1972. / Includes bibliographical references (p. v-xxvi).
40

Die Einführung des Reichsstrafgesetzbuches in Bayern, ihre Geschichte und ihre Bedeutung für die allgemeinen Lehren /

Deiglmayr, Theodor. January 1933 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Friedrich-Alexander-Universität zu Erlangen.

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