A Call to Restore Balance to the Social Sciences
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Köp båda 2 för 1062 krWright and DeLisi provide an invaluable primer in the much-neglected area of conservative criminology. They indict the dominant liberal paradigm for using its power to silence uncomfortable views and for using ideological purity, not science, to decide controversial issues. Whether readers find its claims irritating or illuminating, Conservative Criminology promises to provoke important debates and to force progressives, such as myself, to sharpen our thinking and compile more convincing evidence. It is a volume that should be read by all. - Francis T. Cullen, University of Cincinnati Using reason and data Wright and DeLisi persuasively argue that criminology has been contaminated by an overwhelming commitment to leftist ideology. Conservative Criminology offers a refreshing and open discussion regarding the need for a diversity of thought in criminology that includes a conservative voice. A must read for all criminologists! -Michael G. Vaughn, Saint Louis University Wright and DeLisis Conservative Criminology presents an inconvenient truth that criminology has shut out an important way of looking at the world. As a liberal criminologist, I found it compelling, frustrating, and challenging, all at the same time! Its a must read for scholars and students alike. - Travis Pratt, University of Cincinnati Corrections Institute
John Paul Wright John Paul Wright is Professor of Criminal Justice in the School of Criminal Justice at the University of Cincinnati and is a Distinguished Adjunct Research Professor at King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Wright has authored or coauthored almost 200 scholarly works. His work primarily focuses on the connection between biological factors and criminal behavior, with an emphasis on how biological factors play out across the life course. Wright has published in a broad range of scientific and scholarly journals, including journals in the social and hard sciences. His work has been covered by the New York Times, National Geographic, and National Public Radio. It was his work in biosocial criminology that sensitized him to the fundamental role of political ideology in the social sciences generally and in criminology specifically. Matt DeLisi Matt DeLisi is Professor and Coordinator of Criminal Justice Studies and Faculty Affiliate of the Center for the Study of Violence at Iowa State University. DeLisi's primary research interests include criminal careers/career criminals, self-control theory, corrections, psychopathy, and the molecular/behavioral genetics of antisocial behavior. DeLisi is a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, and Association for Psychological Science. DeLisi has published nearly 200 scholarly works and is Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Criminal Justice.
Why Conservative Criminology? The Tribal Moral Community of Criminology What is Conservatism? Liberals Slaying Dragons Public Housing and the Family Court A Critique of Liberalism A Conservative Critique of Criminology Conservative Criminology