Students, if your book did not come with a CourseCompass Access Code Card, you can purchase immediate online access to your course using a credit card at http: //students.pearsoned.com. 1. Fagin, Criminal Justice, 1/e 2. Barkan, Fundamentals of Criminal Justice, 1/e 3. Albanese, Criminal Justice, 1/e (Brief) 4. Albanese, Criminal Justice, 2/e 5. Boyes-Watson, Crime and Justice: A Casebook Approach, 1/e 6. Shelden/Brown, Criminal Justice in America: A Critical View, 1/
With a focus on the current state of the law and on contemporary problems that matter to students, all presented in way that piques curiosity and interest, this book will cover topics such as hate crime, free speech, human trafficking, ...
Fundamentals of Criminal Investigation
Completely updated and restructured with new hypotheticals that introduce chapters and highlight important issues, this revision of FUNDAMENTALS OF CRIMINAL LAW by noted scholar Paul Robinson offers straightforward and comprehensive...
This book explores the philosophical underpinnings of the law's major doctrines concerning actus reus, mens rea, and defences, showing that they are not always driven by culpability but are grounded also in principles of moral ...
Fundamentals of Criminal Justice
This is an excellent introductory text for undergraduate research courses, and is ideal for students who want to understand how and why criminal justice research is done to become critical consumers of research.
... attention to understanding recidivism through the prism of the life-course.47 Rather than focus just on reoffending in the months and years immediately after punishment, researchers have turned to understanding how punishments may ...
Fundamentals of Criminal Justice
In S. Chainey 8: L. Tompson (Eds.), Crime mapping case studies: Practice and research (pp. 133—142). ... Pearson. Ratcliffe, j. (2002). Damned if you don't, damned if you do: Crime mapping and its implications in the real world.
Engel, Robin S. and Michael R. Smith. 2009. “Perceptual Distortion and Reasonableness during Police Shootings: Law, Legitimacy, and Future Research.” Criminology and Public Policy 8:141–151. Entman, Robert M. and Andrew Rojecki. 2000.