This ideal resource is the result of an enthusiastic collaboration of authors from both Europe and the United States. Highlighting diversities and similarities found in law enforcement priorities, punishment philosophy and practices, and media coverage, the volume also includes an enlightening discourse on political, scholarly and public issues critical to this area of research.
What relationship exists between minority status and crime? Is this relationship generalizable across different societies? Many western nations are becoming concerned with the problem of crime in general and, in particular, the role of minority groups, be they political refugees, guest workers, immigrants, or native ethnic and racial minorities. A unique cross-cultural exploration. Minorities, Migrants, and Crime highlights the empirical realities of crime and these under-studied populations. Each international expert from the United States or Europe surveys national statistical facts and research as well as political and theoretical debates critical to the issues. Revealing a number of surprising similarities and differences, original chapters examine law enforcement priorities, punishment philosophy and practices, and media coverage against the backdrop of contemporary thought and facts about race, ethnicity, migrants, crime, and criminal justice in the United States. Offering an in-depth examination of international perspectives, Minorities, Migrants, and Crime adds a viewpoint crucial to the law and policy making currently taking place in the United States. Minorities, Migrants, and Crime features state-of-the-art research in the international arena of criminal justice. A thought-provoking read, this book will prove to be an ideal resource for researchers, academics, and students in criminology, criminal justice, corrections, policing, sociology, ethnic studies, policy studies, international studies, immigration studies, and public administration.
Author(s): Ineke Haen Marshall
Publisher: Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications
Year: 1997
Language: English
Tags: crime, criminals, ethnic differences, ethnic minorities, foreigners, immigrants, self-reports
Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice in the United States
Marian Fitzgerald
Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice in Britain
Hanns Von Hofer, Jerzy Sarnecki and Henrik Tham
Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice in Sweden
Hans-Jorg Albrecht
Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice in the Federal Republic of Germany
Uberto Gatti, Daniela Malfatti and Alfredo Verde
Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice in Italy
Pamela Irving Jackson
Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice in France
Patrick Hebberecht
Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice in Belgium
Rosemary Barberet and Elisa Garcia-Espana
Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice in Spain
Willem De Haan
Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice in The Netherlands
Ineke Haen Marshall
Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice in the United States
More Similar than Different!