Offender profiling and crime analysis / Peter B. Ainsworth.
Material type:
- 1903240220
- 1903240212 (pbk.)
- HV6080 .A53 2001
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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PAC UNIVERSITY | HV6080 .A53 2001 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | C.1 | Available | 27971 | |||
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PAC UNIVERSITY | HV6080 .A53 2001 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | C.2 | Available | 27972 |
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HV 6025.T5 1976 Crime and Deviance : | HV6030 .W56 2020 The economics of crime : | HV6030 .W56 2020 The economics of crime : | HV6080 .A53 2001 Offender profiling and crime analysis / | HV6080 .A53 2001 Offender profiling and crime analysis / | HV6080 .A667 2024 The psychology of criminal conduct / | HV6080 .A667 2024 The psychology of criminal conduct / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 185-194) and index.
Machine generated contents note: 1 Offender profiling - separating myth from reality -- Is there consensus on what constitutes profiling? -- What does profiling involve? -- What do 'profiles' look like? -- Can the goals of profiling be identified? -- Are there different kinds of profiling? -- What knowledge do profilers need? -- Concluding comments -- Further reading -- 2 Criminal behaviour and its motivation -- Explanations of criminal behaviour -- Genetic and individual factors -- Twin studies -- Family influences -- Personality theories -- Social learning theories -- Concluding comments -- Further reading -- 3 Environmental influences and patterns of offending -- The influence of the environment -- Defensible space -- Is the environment entirely deterministic? -- Modern housing and its possible effects -- People's needs and environmental provision -- Designing environments which might reduce -- crime levels -- Situational crime prevention -- Crime displacement -- Environmental effects on target selection -- Is crime 'normal? -- Repeat victimisation -- Concluding comments -- Further reading -- 4 Problems and pitfalls in the gathering of data -- The reporting and recording of offences -- False reporting of 'crimes' -- How can we know how much crime is committed? -- Police recording of crime -- Other ways in which biases may be produced -- Human perception and memory -- The interviewing of suspects -- Concluding comments -- Further reading -- 5 Crime mapping and geographical profiling -- The geography of crime -- The Chicago School -- The importance of place -- Crime hot spots -- Combining geographical and temporal information -- on crime -- Is such information useful? -- Problems and difficulties with geographic profiling -- Concluding comments -- Further reading -- 6 Early approaches to profiling -- The development of the FBI's first profiling system -- Other classifications - selfish v unselfish rapists -- Further classification of rapists -- What functions might categorisation have? -- How useful is the FBI's approach? -- Concluding comments -- Further reading -- 7 Investigative psychology and the work of David Canter -- The psychological underpinnings of Canter's work -- Canter's work on crime locations -- Concluding comments -- Further reading -- 8 Clinical and other approaches -- The Dutch approach to profiling -- Contributions from forensic psychiatry and clinical -- psychology -- The work of Paul Britton -- Comparing different approaches to profiling -- Concluding comments -- Further reading -- 9 Current developments and future prospects -- Canter's more recent work -- Other recent British work -- Stalking -- Concluding comments -- Further reading -- Conclusions -- How useful is offender profiling? -- References -- Index.