Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Desisting from Crime : Continuity and Change in Long-term Crime Patterns of Serious Chronic Offenders - Michael E. Ezell

Desisting from Crime

Continuity and Change in Long-term Crime Patterns of Serious Chronic Offenders

By: Michael E. Ezell, Lawrence E. Cohen

Hardcover | 1 February 2005

At a Glance

Hardcover


RRP $190.95

$142.75

25%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $35.69 with

 or 

Ships in 7 to 10 business days

This groundbreaking study examines patterns of offending among persistent juvenile offenders. The authors address questions that have been the focus of criminological debate over the last two decades. Are there are multiple groups of offenders in the population with distinct age-crime patterns? Are between-person differences in criminal offending patterns stable throughout the offender''s life? Is there a relationship between offending at one time and at a subsequent time of life, after time-stable differences in criminal propensity are controlled? Ezell and Cohen address these issues by examining three large, separately drawn samples of serious youthful offenders from California. Each sample was tracked over a long time-period, and sophisticated statistical models were used to test eight empirical hypotheses drawn from three major theories of crime: population heterogeneity, state dependence, and dual taxonomy. Each of these three perspectives offers different predictions about the relationship between age and crime, and the possibility of crime desistance over the life of serious chronic offenders. Despite the serious chronic criminality among the sample offenders, by the time they reached their mid- to late twenties and continuing into their thirties, each of the six latent classes of offender identified by the study had begun to demonstrate a declining number of arrests. This finding has profound implications for penal policies that impose life sentences on multiple offenders, such as the Californian ''three strikes and you''re out'' which incarcerates inmates for 25 years to life with their ''third strike'' conviction, at precisely the point when they have begun to grow out of serious crime.
Industry Reviews
`'Criminology is full of great debates, especially those surrounding the identification of brute facts of crime. Two of these...concern the relationship between age and crime and the relationship between past and future criminal activity...serious students of crime make it a point to carefully consider these issues....[this book] serves as an exemplar to all criminologists as to not only how to conduct sound research on key criminological questions, but also to do so in a way that is careful not to go beyond the reach of data.' ' Alex R. Piquero, University of Florida

More in Violence in Society

Consent Laid Bare : Sex, Entitlement & the Distortion of Desire - Chanel Contos
Damned Whores and God's Police - Anne Summers

RRP $44.99

$37.75

16%
OFF
Predators' Paradise : A Journey of Survival and Resilience - Glen Fisher
Man Up : The New Misogyny and the Rise of Violent Extremism - Cynthia Miller-Idriss
The Gift of Fear : Survival Signals That Protect Us from Violence - Gavin de Becker
Trauma Trails : Recreating Song Lines : Recreating Song Lines - Judy Atkinson
Ask Not : The Kennedys and the Women They Destroyed - Maureen Callahan
Reckoning : The forgotten children and their quest for justice - David Hill
My Story : A Child Called It, The Lost Boy, A Man Named Dave - Dave Pelzer
Reporting Science : The Case of Aggression - Jeffrey H.  Goldstein
Mugging as a Social Problem : Routledge Revivals - Michael Pratt
True Crime : Key Themes and Perspectives - Ian Cummins