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Competing Perspectives on Cross-National Crime: An Evaluation of Theory and Evidence
110
Citations
201
References
1988
Year
Comparative LawInternational CriminologyEconomic CriminologyCrime ScienceCross-national CrimeEconomic DevelopmentSociologyLawCriminal LawInternational CrimesDurkheimian-modernization Theoretical PerspectiveInternational LawComparative CriminologyCrime RatesPolitical ScienceSocial SciencesCriminal Justice
Cross-national studies of crime are dominated by a Durkheimian-Modernization theoretical perspective. We evaluate this perspective and present two alternatives, the Marxian-World System and Ecological-Opportunity perspectives. Each is for its theory of social change, causal explanation of criminal behavior, conceptualization of law and crime rates, and view of the relation between collective political behavior and crime. The empirical evidence is assessed and weak support is found for the dominant perspective. The article concludes by reconsidering the concepts of economic development and crime rates.
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