Appearance Bias and Crime
Herausgeber: Berry, Bonnie
Appearance Bias and Crime
Herausgeber: Berry, Bonnie
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Offers an entirely new way of examining crime, criminal victimization, and crime control, through the lens of appearance bias.
Offers an entirely new way of examining crime, criminal victimization, and crime control, through the lens of appearance bias.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. April 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 662g
- ISBN-13: 9781108422314
- ISBN-10: 1108422314
- Artikelnr.: 54802849
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. April 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 662g
- ISBN-13: 9781108422314
- ISBN-10: 1108422314
- Artikelnr.: 54802849
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Part I. Unattractiveness, Criminality, and Victimization: 1. Appearance and
delinquency Robert Agnew; 2. 'Ugly' criminals and 'ugly' victims: a
quantitative analysis of add health data Brent Teasdale and Bonnie Berry;
Part II. Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality as Targeted Identities: 3. Racial
profiling and reconciliation: the quest for indigenous justice in Canada
Terry Wotherspoon and John Hansen; 4. Black Lives Matter: the watchdog for
the criminal justice system Lorenzo M. Boyd and Kimberly Conway Dumpson; 5.
An absence of appearance identifiers: misguided moral crusades in
anti-human trafficking Billy James Ulibarrí; Part III. The Process of
Social Control as Influenced by Appearance: 6. Becoming and being a woman
prisoner: does appearance matter? Brenda Chaney; 7. The impact of victim
attractiveness on victim blameworthiness and defendant guilt determinations
in cases of domestic and sexual assault Jennifer Wareham, Bonnie Berry,
Brenda Sims Blackwell and Denise Paquette Boots; 8. Do attractive women
'get away' with traffic violations? An observational study of police
responses to traffic stops Brent Teasdale, Taylor Gann and Dean Dabney; 9.
The police 'presence': public service versus intimidation Stephen A.
Bishopp; Part IV. Identifying Terrorists, Mistakenly or Not, by Appearance:
10. Dressed to kill: jihadi appearance and its significance in Austria and
beyond Daniela Pisoiu; 11. Charisma, prisoner radicalization, and
terrorism: the role of appearance Mark S. Hamm; Part VI. Very Visible
Differences: Orientation, Disability, Freaks, and Clowns and their
Relationship to Crime and Victimization: 12. Queer looking: appearance and
LGBTQ citizens' victimization and interactions with the criminal justice
system Elicka Peterson Sparks and Ian Skinner; 13. Visible disabilities and
risk of interpersonal victimization Heidi L. Scherer and Bradford W. Reyns;
14. Remarkably unique human appearances: scary clowns and freaks Bonnie
Berry; 15. Appearance criminology: a new approach toward equitable
treatment Bonnie Berry; Index.
delinquency Robert Agnew; 2. 'Ugly' criminals and 'ugly' victims: a
quantitative analysis of add health data Brent Teasdale and Bonnie Berry;
Part II. Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality as Targeted Identities: 3. Racial
profiling and reconciliation: the quest for indigenous justice in Canada
Terry Wotherspoon and John Hansen; 4. Black Lives Matter: the watchdog for
the criminal justice system Lorenzo M. Boyd and Kimberly Conway Dumpson; 5.
An absence of appearance identifiers: misguided moral crusades in
anti-human trafficking Billy James Ulibarrí; Part III. The Process of
Social Control as Influenced by Appearance: 6. Becoming and being a woman
prisoner: does appearance matter? Brenda Chaney; 7. The impact of victim
attractiveness on victim blameworthiness and defendant guilt determinations
in cases of domestic and sexual assault Jennifer Wareham, Bonnie Berry,
Brenda Sims Blackwell and Denise Paquette Boots; 8. Do attractive women
'get away' with traffic violations? An observational study of police
responses to traffic stops Brent Teasdale, Taylor Gann and Dean Dabney; 9.
The police 'presence': public service versus intimidation Stephen A.
Bishopp; Part IV. Identifying Terrorists, Mistakenly or Not, by Appearance:
10. Dressed to kill: jihadi appearance and its significance in Austria and
beyond Daniela Pisoiu; 11. Charisma, prisoner radicalization, and
terrorism: the role of appearance Mark S. Hamm; Part VI. Very Visible
Differences: Orientation, Disability, Freaks, and Clowns and their
Relationship to Crime and Victimization: 12. Queer looking: appearance and
LGBTQ citizens' victimization and interactions with the criminal justice
system Elicka Peterson Sparks and Ian Skinner; 13. Visible disabilities and
risk of interpersonal victimization Heidi L. Scherer and Bradford W. Reyns;
14. Remarkably unique human appearances: scary clowns and freaks Bonnie
Berry; 15. Appearance criminology: a new approach toward equitable
treatment Bonnie Berry; Index.
Part I. Unattractiveness, Criminality, and Victimization: 1. Appearance and
delinquency Robert Agnew; 2. 'Ugly' criminals and 'ugly' victims: a
quantitative analysis of add health data Brent Teasdale and Bonnie Berry;
Part II. Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality as Targeted Identities: 3. Racial
profiling and reconciliation: the quest for indigenous justice in Canada
Terry Wotherspoon and John Hansen; 4. Black Lives Matter: the watchdog for
the criminal justice system Lorenzo M. Boyd and Kimberly Conway Dumpson; 5.
An absence of appearance identifiers: misguided moral crusades in
anti-human trafficking Billy James Ulibarrí; Part III. The Process of
Social Control as Influenced by Appearance: 6. Becoming and being a woman
prisoner: does appearance matter? Brenda Chaney; 7. The impact of victim
attractiveness on victim blameworthiness and defendant guilt determinations
in cases of domestic and sexual assault Jennifer Wareham, Bonnie Berry,
Brenda Sims Blackwell and Denise Paquette Boots; 8. Do attractive women
'get away' with traffic violations? An observational study of police
responses to traffic stops Brent Teasdale, Taylor Gann and Dean Dabney; 9.
The police 'presence': public service versus intimidation Stephen A.
Bishopp; Part IV. Identifying Terrorists, Mistakenly or Not, by Appearance:
10. Dressed to kill: jihadi appearance and its significance in Austria and
beyond Daniela Pisoiu; 11. Charisma, prisoner radicalization, and
terrorism: the role of appearance Mark S. Hamm; Part VI. Very Visible
Differences: Orientation, Disability, Freaks, and Clowns and their
Relationship to Crime and Victimization: 12. Queer looking: appearance and
LGBTQ citizens' victimization and interactions with the criminal justice
system Elicka Peterson Sparks and Ian Skinner; 13. Visible disabilities and
risk of interpersonal victimization Heidi L. Scherer and Bradford W. Reyns;
14. Remarkably unique human appearances: scary clowns and freaks Bonnie
Berry; 15. Appearance criminology: a new approach toward equitable
treatment Bonnie Berry; Index.
delinquency Robert Agnew; 2. 'Ugly' criminals and 'ugly' victims: a
quantitative analysis of add health data Brent Teasdale and Bonnie Berry;
Part II. Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality as Targeted Identities: 3. Racial
profiling and reconciliation: the quest for indigenous justice in Canada
Terry Wotherspoon and John Hansen; 4. Black Lives Matter: the watchdog for
the criminal justice system Lorenzo M. Boyd and Kimberly Conway Dumpson; 5.
An absence of appearance identifiers: misguided moral crusades in
anti-human trafficking Billy James Ulibarrí; Part III. The Process of
Social Control as Influenced by Appearance: 6. Becoming and being a woman
prisoner: does appearance matter? Brenda Chaney; 7. The impact of victim
attractiveness on victim blameworthiness and defendant guilt determinations
in cases of domestic and sexual assault Jennifer Wareham, Bonnie Berry,
Brenda Sims Blackwell and Denise Paquette Boots; 8. Do attractive women
'get away' with traffic violations? An observational study of police
responses to traffic stops Brent Teasdale, Taylor Gann and Dean Dabney; 9.
The police 'presence': public service versus intimidation Stephen A.
Bishopp; Part IV. Identifying Terrorists, Mistakenly or Not, by Appearance:
10. Dressed to kill: jihadi appearance and its significance in Austria and
beyond Daniela Pisoiu; 11. Charisma, prisoner radicalization, and
terrorism: the role of appearance Mark S. Hamm; Part VI. Very Visible
Differences: Orientation, Disability, Freaks, and Clowns and their
Relationship to Crime and Victimization: 12. Queer looking: appearance and
LGBTQ citizens' victimization and interactions with the criminal justice
system Elicka Peterson Sparks and Ian Skinner; 13. Visible disabilities and
risk of interpersonal victimization Heidi L. Scherer and Bradford W. Reyns;
14. Remarkably unique human appearances: scary clowns and freaks Bonnie
Berry; 15. Appearance criminology: a new approach toward equitable
treatment Bonnie Berry; Index.