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单词 criminology
释义

Definition of criminology in English:

criminology

noun ˌkrɪmɪˈnɒlədʒiˌkrɪməˈnɑlədʒi
mass noun
  • The scientific study of crime and criminals.

    犯罪学

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This book will be of interest to urban historians and quantitative historians as well as students and scholars of criminology and policy studies.
    • Both emphasize law enforcement as the central police function, and adopt the rational deterrence model of classical criminology, albeit at different stages of the argument.
    • In January, she began a course of further study for a Master's Degree in social policy and criminology.
    • With a degree in political science and criminology, he became a probation officer in Florida.
    • I would definitely recommend this book to students studying legal psychology as well as criminology.
    • This is a relatively new science in criminology.
    • Significantly, they have been hugely overlooked as a source of knowledge about criminality within histories of criminology and theories of crime and deviance.
    • By that time, Catrin was an undergraduate student studying criminology and criminal justice as part of a broader social sciences degree.
    • Next month she will head for Cardiff to study law and criminology.
    • In contrast, conflict marxist and radical criminology regarded crime as a function of poverty, reflecting a power imbalance in society.
    • He said Caroline was studying criminology in an attempt to help someone like her killer have a better life.
    • Well now there's an institute named after her where they take science to criminology.
    • His primary interests are criminology, statistics, and criminal justice assessment and counseling.
    • At the University of Northumbria, applications to study criminology and forensic science have doubled.
    • Her particular areas of interest are Indigenous criminal justice and forensic issues in criminology.
    • She devoured books and pamphlets on rhetoric, art, criminology, theology, psychology, philosophy, the list could go on and on.
    • Follow-up criminology studies have yet to determine whether the website route is effective.
    • The largest independent criminology study ever conducted into CCTV concluded two years ago that it has had little or no effect on crime.
    • For the past twenty to thirty years, control theories of crime have been at the center of theoretical development in criminology.
    • She was 21 and had a degree in criminology and psychology.

Derivatives

  • criminological

  • adjectiveˌkrɪmɪnəˈlɒdʒɪk(ə)l
    • In the final section I offer an example of the theory/research relationship from one sphere of criminological work - environmental criminology - in which I have myself been engaged.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • A further criticism that might be made of the conventional map is that it does not readily encourage discussion of the wider practical impact of academic criminological research upon criminal justice strategies.
      • This book is a critical examination of current research in, and innovative proposals for, memory for faces, face recognition and face reconstruction for criminological purposes.
      • The themes of gender, race, class and public policy will continue to demand the attention of legal and criminological scholars.
      • Exactly what that level of sentences should be in a particular country is a matter for debate, based on criminological research and, inevitably, restricted by social conventions.

Origin

Late 19th century: from Latin crimen, crimin- 'crime' + -logy.

Definition of criminology in US English:

criminology

nounˌkriməˈnäləjēˌkrɪməˈnɑlədʒi
  • The scientific study of crime and criminals.

    犯罪学

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Her particular areas of interest are Indigenous criminal justice and forensic issues in criminology.
    • He said Caroline was studying criminology in an attempt to help someone like her killer have a better life.
    • Well now there's an institute named after her where they take science to criminology.
    • In contrast, conflict marxist and radical criminology regarded crime as a function of poverty, reflecting a power imbalance in society.
    • In January, she began a course of further study for a Master's Degree in social policy and criminology.
    • Both emphasize law enforcement as the central police function, and adopt the rational deterrence model of classical criminology, albeit at different stages of the argument.
    • Next month she will head for Cardiff to study law and criminology.
    • She devoured books and pamphlets on rhetoric, art, criminology, theology, psychology, philosophy, the list could go on and on.
    • She was 21 and had a degree in criminology and psychology.
    • Follow-up criminology studies have yet to determine whether the website route is effective.
    • Significantly, they have been hugely overlooked as a source of knowledge about criminality within histories of criminology and theories of crime and deviance.
    • With a degree in political science and criminology, he became a probation officer in Florida.
    • By that time, Catrin was an undergraduate student studying criminology and criminal justice as part of a broader social sciences degree.
    • At the University of Northumbria, applications to study criminology and forensic science have doubled.
    • This book will be of interest to urban historians and quantitative historians as well as students and scholars of criminology and policy studies.
    • His primary interests are criminology, statistics, and criminal justice assessment and counseling.
    • This is a relatively new science in criminology.
    • For the past twenty to thirty years, control theories of crime have been at the center of theoretical development in criminology.
    • The largest independent criminology study ever conducted into CCTV concluded two years ago that it has had little or no effect on crime.
    • I would definitely recommend this book to students studying legal psychology as well as criminology.

Origin

Late 19th century: from Latin crimen, crimin- ‘crime’ + -logy.

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更新时间:2024/12/28 12:00:39