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Online tool for adolescents' self-control practice: a pilot study. [PDF]

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CRIMINAL ANTHROPOLOGY IN THE UNITED STATES*

Criminology, 1992
Criminologists continue to debate fundamental issues about the nature of their work. Some of the issues were built into the field by the criminal anthropologists who founded it a century ago. By examining the work of major American criminal anthropologists—a nearly forgotten group—one can identify the origins of three enduring problems: criminology's ...
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THE ITALIAN SCHOOL OF CRIMINAL ANTHROPOLOGY.

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1896
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PRINCIPLES OF CRIMINAL ANTHROPOLOGY

Religious Education, 1915
(1915). PRINCIPLES OF CRIMINAL ANTHROPOLOGY. Religious Education: Vol. 10, No. 1, pp. 65-68.
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Retrospect of Criminal Anthropology

Journal of Mental Science, 1897
H. H. Holmes (or, to call him by his real name, Herman Webster Mudgett), a qualified practitioner of medicine, whose extraordinary career of crime attracted world-wide attention and has caused his name to be coupled with that of Wainewright, was during the last days before his execution carefully studied by Professor Arthur MacDonald and Dr. E.
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The Anthropology of Crime and Criminalization

Annual Review of Anthropology, 2008
The ambiguity of the concept of crime is evident in the two strands of anthropological research covered in this review. One strand, the anthropology of criminalization, explores how state authorities, media, and citizen discourse define particular groups and practices as criminal, with prejudicial consequences.
Jane Schneider, Peter Schneider
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Anthropology and the Criminal Justice System

Practicing Anthropology, 1992
The criminal justice system, generally defined as the police, courts, and prisons, cries out for the attention of anthropology. The numbers of people involved are staggering. According to Bureau of Justice Statistics, the number of prisoners under federal or state correctional authorities in 1990 was more than 800,000 (a 134 percent increase over the ...
Irene Glasser, Livingston D. Sutro
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2. Retrospect of Criminal Anthropology

Journal of Mental Science, 1893
At the session of the International Medico-Legal Congress at Chicago last autumn some twenty papers bearing on various aspects of criminal anthropology were brought forward. They were nearly all by Americans, and for the most part have not yet been published.
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