CRM-22 · Social Sciences · Living entry
Learn Criminology with any AI
Crime, justice & punishment
Criminology is the study of crime, its causes, and how society responds — through policing, courts, punishment and prevention. It sits between sociology, psychology and law, and it asks uncomfortable questions from the start: what counts as "crime," and who gets to decide?
Studied honestly, it replaces easy assumptions about crime and punishment with evidence and hard trade-offs. Set your level below.
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CRM-22 · Criminology
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A map of Criminology
Crime, justice and punishmentThe field's main areas.
- Theories of crime — the competing explanations for why crime happens.
- Policing & criminal justice — how societies detect, try and process crime.
- Penology & prisons — the theory and reality of punishment.
- Youth justice — handling crime and young people.
- Cybercrime — offending in the digital age.
- Victimology — the study of those harmed, long neglected.
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The canon
The thinkers who shaped the fieldReal figures — including one important cautionary tale.
- Cesare Beccaria — On Crimes and Punishments (1764), the case for rational, proportionate, humane justice.
- Cesare Lombroso — the "born criminal" theory: enormously influential, thoroughly discredited, and worth knowing as a warning about pseudoscience.
- Émile Durkheim — the startling argument that crime is normal, and even serves a social function.
- Robert Merton — strain theory: crime as the gap between society's goals and its opportunities.
- Howard Becker — labelling theory: deviance as something society applies, not just something people do.
- Michel Foucault — Discipline and Punish, the unsettling history of the prison and modern control.
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The live debates
The hard questionsReal, uncomfortable debates.
- What causes crime? Biology, environment, rational choice, or the labels society hands out — the theories genuinely conflict.
- Does prison work? Rehabilitation, punishment and deterrence pull in different directions.
- Who defines crime? And whose offences get policed and punished, and whose don't.
- The ethics of prediction. Profiling and "predictive policing," and the bias they can bake in.
- Restorative vs retributive justice. Repairing harm, or exacting it.
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Where to start
A route inA route in — everything runs from the panel above.
- Run Orientation on the main theories of crime.
- Use Great Debates on "does prison work" — the evidence surprises most people.
- Apply it with Real-World Applications to a current justice issue.
- Read Beccaria or Foucault in excerpt alongside a modern criminology text.
Start by questioning the word itself: "crime" is a category society draws — and it could always draw it differently.