Criminal Minds (CRIM7030)
Course level
Postgraduate Coursework
Units
2
Duration
One Semester
Class hours
Incompatible
CRIM2030
Prerequisite
CRIM7000
Assessment methods
True Crime Case Study; Mid-semester exam; Research Paper; Final Exam
Course enquiries
Study Abroad
This course is pre-approved for Study Abroad and Exchange students.
This course is not currently offered, please contact the school or faculty of your program.
Course description
This course provides an in-depth examination of four contemporary and highly influential explanations for how and why people commit crime. These four theories - self-control, social control, social learning and sub-cultural deviance, and general strain theory - are distinguished by their combined emphases on the processes that lead individuals to commit crime and on the mindsets that enable them to do it. In this course, we will build on material covered in CRIM1000 to learn more about the individual causes of crime that have dominated criminological research and theorizing over the last 20 years. We will also learn more about how these theories are changing in response to recent discoveries and cutting-edge research on the biological bases of criminal behaviour. Finally, we will aim to integrate insights from two decades of criminological research together with recent (and some long-standing) discoveries in neuroscience, developmental psychology, and genetics to build a more complete understanding of "criminal minds" - the attitudes, perceptions, and orientations that lead people to commit crime.