Ronald Blackburn, The Psychology of Criminal Conduct: Theory, Research and Practice (Wiley Series in Clinical Psychology) Review

Watch this item
Ronald Blackburn, The Psychology of Criminal Conduct: Theory, Research and Practice (Wiley Series in Clinical Psychology)
1.5 stars
Average rating for this product is: 1.5 out of 5

From 0 ratings and 1 review

Thumb down 0% of users recommend this product

Rate it Now:

Click on the stars above to rate this product:

Tweet This Item

rochester's Review of Ronald Blackburn, The Psychology of Criminal Conduct: Theory, Research and Practice (Wiley Series in Clinical Psychology)

9th May 2004

Overall Rating

1.5 stars
  • Value for money
    2 stars
Good Points

Clean, plain, clear language.


Bad Points

Too many facts, too little analysis of statistics.


General Comments

The Psychology of Criminal Conduct: Theory, Research and Practice is written by a respectable author who has a good command over the use of crystal clear English. However, although this book serves as a good introductory guide to those interested in the psychology of criminals; it is not thorough enough for use by undergraduate students.
The majority of chapters focus on the criminal behaviours as explained through the biological perspective. Thus, although there are passing references to behaviourism, humanism, and freudian theories on the mind and actions of the criminal, it does not offer a detailed account of how these come into play. It is apparent that there is a combination of factors at work; however this book leans towards the biological explanations, and how (for example) a suicidal father may contribute towards criminal offspring directly because of the same "malformed genes".
All in all, this book offers minimal explanation about criminal behaviour as reflected in all theories. It is selective in focusing on the biology of the criminal; however some of the comments are derogatory towards family members because of assumptions that the criminal behaviour is determined by genes, and that free will is not relevant whatsoever. Nature not Nurture is the dominant theme here...


Remember - all reviews on Review Centre express the reviewer's opinion, not necessarily ours.
If you disagree with a review then please let us know by writing a review of your own or adding a comment.

Tweet This Review

rochester's review has yet to be rated - Be the first!

How helpful did you find this review?