Instructor: Dee Wood HarperLOYOLA UNIVERSITY NEW ORLEANS
CRJU - C700-081, Theories of Criminal Behavior Fall 2001
E-mail: harper@loyno.edu
Office: 123 Stallings (504) 865-2161
Office Hours:
Course Meeting Information:
Fri 06:00 10:00PM, Sat 09:00 05:00PM; Sept 7 & 8;
Oct 12 & 13; Nov 2 & 3
Seminar Room 4 on the second floor of the library, except Oct 12
class will be held in Monroe 265
Required Text:
Requirements:
Course Policies: City College policy allows for a reduction in grade for excessive absences in intensively formatted courses. If you anticipate missing nine hours of class time you should not enroll in the course.Learning Outcomes:
No form of plagiarism is tolerated. Submitting, as one’s own, any assignment done by another person (or by other people) constitutes academic theft.Exams: (25% of grade) There is one major comprehensive exam at the end of the course. (4 hours) This examination will be taken on Saturday afternoon of your last class meeting.
Writing and Discussion: (75% of grade) Two papers are required in the course. Each paper consists of a review of a major theoretical work in criminological theory (There are about twenty books on theoretical criminology on reserve in the Loyola Library). Each paper is a comprehensive overview of a theory in question and a review of at least six journal articles that provide a test of the theory or elements of the theory. (See attached list of journals). All papers must be typewritten or word-processed without errors using style guidelines provided in your writer's manual (pp. 71-99).
Grading System:
A = 95 – 100If a student scores 71 or below, they must retake the course.
B+ = 90 – 94
B = 85 – 89
C+ = 80 – 84
Calendar/Course Itinerary (subject to change):
First Weekend
Readings: Horton Text. Pioneering Perspectives…It is expected that you have at least read most of this text before the first class meeting (skim over most of it and read what you find to be most interesting).
Discussion Topics:Overview of Criminological TheorySecond Weekend
History of Criminological Thought
The Classical School
The Positive School
Early Criminal Typologies
Mental Deficiency and Crime
Biological and Psychological Theories of Crime
Readings: Paternoster and Bachman, Chapters 1-5.
Discussion Topics:Foundations of Sociological Criminology.Third Weekend
The Relevance of Theory
Neo-Classical Theory
Neo-positivism: Biological Theories
Control Theory
Social Disorganization
Readings: Paternoster and Bachman. Chapters 6-10
Discussion Topics:Foundations of Sociological Criminology (continued)Comprehensive Examination
Anomie/Strain Theory
Social Learning Theories
Labeling Theory
Conflict, Radical and Feminist Theories
Theoretical Integration
Copyright © 1996-2001 Loyola University New Orleans
Last updated on August 15, 2001