Preface to the Sixth Edition
Part 1: The Theoretical Context and Knowledge Base to the Psychology of Criminal Conduct
Chapter 1 An Overview of the Psychology of Criminal Conduct
Chapter 2 The Empirical Basis to the Psychology of Criminal Conduct
Chapter 3 From Criminology Theories to a Psychological Perspective of Criminal Conduct
Part 2: The Major Risk/Need Factors of Criminal Conduct
Chapter 4 The Biological Basis of Criminal Behavior
Chapter 5 Antisocial Personality Pattern
Chapter 6 The Role of Procriminal Associates and Attitudes in Criminal Conduct
Chapter 7 The Person in Social Context: Family, Marital, School, Work, Leisure/Recreation, and Neighborhood
Chapter 8 Substance Abuse
Part 3: Applications
Chapter 9 The Risk-Need-Responsivity Model of Offender Assessment and Treatment
Chapter 10 Prediction of Criminal Behavior and Classification of Offenders
Chapter 11 Offender Rehabilitation
Chapter 12 Creating and Maintaining RNR Adherence: A Real World Challenge
Chapter 13 The Failed Experiment: Getting Tough on Crime
Chapter 14 Criminal Subtypes: Intimate Partner Violence, the Mentally Disordered, and Sex Offenders
Part 4: Summary and Conclusions
Chapter 15 A General Personality and Cognitive Social Learning Perspective of Criminal Conduct: Summary and Conclusions
James Bonta served as Director of Corrections Research at Public
Safety Canada from 1990 until 2015. He received his Ph.D. in
Clinical Psychology from the University of Ottawa in 1979. Bonta
was a psychologist, and later Chief Psychologist, at the
Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre, a maximum-security remand
facility for adults and young offenders. Throughout his career,
Bonta has held various academic appointments and professional posts
and was a member of the Editorial Advisory Boards for the Canadian
Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice and Behavior. He is a
Fellow of the Canadian Psychological Association, a recipient of
the Association’s Criminal Justice Section’s Career Contribution
Award for 2009, the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal, 2012,
the Maud Booth Correctional Services Award, 2015, and the 2015
Community Corrections Award from the International Corrections and
Prisons Association.
The late D.A. Andrews was a noted criminologist affiliated with
Carleton University throughout his academic career. His work on the
psychology of criminal conduct produced what became known as the
"theory of correctional intervention," which set the standard for
successful intervention practices throughout the field of
corrections worldwide. He was a founding member of Carleton’s
Criminology and Criminal Justice Program and a Fellow of the
Canadian Psychological Association. He received numerous awards for
his work in the criminal justice field, including those from the
American Probation and Parole Association, Correctional Service
Canada, the International Community Corrections Association, and
the American Society of Criminology. After his retirement, he
remained active in the criminal justice field as a Professor
Emeritus and Distinguished Research Professor.
The 6th edition is the most concise and well written edition of The Psychology of Criminal Conduct to date. The tone of the book—its enthusiasm and balance in the way issues are presented—is welcome. Besides the topics contained in past editions, the authors’ discussion of research issues, social contexts, biology, punishment, and prediction and treatment integrity are excellent contributions to this important text.– Paul E. Gendreau, Professor Emeritus, the University of New Brunswick, CanadaNo other single book has so transformed the field of correctional intervention. For more than 20 years this volume has been essential reading for everyone: from students of criminal psychology to correctional professionals, including prison officers, probation officers, case managers, and experienced psychologists. --Devon Polaschek, PhD DipClinPsyc, Professor, Criminal Psychology, School of Psychology, Victoria University of Wellington, New ZealandNow in its Sixth Edition, The Psychology of Criminal Conduct is the most important book ever written in criminology. A scientific tour de force, it outlines the evidence-based RNR paradigm for understanding why people break the law and how to affect their rehabilitation. This paradigm has been used across and beyond North America to save countless offenders from a life in crime and thus countless citizens from victimization. To be literate in criminology and in correctional treatment, all scholars, students, and practitioners should read this book—and then, as I do, keep it close by and consult it often.– Francis T. Cullen, Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus, University of Cincinnati, College of Education, Criminal Justice, and Human Services, USAIt is a real pleasure to welcome a new and fully updated edition of the leading textbook on psychologically informed approaches to understanding and reducing criminal behaviour. For over twenty years its successive editions have explained the theory and evidence behind the Risk-Need-Responsivity model of offender rehabilitation, which has influenced policy and practice in many countries throughout the world and continues to be the most productive source of evidence-based methods. Its influence and importance can hardly be overstated. This latest edition will be an invaluable resource not only for students of criminology and criminal justice but also for practitioners in probation and prisons, and for the managers and leaders of correctional services who have a responsibility, both to the general public and to offenders themselves, to promote and use the most effective practices. Perhaps even some politicians might take a look at this book – they would certainly benefit.– Peter Raynor, Research Professor in Criminology and Criminal Justice, Swansea University, Wales, UKThis book should be essential reading for criminologists and psychologists and anyone who is interested in the assessment, prevention, and treatment of offending. Its reviews of key biological, family, school, neighborhood, and other predictors of crime, and the practical application of this knowledge in the Risk-Need-Responsivity model of effective correctional treatment, are very well-researched, extremely informative, and highly readable.– David P. Farrington, Emeritus Professor of Psychological Criminology, Cambridge University, UKWhen I read the first edition of The Psychology of Criminal Conduct in 1994 I thought it was the best book on its topic. The book provides a comprehensive, interdisciplinary overview on up-to-date research and theory on the origins, prediction, prevention and treatment of offending behavior. The book shows how to explain, predict and treat sexual, violent, acquisitive and other offending and puts the findings in a convincing theoretical and practice-oriented framework. It is essential reading not only for students in the fields of criminology, psychology and law, forensic psychology and psychiatry, sociology, social work and other crime-related disciplines, but also for researchers, practitioners and policy makers in these areas. –Friedrich Lösel, Professor and director emeritus of the Institute of Criminology, Cambridge University (UK) and Institute of Psychology, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany Words like ‘classic’ and ‘seminal’ are all too frequently used to describe scholarly work. The fact is that The Psychology of Criminal Conduct by Bonta and Andrews is a seminal work that has become a classic since it was first published 22 years ago. The sixth edition continues the tradition by including an abundance of up-to-date research studies that address current issues. Bonta has not rested on his laurels but has produced a current work that will continue to set the standard in the field of forensic and correctional psychology. –James R. P. Ogloff, Director, Centre for Forensic Behavioural Science, Swinburne University and Forensicare, Melbourne, Australia
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