This book places offender profiling within a more realistic, balanced context. Initial chapters introduce a theoretical, empirical basis for the approach, and are followed by chapters illustrating the pros and cons of its use in an applied, operational setting. It presents two ba sic ideas: that offender profiling is not an end in itself, but is pur ely an instrument for steering an investigation in a particular direct ion, and that the process of developing a profile depends on a combina tion of investigative experience together with objective findings from behavioral science research.
This book places offender profiling within a more realistic, balanced context. Initial chapters introduce a theoretical, empirical basis for the appro...