The assumption that rewards and punishments influence our choices between different courses of action underlies economic, sociological, psychological, and legal thinking about human action. Hence, the notion of a reasoning criminal--one who employs the same sorts of cognitive strategies when contemplating offending as they and the rest of us use when making other decisions--might seem a small contribution to crime control. This conclusion would be mistaken.
This volume develops an alternative approach, termed the "rational choice perspective," to explain criminal behaviour. Instead...
The assumption that rewards and punishments influence our choices between different courses of action underlies economic, sociological, psychologic...