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The assumption that rewards and punishments influence our choices between different courses of action underlies economic, sociological, psychological, and legal thinking about human action
List of contents
1: Introduction; 17: Part One Empirical Studies of Criminal Decision Making; 2: Shoplifters' Perceptions of Crime Opportunities: A Process-Tracing Study; 3: Victim Selection Procedures Among Economic Criminals: The Rational Choice Perspective; 4: Robbers as Decision-Makers; 5: The Decision to Give Up Crime 1; 6: A Decision-Making Approach to Opioid Addiction; Two: Theoretical Issues; 7: On the Compatibility of Rational Choice and Social Control Theories of Crime; 8: Linking Criminal Choices, Routine Activities, Informal Control, and Criminal Outcomes; 9: Models of Decision Making Under Uncertainty: The Criminal Choice; 10: The Theory of Reasoned Action: A Decision Theory of Crime; 11: The Decision to Commit a Crime: An Information-Processing Analysis; 12: Offense Specialization: Does It Exist?; 13: Criminal Incapacitation Effects Considered in an Adaptive Choice Framework; 14: Practical Reasoning and Criminal Responsibility: A Jurisprudential Approach
About the author
Scott, Marvin
Summary
The assumption that rewards and punishments influence our choices between different courses of action underlies economic, sociological, psychological, and legal thinking about human action