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The
Eleventh Edition of bestselling
Introduction to Criminology: Theories, Methods, and Criminal Behavior provides students with a comprehensive introduction to the study of criminal behavior with a focus on the core of criminology - theory, method, and criminal behavior.
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Frank E. Hagan is a native of the North Side of Pittsburgh and has earned degrees at Gannon, Maryland, and Case Western Reserve. He is Professor Emeritus and the former director of the James V. Kinnane Graduate Program in Administration of Justice and is the author of eight books. These are
Deviance and the Family (with Marvin B. Sussman),
Introduction to Criminology (11
th edition),
Crime Types and Criminals, Research Methods in Criminal Justice and Criminology (10
th edition),
Essentials of Research Methods in Criminal Justice(3
rd edition,
Political Crime, White Collar Deviance (with David Simon), and
The Language of Research (with Pamela Tontodonato).
He is also the author or coauthor of many journal articles and articles in edited volumes. A recipient of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Fellow Award (2000), he was also awarded the Teacher's Excellence Award by Mercyhurst University in 2006. His major interests are research methods, criminology and organized crime, white-collar crime, and political crime and terrorism.
Leah E. Daigle is professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University. She received her PhD in criminal justice from the University of Cincinnati in 2005. Her most recent research is centered on repeat sexual victimization of college women and responses women use during and after being sexually victimized. Her other research interests include the development and continuation of offending and victimization across the life course. She is author of
Victimology: A Text/Reader (2nd ed.),
Victimology: The Essentials (2nd ed.), coauthor of
Criminals in the Making: Criminality Across the Life Course, Victimology, and
Unsafe in the Ivory Tower: The Sexual Victimization of College Women, which was awarded the 2011 Outstanding Book Award by the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. She has also published numerous peer-reviewed articles that have appeared in outlets such as
Justice Quarterly, Journal of Quantitative Criminology, Journal of Interpersonal Violence, and
Victims and Offenders.