PART Ⅰ THE AIMS OF COMPARISON 3
1 Piers Beirne (1983), 'Cultural Relativism and Comparative Criminology',Contemporary Crises, 7, pp. 371-91. 3
2 Gregory C. Leavitt (1990), 'Relativism and Cross-Cultural Criminology:A Critical Analysis', Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 27,pp. 5-29. 25
3 Jon Vagg (1993), 'Context and Linkage: Reflections on Comparative Research and "Internationalism" in Criminology', British Journal of Criminology, 33,pp. 541-54. 51
4 W. Lawrence Neuman and Ronald J. Berger (1988), 'Competing Perspectives on Cross-National Crime: An Evaluation of Theory and Evidence', Sociological Quarterly, 29, pp. 281-313. 65
5 Russell Smandych, Robyn Lincoln and Paul Wilson (1993), 'Toward a Cross-Cultural Theory of Aboriginal Crime: A Comparative Study of the Problem of Aboriginal Overrepresentation in the Criminal Justice Systems of Canada and Australia', International Criminal Justice Review, 3, pp. 1-24. 99
6 Stanley Cohen (1982), 'Western Crime Control Models in the Third World:Benign or Malignant?', Research in Law, Deviance and Social Control, 4, pp. 85-119. 123
PART Ⅱ MEASURING RATES OF CRIME AND VICTIMIZATION 161
7 Carol B. Kalish (1988), 'International Crime Rates', Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice, pp. 1-11. 161
8 Richard R. Bennett and James P. Lynch (1990), 'Does a Difference Make a Difference? Comparing Cross-National Crime Indicators', Criminology, 28,pp. 153-82. 173
9 Jan J.M. van Dijk and Patricia Mayhew (1993), Criminal Victimization in the Industrialized World: Key Findings of the 1989 and 1992 International Crime Surveys, The Netherlands: Ministry of Justice, pp. 1-41, 43-51, 53-67, 95-7. 203
10 Piers Beirne and Barbara Perry (1994), 'Criminal Victimization in the Industrialized World', Crime, Law and Social Change, 21, pp. 155-65. 271
PART Ⅲ VARIETIES OF COMPARATIVE CRIMINOLOGY 285
11 Peggy Reeves Sanday (1981), 'The Socio-Cultural Context of Rape: A Cross-Cultural Study', Journal of Social Issues, 37, pp. 5-27. 285
12 Richard Rosenfeld and Steven F. Messner (1991), 'The Social Sources of Homicide in Different Types of Societies', Sociological Forum, 6, pp. 51-70. 309
13 Robert Fiala and Gary LaFree (1988), 'Cross-National Determinants of Child Homicide', American Sociological Review, 53, pp. 432-45. 329
14 Rosemary Gartner (1990), 'The Victims of Homicide: A Temporal and Cross-National Comparison', American Sociological Review, 55, pp. 92-106. 343
15 F.H. McClintock and Per-Olof H. Wikstr?m (1992), 'The Comparative Study of Urban Violence: Criminal Violence in Edinburgh and Stockholm', British Journal of Criminology, 32, pp. 505-20. 359
16 Setsuo Miyazawa (1993), 'The Enigma of Japan as a Testing Ground for Cross-Cultural Criminological Studies', Annales Internationales de Criminologie,32, pp. 81-102. 375
17 Harold E. Pepinsky (1992), 'Corruption, Bribery and Patriarchy in Tanzania',Crime, Law and Social Change, 17, pp. 25-51. 397
18 Michael Clarke (1990), 'The Control of Insurance Fraud: A Comparative View',British Journal of Criminology, 30, pp. 1-23. 425
19 Raymond J. Michalowski and Ronald C. Kramer (1987), 'The Space Between Laws: The Problem of Corporate Crime in a Transnational Context', Social Problems, 34, pp. 34-53. 449
20 David Nelken (1994), 'Whom can you Trust? The Future of Comparative Criminology', in David Nelken (ed.), The Futures of Criminology, London: Sage Publications, pp. 220-43. 469
Name Index 493