[Contents]
About This Book
The work surveys historical and contemporary writings on the relation between economic circumstances and criminal behavior, reviewing precursors, moral statisticians, the Italian and French criminological schools, bio-socialist and spiritualist perspectives, and socialist analyses. It evaluates statistical studies and theoretical claims about property, prices, industrialization, and social movements, compares competing methodologies, and highlights complexities and contested findings in linking poverty and prosperity to crime rates. The author synthesizes criticisms and evidence to offer a cautious, empirically minded conclusion about the multifaceted influence of economic conditions on criminality.