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  • Crime surveys and more

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on November 3, 2014 What do Americans fear? Find out in the Chapman University Survey . Categories include crime and natural disasters.

  • Bestselling crime author to give University public lecture

    Bestselling American crime author Patricia Cornwell (pictured) will give a free public lecture as part of the University of Leicester’s Chancellor’s Distinguished Lecture Series and Literary Leicester festival 2016.

  • Thinking Sociologically About Crime

    Module code: SY1018 How we understand crime often shifts to discussions of psychological profiling and an increased fascination for all things forensic, but it is important to remember that crime happens and is managed as part of a wider society.

  • Youth Crime and Justice

    Module code: CR2026 Throughout this module you’ll be shining a light on contemporary issues and debates in relation to the causes of youth crime, and the responses to young people who break the law.

  • Youth Crime and Justice

    Module code: CR2026 Throughout this module you’ll be shining a light on contemporary issues and debates in relation to the causes of youth crime, and the responses to young people who break the law.

  • Youth Crime and Justice

    Module code: CR2026 Throughout this module you’ll be shining a light on contemporary issues and debates in relation to the causes of youth crime, and the responses to young people who break the law.

  • Dons, Yardies and Posses: Representations of Jamaican Organised Crime

    ‘Dons, Yardies and Posses: Representations of Jamaican Organised Crime’ is an international and interdisciplinary research network funded by the AHRC as part of the RCUK cross-council theme of transnational organised crime. Learn more about the project.

  • Crime and the Media

    Module code: CR2010 Crime is newsworthy. It is a constant feature in news coverage on television, on the radio, on the internet and in newspapers. It is a popular topic for television drama, documentaries, reality programmes, films and novels.

  • Crime fiction in translation

    Find out more about our event: Crime fiction in translation, with speaker Dr Karen Seago.

  • Theories of Crime and Criminality

    Module code: CR1001 (double module) Are offenders different from non-offenders? Is crime the result of individual biology, psychology or social circumstances? What factors have been identified as ‘high risk’ in terms of predicting future criminal behaviour? In this module...

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