Damodaram Sanjivayya National Law University Visakhapatnam, A.P., India
Damodaram Sanjivayya National Law University Visakhapatnam, A.P., India
PROJECT TITLE
SUBJECT
SOCIOLOGY
Anjali Gurumoorthy
Roll No: - 2018012
2nd Semester
1
Table of Contents
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT .........................................................................3
INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................4
Defining Criminology ............................................................................................... 5
Nature and Scope of Criminology ........................................................................... 6
Historical Development of Criminology ................................................................... 7
Early Explanations of Criminology – Schools of Thought ...............10
Meaning of the ‘School of Criminology’ .............................................................. 10
The Classical School ......................................................................................... 11
Main Reforms Advocated by the Classical School ......................................... 11
Major Shortcomings of the Classical School .................................................. 17
Neo-Classical School......................................................................................... 18
CONCLUSION...................................................................................... 21
BIBLIOGRAPHY .................................................................................. 22
Books:................................................................................................................ 22
Articles: .............................................................................................................. 22
2
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I want to express my special thanks to my MR. LAXMIPATHI RAJU, who gave me this
golden opportunity to do this wonderful project on the topic ‘CLASSICAL AND NEO-
CLASSICAL THEORIES OF CRIME’, which also helped me in doing a lot of research and I
came to know about a lot of things.
Secondly, I also thank DSNLU for providing me with all the necessary materials required for
the completion of the project.
Anjali Gurumooorthy
2ndSemester
Regd. No.-2018012
3
INTRODUCTION
The word “Criminology” originated in 1890. The general meaning of the term is ― “the
scientific study of crime as a social phenomenon, of criminals and of penal institutions.” Prof.
Kenny analysed that Criminology is ‘a branch of criminal science which deals with crime
causation, analysis and prevention of crime.’1 Criminology as a branch of knowledge is
concerned with those particular conducts of human behaviour which are prohibited by
society. It is, therefore, a socio-legal study which seeks to discover the causes of criminality
and suggests the remedies to reduce crimes. Therefore, it flows that criminology and criminal
policy are interdependent and mutually support one another. Thus criminology seeks to study
the phenomenon of criminality in its entirety.
The problem of crime control essentially involves the need for a study of the forces operating
behind the incidence of crime and a variety of co-related factors influencing the personality
of the offender. This has eventually led to development of modern criminology during the
preceding two centuries. The purpose of study of this branch of knowledge is to analyze
different aspects of crime and device effective measures for treatment of criminals to bring
about their re-socialization and rehabilitation in the community. Thus criminology as a
branch of knowledge has a practical utility in so far as it aims at bringing about the welfare of
the community as a whole.
The principles of criminology serve as effective guidelines for formulation of penal policy.
The modern clinical methods and the reformatory measures such as probation, parole,
indeterminate sentence, open prisons, and other correctional institutions are essentially an
outcome of intensive criminological researches during the twentieth century. These measures
have sufficiently demonstrated the futility of dumping offenders inside the prisons and
infliction of barbaric punishments. Prof. Gillin2 has rightly observed that it is not the
humanity within the criminal but the criminality within the human being which needs to be
curbed through effective administration of criminal justice. More recently, criminologists and
1
Webster’s New International Dictionary of the English Language (2d Ed., Unabridged, G. And C.
Merriam Co., 1959).
2
Gillin, Crimnology And Penology (3d Ed. 1945).
4
penologists seem to have agreed that “individualization of the offender should be the ultimate
object of punishment, while treatment methods, the means to attain this end”.
The study of crime and criminal must proceed on a scientific basis by carefully analyzing
various aspects associated therewith and must necessarily suggest measures proposed to
suppress criminality. It must be added that with new crimes emerging in the modern
complexities of life, we seem increasingly concerned about the problem of crime. Today
destructive acts of vandalism, highway, train and bank robberies, looting, bomb blasts, rape,
illegitimate terrorist activities, white-collar crimes, cyber-crimes, criminalization of politics,
hijacking, etc., are constantly increasing which have posed a positive danger to human life,
liberty and property. Modern criminologists, therefore, seem to be seriously concerned with
the problem of crime to protect the society from such anti-social activities of criminals. It is
for this reason that the two sister branches of criminal science, namely, criminology and
penology work hand in hand to appreciate the problem of criminality in its proper
perspective.
Defining Criminology
Criminology maybe defined as “the scientific study of the causation, correction, and
prevention of crime”. Criminology is the social science approach to the study of crime as an
individual and social phenomenon. Although contemporary definitions vary in the exact
words used, there is considerable consensus that criminology involves the application of the
“scientific method” to the study of variation in criminal law, the causes of crime, and
reactions to crime.3
Criminological research areas include the incidence and forms of crime as well as its causes
and consequences. They also include social and governmental regulations and reactions to
crime. Criminology is an interdisciplinary field in the behavioural sciences, drawing
especially on the research of sociologists and psychologists, as well as on writings in law. An
important way to analyze data is to look at quantitative methods in criminology. In 1885,
Italian law professor Raffaele Garofalo coined the term "criminology" (in Italian,
3
Akers, Ronald L. (1990). "Rational Choice, Deterrence, and Social Learning Theory: The Path Not
Taken". Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. 81(3), 653-676.
5
criminologia). The French anthropologist Paul Topinard used it for the first time in French
(criminologie) around the same time.
Criminology has historically played a reforming role in relation to Criminal Law and the
criminal justice system. As an applied discipline, it has produced findings that have
influenced legislators, judges, prosecutors, lawyers, Probation officers, and prison officials,
prompting them to better understand crime and criminals and to develop better and more
human sentences and treatments for criminal behavior.
6
Criminologists also study a host of other issues related to crime and the law. These include
studies of the Victims of Crime, focusing upon their relations to the criminal, and their role as
potential causal agents in crime; juvenile delinquency and its correction; and the media and
their relation to crime, including the influence of Pornography.
The theoretical dimension of criminology has a long history and ideas about the causes of
crime can be found in philosophical thought over two thousand years ago. For example, in
Politics, Plato‘s student, Aristotle (384-322 B.C.), stated that “poverty engenders rebellion
and crime (Quinney 1970).” Religious scholars focused on causes as diverse as natural
human need, deadly sins, and the corrupting influence of Satan and other demons. The
validity of such theories was founded in religious authority and they were not viewed as
theories, subject to verification through any form of systematic observation, measurement
and analysis.
Rational, naturalistic philosophies about people and society grew in prominence during the
18 century. Enlightenment philosophers such as Montesquieu, Voltaire, Cesare Beccaria and
Jeremy Bentham criticized political and legal institutions and advocated social reforms based
on the assumption that people were rational, deliberative beings. Such ideas constituted the
first major school of organized, “naturalistic” thought about criminal law, criminality, and
appropriate responses to crime--the Classical School. Such perspectives were called
7
“naturalistic” because they constructed theories locating the causes of crime in natural
characteristics of human beings as opposed to “supernatural” theories emphasizing demonic
causes. Classical theorists assumed that most people were capable of rational calculation of
gains and costs and that criminality was a choice. Laws were to be designed and enforced
based on that principle. Contemporary “deterrence theory,” “rational choice theory,” and
“social learning theory” in criminology incorporate these same assumptions.
The origins of a more systematic criminology, however, are located in the late eighteenth-
century writings of those who sought to reform criminal justice and penal systems that they
perceived as cruel, inhuman, and arbitrary. These old systems applied the law unequally,
were subject to great corruption, and often used torture and the death penalty
indiscriminately.
The leading theorist of the classical school of criminology, the Italian Cesare Bonesano
Beccaria (1738–94), argued that the law must apply equally to all, and that punishments for
specific crimes should be standardized by legislatures, thus avoiding judicial abuses of
power. Both Beccaria and another classical theorist, the Englishman Jeremy Bentham (1748–
1832), argued that people are rational beings who exercise free will in making choices.
Beccaria and Bentham understood the dominant motive in making choices to be the seeking
of pleasure and the avoidance of pain. Thus, they argued that a punishment should fit the
crime in such a way that the pain involved in potential punishment would be greater than any
pleasure derived from committing the crime. The writings of these theorists led to greater
codification and standardization of European and U.S. laws.
Criminologists of the early nineteenth century argued that legal punishments that had been
created under the guidance of the classical school did not sufficiently consider the widely
varying circumstances of those who found themselves in the gears of the criminal justice
system. Accordingly, they proposed that those who could not distinguish right from wrong,
particularly children and mentally ill persons, should be exempted from the punishments that
were normally meted out to mentally capable adults who had committed the same crimes.
Along with the contributions of a later generation of criminologists, known as the positivists,
such writers argued that the punishment should fit the criminal, not the crime.
Later in the nineteenth century, the positivist school of criminology brought a scientific
approach to criminology, including findings from biology and medicine. The leading figure
of this school was the Italian Cesare Lombroso (1836–1909). Influenced by Charles R.
8
Darwin's theory of evolution, Lombroso measured the physical features of prison inmates and
concluded that criminal behavior correlated with specific bodily characteristics, particularly
cranial, skeletal, and neurological malformations. According to Lombroso, biology created a
criminal class among the human population. Subsequent generations of criminologists have
disagreed harshly with Lombroso's conclusions on this matter. However, Lombroso had a
more lasting effect on criminology with other findings that emphasized the multiple causes of
crime, including environmental causes that were not biologically determined. He was also a
pioneer of the case-study approach to criminology.
The writings of French sociologist Emile Durkheim (1858–1917) also exerted a great
influence on criminology. Durkheim advanced the hypothesis that criminal behavior is a 14
normal part of all societies. No society, he argued, can ever have complete uniformity of
moral consciousness. All societies must permit some deviancy, including criminal deviancy,
or they will stagnate. He saw the criminal as an acceptable human being and one of the prices
that a society pays for freedom.
Durkheim also theorized about the ways in which modern, industrial societies differ from
nonindustrial ones. Industrial societies are not as effective at producing what Durkheim
called a collective conscience that effectively controls the behavior of individuals. Individuals
in industrial societies are more likely to exhibit what Durkheim called anomie—a Greek
word meaning "without norms." Consequently, modern societies have had to develop
specialized laws and criminal justice systems that were not necessary in early societies to
control behavior.
Early efforts to organize criminologists in the United States attracted law enforcement
officials and others who were interested in the criminal justice system. In 1941, a group of
individuals in California organized for the purpose of improving police training and the
standardization of police-training curricula. In 1946, this movement developed into the
establishment of the Society for the Advancement of Criminology, which changed its name to
the American Society of Criminology in 1957. Initial efforts of this organization focused
9
upon scientific crime detection, investigation, and identification; crime prevention, public
safety, and security; law enforcement administration; administration of criminal justice;
traffic administration; and probation.
The American Society of Criminology has since attracted thousands of members including
academics, practitioners, and students of the criminal justice system. Studies of criminology
include both the theoretical and the pragmatic, and some combined elements of both.
Although some aspects of criminology as a science are still considered radical, others have
developed as standards in the study of crime and criminal justice.
1. The adherents of each school try to explain the causation of crime and criminal behavior in
their own way relying on the theory propounded by the exponent of that particular school.
2. Each school of criminology suggests punishment and preventive measures to suit its
ideology.
3. And, each of the school represents the social attitude of people towards crime and criminal
in a given time.
10
In an attempt to find a rational explanation of crime, a large number of theories have been
propounded. Various factors such as evil spirit, sin, disease, heredity, economic
maladjustment etc. have been put forward either singly or together to explain criminality.
With the advance of behavioural sciences, monogenetic explanation of human conduct is no
longer valid and the modern trend is to adopt an eclectic view about the genesis of crime.
However, some criminologists still tend to lay greater emphasis on physical traits in order to
justify exclusive resort to correctional methods for the treatment of offender.
Beccaria, the pioneer of modern criminology expounded his naturalistic theory of criminality
by rejecting the omnipotence of evil spirit. He laid greater emphasis on mental phenomenon
of the individual and attributed crime to ‘free will’ of the individual. Thus he was much
influenced by the utilitarian philosophy of his time which placed reliance on hedonism,
namely, the “pain and pleasure theory”. As Donald Taft rightly put it, this doctrine implied
the notion of causation in terms of free choice to commit crime by rational man seeking
pleasure and avoiding pain.
11
audience among the emerging middle classes whose economic interests lay in providing
better systems for supporting national and international trade.
John Locke
John Locke considered the mechanism that had allowed monarchies to become the primary
form of government. He concluded that monarchs had asserted the right to rule and enforced
it either through an exercise in raw power, or through a form of contract, e.g. the feudal
system had depended on the grants of estates in land as a return for services provided to the
sovereign. Locke proposed that all citizens are equal, and that there is an unwritten but
voluntary contract between the state and its citizens, giving power to those in government and
defining a framework of mutual rights and duties. In Leviathan, Thomas Hobbes wrote, "the
right of all sovereigns is derived from the consent of every one of those who are to be
governed." This is a shift from authoritarianism to an early model of European and North
American democracy where police powers and the system of punishment are means to a more
just end.
12
people rather than the monarchy. According to Beccaria, the crime problem could be
traced not to bad people but to bad laws. A modern criminal justice system should
guarantee all people equal treatment before the law. Beccaria‘s book supplied the blue
print. That blue print was based on the assumption that people freely choose what
they do and are responsible for the consequences of their behavior. Beccaria proposed
the following principles:
Laws Should Be Used To Maintain Social Contract: “Laws are the conditions
under which men, naturally independent, united themselves in society. Weary of
living in a continual state of war, and of enjoying a liberty, which became a little
value, from the uncertainty of its duration, they sacrificed one part of it, to enjoy the
rest in peace and security.”
Only Legislators Should Create Laws: “The authority of making penal laws can
only reside with the legislator, who represents the whole society united by the social
compact.”
Judges Should Impose Punishment only in Accordance with the Law: “[N]o
magistrate then, (as he is one of the society), can, with justice inflict on any other
member of the same society punishment that is not ordained by the laws.”
Judges Should not Interpret the Laws: “Judges, in criminal cases, have no right to
interpret the penal laws, because they are not legislators….Everyman has his own
particular point of view and, at different times, sees the same objects in very different
lights. The spirit of the laws will then be the result of the good or bad logic of the
judge; and this will depend on his good or bad digestion.”
Punishment Should be Based on the Pleasure/Pain Principle: “Pleasure and pain
are the only springs of actions in beings endowed with sensibility….If an equal
punishment be ordained for two crimes that injure society in different degrees, there is
nothing to deter men from committing the greater as often as it is attended with
greater advantage.”
Punishment Should be Based on the Act, not on the Actor: “Crimes are only to be
measured by the injuries done to the society they err, therefore, who imagine that a
crime is greater or less according to the intention of the person by whom it is
committed.”
The Punishment Should be Determined by the Crime: “If mathematical calculation
could be applied to the obscure and infinite combinations of human actions, there
13
might be a corresponding scale of punishment descending from the greatest to the
least.”
Punishment Should be Prompt and Effective: “The more immediate after the
commission of a crime a punishment is inflicted the more just and useful it will
be….An immediate punishment is more useful; because the smaller the interval of
time between the punishment and the crime, the stronger and more lasting will be the
association of the two ideas of crime and punishment.”
All People Should be Treated Equally: “I assert that the punishment of a noble man
should in no wise differ from that of the lowest member of the society.”
Capital Punishment Should be Abolished: “The punishment of death is not
authorized by any right; for….no such right exists….The terrors of death make so
slight an impression, that it has not force enough to withstand forgetfulness natural to
mankind.”
The Use of Torture to Gain Confessions Should be Abolished: “It is confounding
all relations to expect…that pain should be the test of truth, as if truth resided in the
muscles and fibers a wretch in torture. By this method the robust will escape, and the
feeble be condemned.”
It is Better to Prevent Crime than to Punish Them: Would you prevent crimes?
Let the laws be clear and simple, let the entire force of the nation be united in their
defence, let them be intended rather to favour every individual than any particular
classes…. Finally, the most certain method of preventing crimes to perfect the system
of education.”
Perhaps no other book in the history in the history of criminology has had so great an impact.
After the French Revolution, Beccaria‘s basic tenets served as a guide for the drafting of the
French Penal Code, which was adopted in 1791.
Bentham devoted his life to developing a scientific approach to the making and breaking of
laws. Like Beccaria he was concerned with achieving “the greatest happiness of the greatest
14
number.” His work was governed by utilitarian principles. Utilitarianism assumes that all
human actions are calculated in accordance with their likelihood of bringing happiness
(pleasure) or unhappiness (pain). People weigh the probabilities of present future pleasures
against those of present and future pain.
Bentham proposed a precise pseudo-mathematical formula for this process, which he called
“felicific calculus.” According to his reasoning individuals are “human calculators” who out
all the factors into an equation in order to decide whether or not a particular crime is worth
committing. This notion may seem rather whimsical today, but at a time when there were
over 200 capital offences, it provided a rationale for reform of the legal system. Bentham
reasoned that if prevention was the purpose of punishment, and if punishment became too
costly by creating more harm than good, then penalties need to be set just a bit an excess of
the pleasure one might derive from committing a crime, and no higher. The law exists in
order to create happiness for the community. Since punishment creates unhappiness, it can be
justified only if it prevents a greater evil than it produces. Thus, Bentham suggested if a
hanging a man‘s effigy produced the same preventive effect as hanging the man himself there
would be no reason to hang the man.
In this context, the most relevant idea was known as the "felicitation principle", i.e. that
whatever is done should aim to give the greatest happiness to the largest possible number of
people in society. Bentham argued that there had been "punishment creep", i.e. that the
severity of punishments had slowly increased so that the death penalty was then imposed for
more than two hundred offences in England.4 For example, if rape and homicide were both
punished by death, then a rapist would be more likely to kill the victim (as a witness) to
reduce the risk of arrest.
Bentham posited that man is a calculating animal who will weigh potential gains against the
pain likely to be imposed. If the pain outweighs the gains, he will be deterred and this
produces maximal social utility. Therefore, in a rational system, the punishment system must
be graduated so that the punishment more closely matches the crime. Punishment is not
retribution or revenge because that is morally deficient: the hangman is paying the murder the
compliment of imitation.
4
Landau, (2002). “Law, Crime, and English Society”, 1660-1830. Cambridge
15
But the concept is problematic because it depends on two critical assumptions:
if deterrence is going to work, the potential offender must always act rationally
whereas much crime is a spontaneous reaction to a situation or opportunity; and
if the system graduates a scale of punishment according to the seriousness of the
offence, it is assuming that the more serious the harm likely to be caused, the more the
criminal has to gain.
In this context, note Bentham's proposal for a prison design called the "panopticon" which,
apart from its surveillance system included the right of the prison manager to use the
prisoners as contract labor.
1. Man‘s emergence from the State‘s religious fanaticism involved the application of his
reason as a responsible individual.
2. It is the ‘act’ of an individual and ‘not his intent’ which forms the basis for
determining criminality within him. In other words, criminologists are concerned with
the ‘act’ of the criminal rather than his ‘intent’. Still, they could never think that there
could be something like crime causation.
5
Vold, G. Bernard, T. and Snipes, J. (1998) ―Theoretical Criminology‖, Oxford. University prers.
Oxford:
16
3. The classical writers accepted punishment as a principal method of infliction of pain,
humiliation and disgrace to create ‘fear’ in man to control his behavior.
4. The propounders of this school, however, considered prevention of crime more
important than the punishment for it. They therefore, stressed on the need for a
Criminal Code in France, Germany and Italy to systematize punishment for forbidden
acts. Thus the real contribution of classical school of criminology lies in the fact that
it underlined the need for a well defined criminal justice system.
5. The advocates of classical school supported the right of the State to punish the
offenders in the interest of public security. Relying on the hedonistic principle of pain
and pleasure, they pointed out that individualization was to be awarded keeping in
view the pleasure derived by the criminal from the crime and the pain caused to the
victim from it. They, however, pleaded for equalization of justice which meant equal
punishment for the same offence.
6. The exponents of classical school further believed that the criminal law primarily rests
on positive sanctions. They were against the use of arbitrary powers of Judges. In
their opinion the Judges should limit their verdicts strictly within the confines of law.
They also abhorred torturous punishments.
Thus classical school propounded by Beccaria came into existence as a result of the influence
of writings of Montesquieu, Hume, Bacon and Rousseau. His famous work ‘Essays on Crime
and Punishment’ received wide acclamation all over Europe and gave a fillip to a new
criminological thinking in the contemporary west. He sought to humanize the criminal law by
insisting on natural rights of human beings. He raised his voice against severe punishment,
torture and death penalty. Beccaria‘s views on crime and punishment were also supported by
Voltaire as a result of which a number of European countries redrafted their penal codes
mitigating the rigorous barbaric punishments and some of them even went to the extent of
abolishing capital punishment from their Penal Codes.
1. The classical school proceeded on an abstract presumption of free will and relied
solely on the act (i.e., the crime) without devoting any attention to the state of mind of
the criminal.
17
2. It erred in prescribing equal punishment for same offence thus making no distinction
between first offenders and habitual criminals and varying degrees of gravity of the
offence.
However, the greatest achievement of this school of criminology lies in the fact that it
suggested a substantial criminal policy which was easy to administer without resort to the
imposition of arbitrary punishment. It goes to the credit of Beccaria who denounced the
earlier concepts of crime and criminals which were based on religious fallacies and myths
and shifted emphasis on the need for concentrating on the personality of an offender in order
to determine his guilt and punishment. Beccaria‘s views provided a background for the
subsequent criminologists to come out with a rationalized theory of crime causation which
eventually led the foundation of the modern criminology and penology.
Neo-Classical School
In criminology, the Neo-Classical School continues the traditions of the Classical School
within the framework of Right Realism. Hence, the utilitarianism of Jeremy Bentham and
Cesare Beccaria remains a relevant social philosophy in policy term for using punishment as
a deterrent through law enforcement, the courts, and imprisonment.
The ‘free will’ theory of classical school did not survive for long. It was soon realized that the
exponents of classical school faultered in their approach in ignoring the individual differences
under certain situations and treating first offenders and the habitual alike on the basis of
similarity of act or crime. The neo-classists asserted that certain categories of offenders such
as minors, idiots, insane or incompetent had to be treated leniently in matters of punishment
irrespective of the similarity of their criminal act because these persons were incapable of
appreciating the difference between right and wrong. This tendency of neo-classists to
distinguish criminals according to their mental depravity was indeed a progressive step
inasmuch as it emphasized the need for modifying the classical view. Thus the contribution
of neo-classical thought to the science of criminology has its own merits.
When crime and recidivism are perceived to be a problem, the first political reaction is to call
for increased policing, stiffer penalties, and increased monitoring and surveillance for those
released on parole. Intuitively, politicians see a correlation between the certainty and severity
of punishment, and the choice whether to commit crime. The practical intention has always
been to deter and, if that failed, to keep society safer for the longest possible period of time
18
by locking the habitual offenders away in prisons (see Wilson). From the earliest theorists,
the arguments were based on morality and social utility, and it was not until comparatively
recently that there has been empirical research to determine whether punishment is an
effective deterrent.
19
cause. It must, however be noted that though this causation was initially confined to
psychopathy or psychology but was later expanded further and finally the positivists
succeeded in establishing reasonable relationship between crime and environment of
the criminal.
6. Neo-classists adopted subjective approach to criminology and concentrated their
attention on the conditions under which an individual commits crime.
Thus it would be seen that the main contribution of neo-classical school of criminology lies
in the fact that it came out with certain concessions in the ‘free will’ theory of classical
school and suggested that an individual might commit criminal acts due to certain
extenuating circumstances which should be duly taken into consideration at the time of
awarding punishment. Therefore, besides the criminal act as such, the personality of the
criminal as a whole, namely, his antecedents, motives, previous life-history, general
character, etc., should not be lost sight of in assessing his guilt. It may be noted that the origin
of jury system in criminal jurisprudence is essentially an outcome of the reaction of neo-
classical approach towards the treatment of offenders.
20
CONCLUSION
Criminology, as a branch of knowledge, is concerned with those particular conducts of
human behaviour which are prohibited by society. It is, therefore, a socio-legal study which
seeks to discover the causes of criminality and suggests the remedies to reduce crimes. The
principles of criminology serve as effective guidelines for formulation of penal policy.
Criminology is an inter-disciplinary field of study, involving scholars and practitioners
representing a wide range of behavioral and social sciences as well as numerous natural
sciences.
A school of criminology means “the system of thought which consists of an integrated theory
of causation of crime and of policies of control implied in the theory of causation”. Pre-
classical, classical, neo-classical, positive, clinical and sociological schools of criminology
can be traced down through the development of criminology. The preclassical school was
dominated by the spiritual mysticism.
The pioneer of Classical school, Beccaria, expounded his naturalistic theory of criminality by
rejecting the omnipotence of evil spirit. He laid greater emphasis on mental phenomenon of
the individual and attributed crime to ‘free will’ of the individual. The classical writers
accepted punishment as a principal method of infliction of pain, humiliation and disgrace to
create ‘fear’ in man to control his behavior. This school, however, considered prevention of
crime more important than the punishment for it. The classical school had some
shortcomings.
The neo-classists asserted that certain categories of offenders such as minors, idiots, insane or
incompetent had to be treated leniently in matters of punishment irrespective of the similarity
of their criminal act because these persons were incapable of appreciating the difference
between right and wrong. This tendency of neo-classists to distinguish criminals according to
their mental depravity was indeed a progressive step inasmuch as it 40 emphasized the need
for modifying the classical view. Thus the contribution of neoclassical thought to the science
of criminology has its own merits.
Finally, however, the modern criminologists prefer to identify the criminal with a particular
social type who has been a victim of well known inequalities between social classes, private
wealth, private property, social power, and life chances.
21
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Books:
Adler, M. L. (2001). ― criminology‖ 4 th ed. New York: Mc Gr aw-Hill companies.
Sutherland, E. H. (1939)―Principles of Criminology”. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott,
Gottfredson, M. and T. Hirschi. (1990) ―A General Theory of Crime”. CA: Stanford
University Press,
Carrington, Kerry, and Russell Hogg, eds. 2002. ―Critical Criminology: Issues,
Debates, Challenges”. Portland, Ore.: Willan Publishing.
Landau, (2002). “Law, Crime, and English Society”, 1660-1830. Cambridge
University Press, p. 118.
Vold, G. Bernard, T. and Snipes, J. (1998) ―Theoretical Criminology‖, Oxford.
University prers. Oxford:
Articles:
Hirschi, & Gottfredson, M. (1993). ―Commentary: Testing the General Theory of
Crime". Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency‖, 30. 47-54.
Akers, Ronald L. (1990). "Rational Choice, Deterrence, and Social Learning Theory:
The Path Not Taken". Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. 81(3), 653-676.
22