BioPsychoSociology: Outline and Links | Criminology: A BioPsychoSocial Approach | Selected Articles: Genetics and Crime at Institute of Justice Conference - NYTimes.com: “Throughout the past 30 or 40 years most criminologists couldn’t say the word ‘genetics’ without spitting,” Terrie E. Moffitt, a behavioral scientist at Duke University, said. “Today the most compelling modern theories of crime and violence weave social and biological themes together.”

Updates: 10.5.14 | 10.11.14 | 10.12.14 | 10.13.14 | 10.15.14


BioPsychoSociology: Outline and Links 

Criminology: A BioPsychoSocial Approach

CRIMES and PUNISHMENTS: Notes on BioPsychoSocial Behavioral Criminology with WebBook: Links, Searches and Reviews

BioPsychoSociology and Criminology Reading List - Links to Articles and Searches - by Michael Novakhov, M.D.

BioPsychoSociology

The BioPsychoSocial Nature of Man and Society - General Introduction

On Human Nature: The BioPsychoSocial Model of Man and Society





Human nature - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Human Nature: Justice versus Power, Noam Chomsky debates with Michel Foucault
Human - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The BioPsychoSocial Nature of Man and Society - Google Search
The BioPsychoSocial Nature of Man - Google Search
The BioPsychoSocial Nature of Society - Google Search
A PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE by Sigmund Freud

Wilson (Edward) On Human Nature


On Human Nature - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wilson (Edward) On Human Nature Summary
On Human Nature (Open Library)

Sociobiology


E. O. Wilson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sociobiology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Instinct - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Intuition (psychology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Group selection - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Consilience (book) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Evolutionary Perspectives: Survival, Control, Domination, Expansion


Sociocultural evolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Evolutionary biology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Evolutionary physiology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Evolutionary psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Developmental psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Evolutionary psychology of parenting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Evolutionary leadership theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sociobiological theories of rape - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sociobiology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Social Sciences


Social science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
History of the social sciences - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anthropology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Evolutionary psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Humanism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Human condition - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Natural science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nature - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Human Behaviors


Human behavior - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Behavior - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Behavioural sciences - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Applied behavior analysis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Behavioral cusp - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Behaviorism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Radical behaviorism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Experimental analysis of behavior - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Instinct - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Motivation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Reason - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rebellion - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Social relation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Human sexual activity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Differential susceptibility hypothesis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The BioPsychoSocial Model


Biopsychosocial model - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
George L. Engel - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Criticism - Biopsychosocial model - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Biopsychosocial Model 25 Years Later: Principles, Practice, and Scientific Inquiry
biopsychosocial definition - Google Search
biopsychosocial - Google Search
biopsychosociology - Google Search
BioPsychoSociology - Google Search

BioPsychoSocial Continuums


Continuum - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
biopsychosocial continuum - Google Search
BioPsychoSocial Isomorphic Continuum - Google Search
BioPsychoSocial Isomorphic Continuums - Google Search
biopsychosocial analogous continuums - Google Search
biopsychosocial analogous continua - Google Search
isological definition - Google Search
isological continuum - Google Search
homologous - Google Search
homologous continuum - Google Search
isomorphic - Google Search
Behavior and Law: American Psychiatry At The Crossroads

Biological Determinants of Human Behavior and Social Functions

The Biological Basis of Human Behavior



The Biological Basis of Human Behavior
Biological determinism
Biological Determinants of Human Behavior and Social Functions - Google Search
biological determinants of behavior and experience - Google Search
determinants of human behavior ppt - Google Search
what biological factors influence human behavior - Google Search
social and biological factors that influence human behaviour - Google Search

Behavioral neuroscience


Behavioral neuroscience - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Neurology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Medicine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Behavioral genetics

General



Behavioural genetics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Human behaviour genetics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Behavioral genetics - Google Search
genetic studies in sociology - Google Search
behavioral genetics psychology - Google Search
genetic studies in psychology - Google Search
genetic studies in psychiatry - Google Search
genetic studies in psychiatric disorders - Google Search
Genetics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Behavioral genetics and criminology


Genetics and Crime at Institute of Justice Conference - NYTimes.com
Criminologist’s Research Shows Genes Influence Criminal Behavior - UT Dallas News
BIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES IN CRIMINOLOGY - FISHBEIN - 2006 - Criminology - Wiley Online Library
Criminology: Theory, Research, and Policy - Gennaro Vito, Jeffrey Maahs - Google Books
Behavioral genetics and criminology - Google Search
Behavioral genetics and criminology - Google Scholar
Behavioral genetics and crime - Google Search
Biological determinants of criminal behavior - Google Scholar
Biological determinants of criminality - Google Scholar

Psychiatric Genetics

Recent Genetic Studies in Psychiatry



PsychiatryOnline | Psychiatric News | News Article
PsychiatryOnline | American Journal of Psychiatry | Uncovering the Hidden Risk Architecture of the Schizophrenias: Confirmation in Three Independent Genome-Wide Association Studies
Uncovering the Hidden Risk Architecture of the Schizophrenias: Confirmation in Three Independent Genome-Wide Association Studies - Google Search
Schizophrenia not a single disease but multiple genetically distinct disorders | Newsroom | Washington University in St. Louis
Psych News Alert: Genomic Analysis Yields Eight Distinct Types of Schizophrenia

Genetics, Eugenics and Race issues in Societies and Cultures

Biological Aspects of Personality

Somatic Factors

General Somatic Health or Illness Status

Neurological Factors, e.g. TLE

Endocrine Factors

Toxicities and Substance Use and Abuse

Environmental, (e.g. lead) and Nutritional Factors

Review of current studies

Psychological Determinants of Human Behavior and Social Functions



Psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Neuropsychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Review of current studies

Social Determinants of Human Behavior and Social Functions


Sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Social roles


Role - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Social Hierarchies

Social Structures and Institutions

Social Spirit and Cultures

Review of current studies

Semiotics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sociological Theories, Methods and Fields

General: Sociology and Social Studies



Sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Outline of sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Index of sociology articles - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Social behavior - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Institution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Social structure - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
History of science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Social studies - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Philosophy of Science


Philosophy of social science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philosophy of medicine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philosophy and economics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philosophy of science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Consilience - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Philosophy of Psychiatry


Philosophy of Psychiatry - Google Search
Epistemology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Understanding - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sociology Books


Abductive Analysis: Theorizing Qualitative Research, Tavory, Timmermans
Writing for Social Scientists: How to Start and Finish Your Thesis, Book, or Article: Second Edition, Becker, Richards
Misbehaving Science: Controversy and the Development of Behavior Genetics, Panofsky
Sociology | Subject Catalog | The University of Chicago Press
Sexual Fields: Toward a Sociology of Collective Sexual Life, Green
Understanding Global Social Policy: Second Edition, Yeates
Social Policy: Theory and Practice - Third Edition, Spicker
Think Tanks in America, Medvetz
Mind, Self, and Society: The Definitive Edition, Mead, Joas, Huebner

Sociology Journals


Annual Review of Sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
AnnuRev
American Sociological Association: American Sociological Review
American Journal of Sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American Sociological Review - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American Journal of Sociology
www.press.uchicago.edu/journals/ajs/board.html?journal=ajs
Sociology - Jornals - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Project: BioPsychoSociology and BioPsychoSocial Criminology Review


criminology review - Google Search

Theories


History of sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sociological Theory


Sociological theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sociological theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Structural functionalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
what is sociological theory sociology - Google Search
Sociological Theory | Chapter 3 Chapter Summary

BioPsychoSocial Functional-Organismic paradigm


Organic and Structural Functionalism theories in sociology - Google Search
Organismic and Structural Functionalism theories in sociology - Google Search
Organism and Structural Functionalism theories in sociology - Google Search

Organismic Theory of Society and State


Organism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Degeneration - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Theories of Society and State - Google Search
Organismic Theories of Society and State - Google Search
organismic theory of state - Google Search
organismic theory of society - Google Search
organism theory of society - Google Search
define organism theory of society - Google Search
define organism theory of state - Google Search
organism theory of state - Google Search

"Organic" Theory

General Aspects of "Organic" Theory



Organic theory of the state - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Organic Society - from Sociocultural evolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
organic theory of state - Google Search
organic theory of society - Google Search
Human body - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Endocrine system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nervous system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Intrinsic and extrinsic properties - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Plato and Aristotle


Cambridge Journals Online - Philosophy - Abstract - Plato's Analogy of State and Individual: <i>The Republic</i> and the Organic Theory of the State
organic theory of state by aristotle - Google Search
aristotle concept of state - Google Search

Herbert Spencer


Herbert Spencer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Herbert Spencer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Reviews of Organic Theory


JSTOR: American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 6, No. 5 (Mar., 1901), pp. 577-601
Full text of "The Organic Theory of Society. Passing of the Contract Theory"
Essay on the Organism Theory of Society
Individual and Society - KKHSOU
mechanical and organic solidarity (social theory) -- Encyclopedia Britannica
Full text of "Organismic theories of the state; nineteenth century interpretations of the state as organism or as person"

Related


association theory sociology - Google Search
organic theory of states by friedrich ratzel - Google Search
organic theory of nations - Google Search

Structural Functionalism


Structural functionalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Structural functionalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Systems Theory


Systems theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ludwig von Bertalanffy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Talcott Parsons - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Action theory (sociology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
System - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
System - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
System - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
System - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Systems psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Living systems - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Social system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Model of hierarchical complexity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Control theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Complexity theory and organizations - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Black box - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
System - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Systems thinking - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Systems philosophy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sociocybernetics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Homeostasis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Systems theory in political science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Systems psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Systems theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
What is Systems Theory?
General Theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Grand theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sociocultural System


Cultural system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sociocultural system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sociocultural evolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dual inheritance theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cultural neuroscience - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Origin of language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Origin of speech - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Origins of society - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Symbolic culture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Human Revolution (human origins) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Societal collapse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sustainability - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Social cycle theory and BioPsychoSocial Principle of Cyclicity

Biological Cyclicity



Biological life cycle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Biorhythm - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
List of cycles - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
concept of cyclicity - Google Search
biological cycles of man - Google Search
natural biological cycles of man - Google Search

Social cycle theory


Social cycle theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Historical Cyclicity


Society - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philosophy of history - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cyclical and linear history-Philosophy of history - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Spengler


Oswald Spengler - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Decline of the West - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Toynbee


Arnold J. Toynbee - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Study of History - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Study of History - Book - nobs: 10/17/1993 - 10/24/1993

Sorokin


Pitirim Sorokin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
social and cultural dynamics sorokin - Google Search
Social revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sociology of revolution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Amazon.com: Social and Cultural Dynamics (9780875580296): Pitirim A. Sorokin: Books

"Clash of Civilisations"


samuel huntington - Google Search
Samuel P. Huntington - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Clash of Civilizations - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Social disorganization theory


Social disorganization theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Methods

Qualitative Approach: Hermeneutics



Qualitative research - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hermeneutics


Hermeneutics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hermeneutics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Quantitative Approach: Bio-Psycho-Socio-Metrics


Quantitative research - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Statistics and Case Studies

Project: Mental Status Profile Scales and Self-Report

Fields

Social Anthropology



Social anthropology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anthropology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cultural anthropology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sociocultural anthropology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edward Burnett Tylor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James George Frazer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Golden Bough - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Biocultural anthropology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ethology in Sociology


ethology in sociology - Google Search
Ethology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Does Ethology Throw Any Light on Human Behavior?

Humans as Predators

Predation

Social Psychology



Sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Social psychology (sociology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Systems psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Psychoanalysis and Sociology


Psychoanalytic sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sigmund Freud - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Totem and Taboo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Political Sociology


Sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Economic Sociology


Economic sociology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sociology of Deviance


Deviance (sociology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Social disorganization theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert K. Merton - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Criminology


Index of criminology articles - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
criminology - Google Search
criminology - Google Search

Police and Law Enforcemenr Information Systems

Books


Criminology: An Interdisciplinary Approach - Anthony Walsh, Lee Ellis - Google Books
The Mask of Sanity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Serial Crime: Theoretical and Practical Issues in Behavioral Profiling - Wayne Petherick - Google Books
Psychology and Crime: An Introduction to Criminological Psychology: An ... - Clive R. Hollin - Google Books
Epidemiological Criminology: A Public Health Approach to Crime and Violence - Timothy A. Akers, Roberto H. Potter, Carl V. Hill - Google Books
Criminological Theory: An Analysis of Its Underlying Assumptions - Werner J. Einstadter, Stuart Henry - Google Books

Reviews


Online Review - Free Online Criminology Review

BioPsychoSociology of Groups, Societies, States, Cultures and Civilizations

Individual-Groups-Society Continuum

Structure and Function

Cell and Boundaries

Homeostasis, self-regulation and feedback mechanisms

Communications

Cyclicity

The Distinctions: Groups, Societies, States, Cultures and Civilizations

Groups






Social group - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Interpersonal relationship - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Society


Society - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Institution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Social relation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nation


Nation as Network: Diaspora, Cyberspace, and Citizenship, Bernal

State

Culture


Culture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cultural system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cultural cognition - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Western culture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Civilization


Civilization - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Civilization - Google Search

World System


World-systems theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Group Dynamics with extensions to Societies, States and Cultures

Types and hierarchies of groups



Social group - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Common Group Dynamics


Group dynamics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Group Dynamics - Google Search
Group Dynamics with extensions to Societies, States and Cultures - Google Search

BioPsychoSociology of National Characters

Nationalism and Pathological Narcissism

Organisational Cultures



Organizational studies - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Organization - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Organizational culture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
healthy culture in an organization - Google Search
Work behavior - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Organizational behavior - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Industrial and organizational psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Industrial and organizational psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Biological Foundations of Organizational Behavior, Colarelli, Arvey

Crowd Behavior


Crowd psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Totalitarian - Libertarian Dichotomy and Continuum

BioPsychoSociology of Crimes, Law, Politics and Markets

BioPsychoSociology of Power, Control and Domination

Wars




War-Psychoanalytic psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
War cycles - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rosen, S.P.: War and Human Nature (eBook and Paperback).

BioPsychoSocial Criminology


Criminology-BioSocial Theories - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Crime - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Behavior and Law: CRIMES and PUNISHMENTS | Behavioral Criminology WebBook: Links, Searches, Reviews, Notes - Updated on 12.22.13
Centre for Crime and Justice Studies - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Criminology: BioPsychoSocial Approach


The Biopsychosocial Perspective
Criminology: BioPsychoSocial Approach - Google Search
Criminology: BioPsychoSocial Approach - Google Search
Criminology: BioPsychoSocial Approach - Google Search
Criminology BioPsychoSocial - Google Search

The works of Lombroso

Bio- and Psychometrics

Psychiatric Aspects of Criminal Behaviors


Mental Illness and The Criminal Justice System - icclr.law.ubc.ca/sites/icclr.law.ubc.ca/files/publications/pdfs/Mental Illness and the Criminal Justice System %5BFinal VS%5D.pdf
Psychiatric Aspects of Criminal Behaviors - Google Search

Psychiatric Diagnosis: Issues and Problems


Classification of mental disorders - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Category:Psychiatric diagnosis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Norm, Mormality and Abnormality


Abnormality (behavior) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Normality (behavior) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Norm (social) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Norm (philosophy) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
psychiatric diagnosis - Google Search
psychiatric diagnosis criticism - Google Search
NIMH · Transforming Diagnosis
The Real Problems With Psychiatry - The Atlantic
How a Scientific Field Can Collapse: The Case of Psychiatry - Evolution News & Views
Psychoanalysis and Academia: Present, Past, Future | www.bpsi.org
Diederik Stapel’s Audacious Academic Fraud - NYTimes.com
Disputed results a fresh blow for social psychology : Nature News & Comment

Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology

Psychiatric Syndromes and Criminal Behaviors


Behavior and Law: Explorations in Criminal Psychopathology: Clinical Syndromes With Forensic Implications, Second Edition - JAAPL
Dr. Louis B. Schlesinger - Google Search

Cognitive Syndromes

Mental Retardation and Intellectual Deficiencies

Organic Brain Syndromes


Cognitive bias - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cognitive bias - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Information deficit model - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Delusional Syndromes

Acute Psychotic States

Affective Syndromes: Depression and Manic States

Vegetative signs of Depressions as an example of BioPsychoSocial marker

Personality Disturbances and Antisocial Behaviors

Other Psychiatric Pathology and Criminal Behaviors


Psychiatric Syndromes and Criminal Behaviors - Google Search
psychiatric disorders associated with criminal behavior - Google Search
mental disorders that cause criminal behavior - Google Search
psychiatric syndromes list - Google Search
psychology syndromes - Google Search
mental disorders that cause criminal behavior - Google Search
psychiatric disorders associated with epilepsy - Google Search
mental disorders and criminal behavior - Google Search
mental illness and criminal behavior - Google Search

Case Histories


The Rough Guide to True Crime - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Review of current studies

Psychiatric aspects of various types of crimes by legal definitions

Case Histories

Review of Current Studies

Mental Illness in USA



Cost of not caring: Mental illness in America

Community Mental Health Index and Scale

Mental Illness in Prison Populations

Suicide


40,000 suicides annually, yet America simply shrugs

Insanity Defense Studies

criminal psychopathology - Google Search
criminal psychopathology definition - Google Search
psychopathology criminal behavior - Google Search
psychopathology criminal minds - Google Search
Biosocial criminology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Biosocial theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Psychological Aspects of Criminal Behaviors


Criminal psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
criminal psychology - Google Search
criminal minds - Google Search

Psychodynamic Criminology and the role of Intrapsychic conflicts in crimes


Psychodynamic Criminology - Search results - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Psychodynamic theories of offending - www.psychlotron.org.uk/newResources/criminological/A2_AQB_crim_psychodynamicTheories.pdf
1956-Criminal Psychodynamics-- A Platform - scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4460&context=jclc
Psychoanalytic criminology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Psychoanalytic Criminology - Search results - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Franz Alexander - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edward Glover (psychoanalyst) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Acting out - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Psychological manipulation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Offender profiling - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Psychodynamic Criminology - Google Search
psychodynamic approach criminology - Google Search
psychodynamic trait theory criminology - Google Search
latent trait theory criminology - Google Search
intrapsychic conflict - Google Search
intrapsychic conflict and crimes - Google Search
intrapsychic conflict and criminalisation - Google Search
intrapsychic conflict and criminology - Google Search

Psychoanalysis


Defence mechanisms - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Intersubjective psychoanalysis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Psychodynamics of various types of crimes by legal definitions


Voyeurism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stalking - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kleptomania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Case Histories

Review of Current Studies

Review of current studies


Infanticide - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"White collar" crimes: profiles and cases

Sociobiological theories of rape - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Psychodynamics of Investigative and Detective work

Social Aspects of Criminal Behaviors

Social Disorganisation and the role of environmental and subcultural factors

Criminal Groups and gangs

Crime and Social Policies

Sociology of various types of crimes by legal definitions

Review of Current Studies

Review of current studies

DNA Evidence and Wrong Convictions

NYC Jogger case

BioPsychoSociology of Law





organic theory of law - Google Search
Public law - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Biological-Medical, Psychological and Social Aspects of Law Enforcement and Police Work

Proposal for Therapeutic Droning

Review of current studies

BioPsychoSociology of Politics



Theories of political behavior - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Political Science


Political science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political Science (journal) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Outline of political science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
History of political science - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Theories of political behavior - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Identity (social science) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political philosophy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Politics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political organization - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political lists - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Political Psychology


political psychology - Google Search
Political psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
International Society of Political Psychology

Personology

Political Personology

Meritocracy vs Dynastic Clans systems

SocioPolitical Cyclicity

BioPsychoSociology of Financial Markets


Market (economics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Behavioral economics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Economic system - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Socioeconomics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thermoeconomics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cultural economics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
organic theory of financial markets - Google Search

Behavioral Economics


Behavioral economics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
IQ and the Wealth of Nations - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Exchange Behavior and Economics

Criticism of Leftist and Marxist Economic Ideologies

Marx: Personality and Life

Marxism: A Political Tool more than a Science

Market as a beast

The Health of Nations: Norms and Dysfunctions in Groups, Societies, States and Cultures




The Wealth of Nations - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The concept of Health and Illness in Individuals, Groups and Societies


Cultural health - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Normality (behavior) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Norm (social) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Health as an Ideal

What makes Groups, Societies and Cultures Healthy or Sick?

Societal collapse



Society - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Societal collapse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Short History of Progress - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Study of History - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Why Nations Fail - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Summary - Why Nations Fail by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson
why nations fail - Google Search
The Russian mirror has broken | European Council on Foreign Relations

Ancient Rome and Lead Theory

Maya civilization


Maya civilization - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sacrifice in Maya culture - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Human trophy taking in Mesoamerica - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Sustainable" (Healthy) States

Sick, Failed and Fragile Societies, States and Cultures


Degeneration - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Societal collapse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maya civilization - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fall of the Western Roman Empire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://msmunatunagb.wikispaces.com/file/view/Cultural+Extinction.pdf
extinct cultures - Google Search
healthy culture - Google Search
healthy state - Google Search
failed state - Google Search
sick society - Google Search
dead cultures - Google Search
list of dead cultures - Google Search
List of rump states - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dysgenics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Devolution (biology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Review of current studies

Good Governing and Healthy Social Policies

"Social Engineering"

Related Topics



Heterosexual–homosexual continuum - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Notes and Posts

Articles

The BioPsychoSocial Nature of Man and Society

Notes

Quotes

Projects

Posts

CRIMES and PUNISHMENTS: BioPsychoSocial Behavioral Criminology: Links, Searches and Reviews

Part 1: Crime, Criminality and Criminology

Crime, Criminality and Criminal Behaviors

Crime: General Introduction







Crime - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Category:Crime - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Category:Violent crime - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Category:Works about crime - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Crime - Search results - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Crime (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Crime control - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National Law Enforcement and Corrections Technology Center - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
crime - Google Search
crime analysis - Google Search
individual crime analysis - Google Search
Crime analysis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

-

Selected Articles

Genetics and Crime at Institute of Justice Conference - NYTimes.com

Genetics and Crime at Institute of Justice Conference

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It was less than 20 years ago that the National Institutes of Health abruptly withdrew funds for a conference on genetics and crime after outraged complaints that the idea smacked of eugenics. The president of the Association of Black Psychologists at the time declared that such research was in itself  “a blatant form of stereotyping and racism.”
The tainted history of using biology to explain criminal behavior has pushed criminologists to reject or ignore genetics and concentrate on social causes: miserable poverty, corrosive addictions, guns. Now that the human genome has been sequenced, and scientists are studying the genetics of areas as varied as alcoholism and party affiliation, criminologists are cautiously returning to the subject. A small cadre of experts is exploring how genes might heighten the risk of committing a crime and whether such a trait can be inherited.    
The turnabout will be evident on Monday at the annual National Institute of Justice conference in Arlington, Va. On the opening day criminologists from around the country can attend a panel on creating databases for information about DNA and “new genetic markers” that forensic scientists are discovering.
“Throughout the past 30 or 40 years most criminologists couldn’t say the word ‘genetics’ without spitting,” Terrie E. Moffitt, a behavioral scientist at Duke University, said. “Today the most compelling modern theories of crime and violence weave social and biological themes together.”  
Researchers estimate that at least 100 studies have shown that genes play a role in crimes. “Very good methodological advances have meant that a wide range of genetic work is being done,” said John H. Laub, the director of the justice institute, who won the Stockholm Prize in Criminology last week. He and others take pains to emphasize, however, that genes are ruled by the environment, which can either mute or aggravate violent impulses. Many people with the same genetic tendency for aggressiveness will never throw a punch, while others without it could be career criminals.
The subject still raises thorny ethical and policy questions. Should a genetic predisposition influence sentencing? Could genetic tests be used to tailor rehabilitation programs to individual criminals? Should adults or children with a biological marker for violence be identified?
Everyone in the field agrees there is no “crime gene.” What most researchers are looking for are inherited traits that are linked to aggression and antisocial behaviors, which may in turn lead to violent crime. Don’t expect anyone to discover how someone’s DNA might identify the next Bernard L. Madoff.  
And that is precisely the problem, said Troy Duster, a professor of sociology and bioethics at New York University, who argues that studies examine not the remorseless and rapacious behavior of the rich and powerful, but the behavior of disadvantaged minorities. “Every era believes that the technology and the methodology have improved,” he said, “but the science itself is problematic.” 
One gene that has been linked to violence regulates the production of the monoamine oxidase A enzyme, which controls the amount of serotonin in the brain. People with a version of the gene that produces less of the enzyme tend to be significantly more impulsive and aggressive, but, as Ms. Moffitt and her colleague (and husband) Avshalom Caspi discovered, the effect of the gene is triggered by stressful experiences. 
Steven Pinker, a professor of psychology at Harvard whose forthcoming book, “The Better Angels of Our Nature,” argues that humans have become less violent over the millenniums, suggests that the way to think about genetics and crime is to start with human nature and then look at what causes the switch for a particular trait to be flipped on or off.
“It is not a claim about how John and Bill differ, but about how every male is the same,” he said. Understanding the genetics of violence can “tell you what aspect of the environment you should look at.” 
He mentioned one of the biggest risk factors leading to crime: remaining single instead of getting married, a link uncovered by Mr. Laub and Robert J. Sampson, a Harvard sociologist who was a co-winner of the Stockholm Prize. Marriage may serve as a switch that directs male energies toward investing in a family rather than competing with other males, Mr. Pinker said.
Kevin Beaver, an associate professor at Florida State University’s College of Criminology and Criminal Justice, said genetics may account for, say, half of a person’s aggressive behavior, but that 50 percent comprises hundreds or thousands of genes that express themselves differently depending on the environment.
He has tried to measure which circumstances — having delinquent friends, living in a disadvantaged neighborhood — influence whether a predisposition to violence surfaces. After studying twins and siblings, he came up with an astonishing result: In boys not exposed to the risk factors, genetics played no role in any of their violent behavior. The positive environment had prevented the genetic switches — to use Mr. Pinker’s word — that affect aggression from being turned on. In boys with eight or more risk factors, however, genes explained 80 percent of their violence. Their switches had been flipped.
A rash of new research has focused on self-control as well as callousness and a lack of empathy, traits regularly implicated in the decision to commit a crime. Like other personality traits, these are believed to have environmental and genetic components, although the degree of heritability is debated. 
In findings from a long-term study of 1,000 babies born in 1972 in a New Zealand town, Ms. Moffitt and her colleagues recently reported that the less self-control a child displayed at 3 years of age, the more likely he or she was to commit a crime more than 30 years later. Forty-three percent of the children who scored in the lowest fifth on self-control were later convicted of a crime, she said, versus 13 percent of those who scored in the highest fifth.  
But a predisposition is not destiny. “Knowing something is inherited does not IN ANY WAY tell us anything about whether changing the environment will improve it,” Ms. Moffitt wrote in an e-mail. “For example, self-control is a lot like height, it varies widely in the human population, and it is highly heritable, but if an effective intervention such as better nutrition is applied to the whole population, then everyone gets taller than the last generation.”
Criminologists and sociologists have been much more skittish about genetic causes of crime than psychologists.  In 2008 a survey conducted by John Paul Wright, who heads graduate programs at the University of Cincinnati’s School of Criminal Justice, discovered that “not a single study on the biology-crime link has been published in dissertation form in the last 20 years” from a criminal justice Ph.D. program, aside from two dissertations he had personally overseen (one of which was Mr. Beaver’s). He also noted that the top four journals in the field had scarcely published any biological research in the past two decades.
Mr. Wright said he now thinks “in criminology the tide is turning, especially among younger scholars.”
But recent work has tended to air outside the main criminology forums. Mr. Beaver, for example, published a paper in Biological Psychiatry in February that concluded that adoptees whose biological parents had broken the law “were significantly more likely to be arrested, sentenced to probation, incarcerated, and arrested multiple times when compared with adoptees whose biological parents had not been arrested.”
At the American Association for the Advancement of Science’s meeting in February, Adrian Raine, chairman of the criminology department at the University of Pennsylvania and a pioneer in the field, presented a paper showing how variations in the parts of a toddler’s brain that regulate emotions — believed to be a product of genes and environment — turned out to be a good predictor of criminal behavior later in life.
Mr. Sampson, who planned to attend the opening day of the justice institute conference, said that “sociology has nothing to fear from genetic research,” but he maintained that the most interesting questions about crime, like why some communities have a higher crime rate than others, are not traceable at all to genetics. “The more sophisticated the genetic research, the more it will show the importance of social context,” he said.





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