Audiobook: Crime: Its Cause and Treatment
- Download Preface; Chapter 1: What is Crime? audio
- Download Chapter 2: Purpose of Punishment audio
- Download Chapter 3: Responsibility for Crime audio
- Download Chapter 4: Environment audio
- Download Chapter 5: Adjusting Heredity and Environment audio
- Download Chapter 6: Psychology of Criminal Conduct audio
- Download Chapter 7: The Criminal audio
- Download Chapter 8: The Female Criminal audio
- Download Chapter 9: Juvenile Criminals audio
- Download Chapter 10: Homicide audio
- Download Chapter 11: Sex Crimes audio
- Download Chapter 12: Robbery and Burglary audio
- Download Chapter 13: Man as a Predatory Animal audio
- Download Chapter 14: Crimes against Property audio
- Download Chapter 15: Attitude of the Criminal audio
- Download Chapter 16: The Law and the Criminal audio
- Download Chapter 17: Repealing Laws audio
- Download Chapter 18: Is Crime Increasing? audio
- Download Chapter 19: Medical Experts audio
- Download Chapter 20: Punishment audio
- Download Chapter 21: The Effect of Punishment on Others audio
- Download Chapter 22: Evolution of Punishment audio
- Download Chapter 23: Capital Punishment audio
- Download Chapter 24: Stigmata of the Criminal audio
- Download Chapter 25: The Good in Criminals audio
- Download Chapter 26: The Defective and Insane audio
- Download Chapter 27: Social Control audio
- Download Chapter 28: Industrialism and Crime audio
- Download Chapter 29: War and Crime audio
- Download Chapter 30: Civilization and Crime audio
- Download Chapter 31: The Convict audio
- Download Chapter 32: Isolation and Sterilization audio
- Download Chapter 33: Crime, Disease and Accident audio
- Download Chapter 34: Luck and Chance audio
- Download Chapter 35: Pardons and Paroles audio
- Download Chapter 36: Remedies audio
Audiobooks Genres
Author
Description
Clarence Darrow was an American lawyer. He remains notable for his wit and agnosticism, which marked him as one of the most famous American lawyers and civil libertarians.
In this book, Darrow expands on his lifelong contention that psychological, physical, and environmental influences—not a conscious choice between right and wrong—control human behavior. To my ears (the reader's), the author has a rather simplistic behaviourist view of human behaviour, but he argues his position with wonderful clarity. Darrow is coherently critical of conspiracy laws, of the creation of laws by the powerful (and consequently the definition of "crime" by that group) .... and his views on the machinery of "justice" and on how criminals are treated are still very relevant. (Summary adapted from Wikipedia.)
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