Abuses Of Government Power

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ABUSES OF GOVERNMENT POWER

Abuses of Government Power

Abuses of Government Power

Introduction

This essay demonstrates the theory behind political sociology and applies that knowledge to current domestic and world event which is Criminology. This paper has critically examined the relevant literature related to that question, has identified the core theoretical issues and has articulated how these theoretical issues relate to criminology.

Criminology and Political Sociology Theories

Criminology can be defined as the multidisciplinary study of crime (Andrews, 2006, 515). As the definition suggests, many disciplines are involved in the collection of knowledge about crime, including psychology, sociology, psychiatry, anthropology, biology, neurology, political science and economics (Bartol, 1999 p. 4). Over the years criminology has been dominated by three disciplines - sociology, psychology and biology. Criminology needs all the help it can get in its struggle to understand, explain and prevent criminal behaviour and an integration of the data, theory and general viewpoints of each discipline is crucial (Bartol, 1999 pg. 4).

While interest in crime has always been high, understanding of why it occurs and what to do about it has always been a problem. Public officials, politicians and 'experts' offer simple and incomplete solutions for obliterating crime, whereas academe invariably offers abstract interpretations and suggestions that often have little practical value. As in most areas of human behaviour, there is no shortage of experts but there are very few effective solutions (Bartol, 1999, 215)

Criminologists develop theories and conduct research to understand and explain criminal behaviour. A theory attempts to make sense out of many disparate observations (or facts) by stating a general principal that connects, integrates and explains them. A good theory is extremely valuable in that it extends our knowledge beyond the facts in front of us (the raw data), enabling us to predict how others might behave at another time and in another place (Bourne, 2007, 15). Criminological theories based on biology, psychology were both, at one stage dominant in the field; however the vast majority of current criminological text employs sociological theory and research. Biological and psychological explanations will be examined in the following essay; however there will be a focus on sociological theory.

Criminology not only progresses by the development of coherent and comprehensive theories about crime and its causes but also by the systematic collection and analysis of observations about the social world in relation to those theories (Bilton, 2006, 69).

Generally, data is generated by different forms of data collection and examined by different forms of data analysis. The variety of data is, in part a reflection of the diversity of problems addressed and the overabundance of aspects of such problems which are exposed for investigation by different theoretical approaches (Downes, 2007, 47).

Any given instance of criminological research represents a particular constellation between problem, theory and method, and the data which is used is the outcomes of that constellation. This essay will also look at the research procedure and its three phases: the research question or problem, the research and information gathering method, and interpreting the results from the gathered ...
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