Criminology includes the study of all aspects of crime and law enforcement—criminal psychology, the social setting of crime, prohibition and prevention, investigation and detection, capture and punishment. Thus, many of the people involved—legislators, social workers, probation officers, judges, etc.—could possibly be considered criminologists, though the word usually refers only to scholars and researchers.
Examples of criminology in a Sentence
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Both the fears and promises around algorithms in the courtroom assume judges are consistently using them
Still, University of Pennsylvania criminology professor Richard Berk argues that human decision-makers can be just as flawed.—Lauren Feiner, The Verge, 30 Oct. 2024 Valente is also trained in boxing and judo and graduated with a degree in criminology from Barry University.—Lissete Lanuza Sáenz, StyleCaster, 29 Oct. 2024 Online majors include anthropology, environmental management, sport management and criminology, among many others.—Doug Wintemute, Forbes, 29 Sep. 2024 Cartoon by Will Santino Copy link to cartoon Copy link to cartoon
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Dennis Eady, a criminology scholar at Cardiff University, runs one of Britain’s remaining innocence projects.—Heidi Blake, The New Yorker, 29 July 2024 See all Example Sentences for criminology
Word History
Etymology
Latin crīmin-, crīmen "accusation, crime" + -o- + -logy
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