| 释义 | 
		Definition of criminology in English: criminologynoun ˌkrɪmɪˈnɒlədʒiˌkrɪməˈnɑlədʒi mass nounThe scientific study of crime and criminals.  Example sentencesExamples -  This book will be of interest to urban historians and quantitative historians as well as students and scholars of criminology and policy studies.
 -  Both emphasize law enforcement as the central police function, and adopt the rational deterrence model of classical criminology, albeit at different stages of the argument.
 -  In January, she began a course of further study for a Master's Degree in social policy and criminology.
 -  With a degree in political science and criminology, he became a probation officer in Florida.
 -  I would definitely recommend this book to students studying legal psychology as well as criminology.
 -  This is a relatively new science in criminology.
 -  Significantly, they have been hugely overlooked as a source of knowledge about criminality within histories of criminology and theories of crime and deviance.
 -  By that time, Catrin was an undergraduate student studying criminology and criminal justice as part of a broader social sciences degree.
 -  Next month she will head for Cardiff to study law and criminology.
 -  In contrast, conflict marxist and radical criminology regarded crime as a function of poverty, reflecting a power imbalance in society.
 -  He said Caroline was studying criminology in an attempt to help someone like her killer have a better life.
 -  Well now there's an institute named after her where they take science to criminology.
 -  His primary interests are criminology, statistics, and criminal justice assessment and counseling.
 -  At the University of Northumbria, applications to study criminology and forensic science have doubled.
 -  Her particular areas of interest are Indigenous criminal justice and forensic issues in criminology.
 -  She devoured books and pamphlets on rhetoric, art, criminology, theology, psychology, philosophy, the list could go on and on.
 -  Follow-up criminology studies have yet to determine whether the website route is effective.
 -  The largest independent criminology study ever conducted into CCTV concluded two years ago that it has had little or no effect on crime.
 -  For the past twenty to thirty years, control theories of crime have been at the center of theoretical development in criminology.
 -  She was 21 and had a degree in criminology and psychology.
 
 
 Origin   Late 19th century: from Latin crimen, crimin- 'crime' + -logy.    Definition of criminology in US English: criminologynounˌkriməˈnäləjēˌkrɪməˈnɑlədʒi The scientific study of crime and criminals.  Example sentencesExamples -  Her particular areas of interest are Indigenous criminal justice and forensic issues in criminology.
 -  He said Caroline was studying criminology in an attempt to help someone like her killer have a better life.
 -  Well now there's an institute named after her where they take science to criminology.
 -  In contrast, conflict marxist and radical criminology regarded crime as a function of poverty, reflecting a power imbalance in society.
 -  In January, she began a course of further study for a Master's Degree in social policy and criminology.
 -  Both emphasize law enforcement as the central police function, and adopt the rational deterrence model of classical criminology, albeit at different stages of the argument.
 -  Next month she will head for Cardiff to study law and criminology.
 -  She devoured books and pamphlets on rhetoric, art, criminology, theology, psychology, philosophy, the list could go on and on.
 -  She was 21 and had a degree in criminology and psychology.
 -  Follow-up criminology studies have yet to determine whether the website route is effective.
 -  Significantly, they have been hugely overlooked as a source of knowledge about criminality within histories of criminology and theories of crime and deviance.
 -  With a degree in political science and criminology, he became a probation officer in Florida.
 -  By that time, Catrin was an undergraduate student studying criminology and criminal justice as part of a broader social sciences degree.
 -  At the University of Northumbria, applications to study criminology and forensic science have doubled.
 -  This book will be of interest to urban historians and quantitative historians as well as students and scholars of criminology and policy studies.
 -  His primary interests are criminology, statistics, and criminal justice assessment and counseling.
 -  This is a relatively new science in criminology.
 -  For the past twenty to thirty years, control theories of crime have been at the center of theoretical development in criminology.
 -  The largest independent criminology study ever conducted into CCTV concluded two years ago that it has had little or no effect on crime.
 -  I would definitely recommend this book to students studying legal psychology as well as criminology.
 
 
 Origin   Late 19th century: from Latin crimen, crimin- ‘crime’ + -logy.     |