ANNUAL REVIEWS Connect With Our Experts New From Annual Reviews: Annual Review of Criminology criminol.annualreviews.org • Volume 1 • January 2018 Co-Editors:
Joan Petersilia, Stanford University andRobert J. Sampson, Harvard University The Annual Review of Criminology provides comprehensive reviews of significant developments in the multidisciplinary field of
criminology, defined as the study of both the nature of criminal behavior and societal reactions to crime. International in scope, the
journal examines variations in crime and punishment across time (e.g., why crime increases or decreases) and among individuals,
communities, and societies (e.g., why certain individuals, groups, or nations are more likely than others to have high crime or
victimization rates). The societal effects of crime and crime control, and why certain individuals or groups are more likely to be
arrested, convicted, and sentenced to prison, will also be covered via topics relating to criminal justice agencies (e.g., police, courts,
and corrections) and criminal law.
TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR VOLUME 1: THE DISCIPLINE
• Reflections on Disciplines and Fields, Problems, Policies, and Life, James F. Short
• Replication in Criminology and the Social Sciences, William Alex Pridemore, Matthew C. Makel, Jonathan A. Plucker
CRIME AND VIOLENCE
• Bringing Crime Trends Back into Criminology: A Critical Assessment of the Literature and a Blueprint for Future Inquiry, Eric P. Baumer,
María B. Vélez, Richard Rosenfeld
• Immigration and Crime: Assessing a Contentious Issue, Graham C. Ousey, Charis E. Kubrin
• The Long Reach of Violence: A Broader Perspective on Data, Theory, and Evidence on the Prevalence and Consequences of Exposure to Violence, Patrick Sharkey
• Victimization Trends and Correlates: Macro‑ and Microinfluences and New Directions for Research, Janet L. Lauritsen, Maribeth L. Rezey
• Situational Opportunity Theories of Crime, Pamela Wilcox,
Francis T. Cullen
• Schools and Crime, Paul J. Hirschfield
PUNISHMENT AND POLICY
• Collateral Consequences of Punishment: A Critical Review and Path Forward, David S. Kirk, Sara Wakefield
• Understanding the Determinants of Penal Policy: Crime, Culture, and Comparative Political Economy, Nicola Lacey, David Soskice,
David Hope
• Varieties of Mass Incarceration: What We Learn from State Histories, Michael C. Campbell
• The Politics, Promise, and Peril of Criminal Justice Reform in the Context of Mass Incarceration, Katherine Beckett
THE PRISON
• Inmate Society in the Era of Mass Incarceration, Derek A. Kreager,
Candace Kruttschnitt
• Restricting the Use of Solitary Confinement, Craig Haney
DEVELOPMENTAL AND LIFE‑COURSE CRIMINOLOGY
• Desistance from Offending in the Twenty‑First Century, Bianca E. Bersani, Elaine Eggleston Doherty
• On the Measurement and Identification of Turning Points in Criminology, Holly Nguyen, Thomas A. Loughran
ECONOMICS OF CRIME
• Gun Markets, Philip J. Cook
• Offender Decision‑Making in Criminology: Contributions from Behavioral Economics, Greg Pogarsky, Sean Patrick Roche,
Justin T. Pickett
POLICE AND COURTS
• Policing in the Era of Big Data, Greg Ridgeway
• Reducing Fatal Police Shootings as System Crashes: Research, Theory, and Practice, Lawrence W. Sherman
• The Problems With Prosecutors, David Alan Sklansky
• Monetary Sanctions: Legal Financial Obligations in US Systems of Justice, Karin D. Martin, Bryan L. Sykes, Sarah Shannon, Frank Edwards,
Alexes Harris
• Forensic DNA Typing, Erin Murphy