NEW Criminology, Section 12.1: Integrated Theories
Hypothetically, explanations of crime can better predict criminality if they combine concepts from many different previous theories. This combination could hypothetically explain crime with much more accuracy than any single theory by itself. It would be difficult to combine theories that have contradictory assumptions, but it's possible to take concepts from these competing theories and modify assumptions to make them compatible. Some of the existing combined theories have taken aspects of theories like social control, learning, and stain and conceptualized the manner in which all of those factors relate to the others. These theories sometimes explain criminality better than the original theories, but not always.

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NEW Criminology, Section 12.2: Examples of Integrated Theories

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Criminology, Section 11: Integrated Theories

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NEW Criminology, Section 11.1: Life Course Theories

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1986: How to Spot the Upper Class | That's Life! | BBC Archive

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CRIM 205- April 2- "Cultural Criminology"

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The Future of Criminology | Brian Boutwell | TEDxSaintLouisUniversity

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My answer to "how do you defend someone you think is guilty"

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Routine Activities Theory

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The French Do Not Care About Work

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Professor Jiang: World War 3 Is About To Begin, Let Me Explain!

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Subcultural Theories of Crime & Deviance - Albert Cohen | A Level Sociology

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Once You Learn Economics, You Can't Be MANIPULATED Anymore

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NEW Criminology, Section 9.2: General Strain Theory and Institutional Anomie Theory

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An atheist explains the most convincing argument for God | Alex O'Connor

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Penny Helps Sheldon Solve His Equation | The Big Bang Theory

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Don't Hang Up On AI Scammers. Do THIS Instead.

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50 Years of Crime Prevention Theory in 5 Minutes FINAL

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Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

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