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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
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- Northwestern Pritzker School of Law (33)
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- Selected Works (10)
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- Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (33)
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Articles 1 - 30 of 100
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Destructive Hostility: The Jeffrey Dahmer Case: A Psychiatric And Forensic Study Of A Serial Killer, Jeffrey Jentzen, George Palermo, L. Thomas Johnson, Khang-Cheng Ho, K. Alan Stormo, John Teggatz
Destructive Hostility: The Jeffrey Dahmer Case: A Psychiatric And Forensic Study Of A Serial Killer, Jeffrey Jentzen, George Palermo, L. Thomas Johnson, Khang-Cheng Ho, K. Alan Stormo, John Teggatz
School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications
We were involved as forensic experts in the case of the serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer. We discuss the scene and victim autopsy findings, with a brief consideration of the basic emotion of hostility. These findings support the thesis that at the basis of this serial killer's behavior were primary unconscious feelings of hate that he had channeled into a sadistic programmed destruction of 17 young men. The interview of the serial killer, the photographic scene documentation, and the autopsy findings stress the ambivalent homosexuality of the killer, his sexual sadism, his obsessive fetishism, and his possible cannibalism and necrophilia.
1994 Division Meeting Minutes And Correspondence., American Society Of Criminology. Division On Women And Crime
1994 Division Meeting Minutes And Correspondence., American Society Of Criminology. Division On Women And Crime
Division on Women and Crime Documents and Correspondence
No abstract provided.
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 11-12, Francis B. Schreiber
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 11-12, Francis B. Schreiber
ATM Crime and Security Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Stalking: Student As Victim, Kristine Botsford Mullendore, Gary Ebels
Stalking: Student As Victim, Kristine Botsford Mullendore, Gary Ebels
Kristine Botsford Mullendore
No abstract provided.
Correspondence Related To The Dwc Resource Guide, Nicole H. Rafter
Correspondence Related To The Dwc Resource Guide, Nicole H. Rafter
Division on Women and Crime Documents and Correspondence
No abstract provided.
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 10, Francis B. Schreiber
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 10, Francis B. Schreiber
ATM Crime and Security Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Divisionews (Fall 1994/ Vol. 8 No. 1), American Society Of Criminology Division On Women And Crime
Divisionews (Fall 1994/ Vol. 8 No. 1), American Society Of Criminology Division On Women And Crime
Division on Women and Crime Documents and Correspondence
American Society of Criminology. Division on Women and Crime
Responsibility For Visitor Safety: Park Law Enforcement, Patrick Oliver
Responsibility For Visitor Safety: Park Law Enforcement, Patrick Oliver
History and Government Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Other Faces In The Mirror: Power, Conflict And Peacemaking In Our Daily Lives, Christine Yalda
Other Faces In The Mirror: Power, Conflict And Peacemaking In Our Daily Lives, Christine Yalda
Christine A. Yalda
No abstract provided.
Civvies To Plod The Beat?, Brian Kingshott
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 8-9, Francis B. Schreiber
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 8-9, Francis B. Schreiber
ATM Crime and Security Newsletter
No abstract provided.
The Reliability Of Self-Reported Drug Use Measured Through The Drug Use Forecasting Program: A Multi-Trait Assessment, Charles M. Katz
The Reliability Of Self-Reported Drug Use Measured Through The Drug Use Forecasting Program: A Multi-Trait Assessment, Charles M. Katz
Student Work
The majority of drug use data obtained by researchers thus far has been generated through the use of self-reports and urinalyses. In fact, such methods are often the only way to accurately identify individuals who use drugs. There has only been a minimal amount of research concerning the reliability of the self-reported drug use among arrestees in the Drug Use Forecasting (DUF) program. The purpose of this paper is to present initial evidence on the reliability of self-reported interview data when compared to urinalysis, and to give a detailed description of the variables associated with the accuracy of self-reports. The …
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 7, Francis B. Schreiber
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 7, Francis B. Schreiber
ATM Crime and Security Newsletter
No abstract provided.
The Reluctant Partner: Making Procedural Law For International Civil Litigation, Stephen B. Burbank
The Reluctant Partner: Making Procedural Law For International Civil Litigation, Stephen B. Burbank
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
A Comparative Study Of Black And White Girls' Delinquency, Kenya Larae Covington
A Comparative Study Of Black And White Girls' Delinquency, Kenya Larae Covington
Sociology & Criminal Justice Theses & Dissertations
In this research, I examined the similarities and differences between black and white female delinquents. A secondary analysis of the Survey of Youth in Custody, 1987 data was utilized to answer the following research questions: (1) What factors contribute to each group's delinquency the most? (2) Are the factors that contribute to black girls' delinquency significantly different from those factors that contribute to white girls' delinquency? The study was guided by previous research on race and female delinquency, girls' victimization, the role of the family and school performance. The independent variables victimization, family structure, family function and school performance were …
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 5-6, Francis B. Schreiber
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 5-6, Francis B. Schreiber
ATM Crime and Security Newsletter
No abstract provided.
No-Fault Marital Dissolution: The Bitter Triumph Of Naked Divorce, J Herbie Difonzo
No-Fault Marital Dissolution: The Bitter Triumph Of Naked Divorce, J Herbie Difonzo
San Diego Law Review
In this Article, the author examines the origins of the no-fault divorce movement, concluding that the abandonment of fault grounds was conceived as a conservative measure intended to facilitate the reversal of the escalating divorce rate and to replace traditional marital dissolution with therapeutic divorce. This reform collapsed at mid-point, achieving only the jettisoning of divorce grounds. The author argues that an unintended consequence of the reform battle was the transformation from mutual consent divorce, the operating milieu for most of the twentieth century, into divorce on demand. The author concludes that this transformation has resulted in a significant loss …
Comment: Theory And Practice In Dna Fingerprinting, Richard O. Lempert
Comment: Theory And Practice In Dna Fingerprinting, Richard O. Lempert
Articles
Throughout her useful paper on DNA identification, Professor Roeder properly attends to both theory and practice. Thus she acknowledges the theoretical soundness of certain criticisms that have been made of the standard paradigm used to evaluate DNA random match probabilities but argues that in practice these criticisms matter little. I am thinking here of the arguments that those cautioning against overweighing DNA evidence have made regarding the undeniable existence of population substructure and its potential implications for independence assumptions supporting the application of the product rule and for the use of convenience samples, such as data garnered from no more …
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 4, Francis B. Schreiber
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 4, Francis B. Schreiber
ATM Crime and Security Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 3, Francis B. Schreiber
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 3, Francis B. Schreiber
ATM Crime and Security Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 2, Francis B. Schreiber
Atm Crime & Security Newsletter, Vol. 4, No. 2, Francis B. Schreiber
ATM Crime and Security Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Epstein's Premises, Evan Tsen Lee
Epstein's Premises, Evan Tsen Lee
San Diego Law Review
This Article criticizes Richard Epstein's argument that Congress should repeal Title VII expressed in his book Forbidden Grounds: The Case Against Employment Discrimination. The author's criticisms of Epstein's argument are the product of disagreement with some of Epstein's premises, and disagreement with some of Epstein's choices about where to stop his analyses. The author disputes Epstein's premise that governmental intervention into otherwise accessible markets is justifiable only in cases of force or fraud. The author also notes some of Epstein's empirical suppositions that are inconsistent with one another.
Standing Firm, On Forbidden Grounds, Richard A. Epstein
Standing Firm, On Forbidden Grounds, Richard A. Epstein
San Diego Law Review
This introductory Article to the Title VII Symposium contained in this issue of the San Diego Law Review addresses the critiques leveled at the book Forbidden Grounds: The Case Against Employment Discrimination Laws. Richard Epstein, the author of the book, recognizes the disagreement expressed in the Articles in the Symposium, and attempts to defend his thesis in this Article. He argued in Forbidden Grounds that the best set of overall social outcomes would come from eliminating antidiscrimination laws which prohibit employer discrimination on the grounds of race, creed, sex, age, handicap, or anything else. In this Article, he addresses several …
Epstein's Challenge To The Civil Rights Regime, W. B. Allen
Epstein's Challenge To The Civil Rights Regime, W. B. Allen
San Diego Law Review
This Article takes a close look at the government's determination of the substantive meaning of nondiscrimination in order to better evaluate the relation between the current practice of the civil rights regime and the alternative suggested by Richard Epstein in his book Forbidden Grounds: The Case Against Employment Discrimination Laws. It also analyzes the "limit condition view" of government, namely that the government may in no way discriminate, and everyone cannot be prevented from discriminating. The author concludes that defenders of the civil rights regime must engage Epstein's argument, because failing to do so will be to fail either to …
Alternative Grounds: Epstein's Discrimination Analysis In Other Market Settings, Ian Ayres
Alternative Grounds: Epstein's Discrimination Analysis In Other Market Settings, Ian Ayres
San Diego Law Review
This Article focuses on how Richard Epstein's discrimination analysis in his book Forbidden Grounds: The Case Against Employment Discrimination Laws plays out in four other market contexts. The author analyzes historical labor markets (circa 1964), public accommodations, housing, and new car markets. He concludes that applying Epstein's theory to these different market settings exposes limitations of Epstein's analysis.
Licensing Laws: A Historical Example Of The Use Of Government Regulatory Power Against African Americans, David E. Bernstein
Licensing Laws: A Historical Example Of The Use Of Government Regulatory Power Against African Americans, David E. Bernstein
San Diego Law Review
This Article addresses how the legacy of government policy has been a large factor in the economic subjugation of black Americans between Reconstructionist and the modern Civil Rights era. Specifically, this Article displays how white interest groups used occupational licensing laws to stifle black economic progress, and how these laws were used to prevent blacks from competing with established white skilled workers. The author notes that Richard Epstein with his book Forbidden Grounds: The Case Against Employment Discrimination Laws has done the legal community a great service by reminding it that the source of some of the economic disparity between …
Lonely Libertarian: One Man's View Of Antidiscrimination Law, Lea Brilmayer
Lonely Libertarian: One Man's View Of Antidiscrimination Law, Lea Brilmayer
San Diego Law Review
In his book Forbidden Grounds: The Case Against Employment Discrimination Laws, Richard Epstein attacks antidiscrimination law from three different philosophical points of view: utilitarian, libertarian, and freedom of contract. The author of this Article addresses each of these philosophies, and argues that none of these arguments is compelling as applied to a legal regime as popular as Epstein admits core antidiscrimination law to be. This Article points out inconsistencies in Epstein's view of the public's acceptance of antidiscrimination laws as being silly.
The Discrimination Shibboleth, Andrew Kull
The Discrimination Shibboleth, Andrew Kull
San Diego Law Review
This Article explores a more conservative viewpoint than Richard Epstein's view that all employment antidiscrimination laws should be repealed in his book Forbidden Grounds: The Case Against Employment Discrimination. This Article focuses on the distinctions between current antidiscrimination laws and those of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. While the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibited discrimination on the basis of race and sex, current laws prohibit discrimination on many other grounds. The author argues that these new laws constitute new policy choices, and they impose more costs than the traditional laws.
Market Affirmative Action, Robert Cooter
Market Affirmative Action, Robert Cooter
San Diego Law Review
This Article applies the economic theory of regulation to laws forbidding discrimination or requiring affirmative action. It argues for using transferable rights in order to achieve diversity rather than quotas. Based on economic theories, the Article finds that the most efficient remedies for discrimination are the ones already developed by economists for other problems. The author suggests that discriminatory cartels can be prohibited or undermined, discriminatory signals can be overcome by supplementing market information, and external effects of prejudice can be internalized by tax subsidies. He concludes that perfect competition causes discriminators to pay for segregation, and some current antidiscrimination …
Reality, Drew S. Days, Iii
Reality, Drew S. Days, Iii
San Diego Law Review
This Article applies the economic theory of regulation to laws forbidding discrimination or requiring affirmative action. It argues for using transferable rights in order to achieve diversity rather than quotas. Based on economic theories, the Article finds that the most efficient remedies for discrimination are the ones already developed by economists for other problems. The author suggests that discriminatory cartels can be prohibited or undermined, discriminatory signals can be overcome by supplementing market information, and external effects of prejudice can be internalized by tax subsidies. He concludes that perfect competition causes discriminators to pay for segregation, and some current antidiscrimination …