01599 2200265 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020002200097041000800119082001200127084001800139100002400157245005500181250001100236260004000247300002600287500002400313504001500337520088900352650002101241650001901262990002601281990002601307INLIS00000000000324720221013115034 a0010-0520003247221013 | | eng  a978-0-17-640611-0 aeng a302.542 a302.542 DEU d0 aDeutschman, Linda B1 aDeviance and Social Control /cLinda B. Deutschman a4th ed aToronto :bThomson Wadsworth,c2007 axix, 451 p. ;c23 cm. aIndeks : p. 435-451 ap. 429-432 aThis book maintains the features that readers hav praised throughout the previous three editions. This one is organized to introduce the topic of deviance in a sequence that does not force students to grapple with concepts, names, and explanations that have not been introduced, that are explained a chapter or two later, or that are called different names without any explanation for the variation. Three possible approaches can be used in the organization of a deviance text. The one chosen here has theory as its central theme and uses specific forms of behaviour to illustrate these theories. It focuses on explanations and principles of analysis, and how traditional approaches persist despite the arrival of newer orthodoxies. This presentation allows the instructor to update the material quickly and adapt it to his or her interest simply by providing more examples or detail. 4aDeviant behavior 4aSocial Control a11259/MKRI-P/XII-2008 a11260/MKRI-P/XII-2008