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  1. Dictionary
    criminality
    /ˌkrɪmɪˈnalɪti/

    noun

    • 1. behaviour that is contrary to or forbidden by criminal law: "a regime that sanctions organized criminality"

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  3. Criminality is the quality or state of being criminal, or criminal activity. Learn the synonyms, examples, word history, and legal definition of criminality from Merriam-Webster dictionary.

    • Introduction
    • Classification of Crime
    • Measurement of Crimes
    • Approaches to Crime
    • Sociological Approach to Crime
    • Psychological Approach to Crime
    • Legal Approach to Crime
    • Conclusion
    • References

    The definition of Crime is beautifully quoted by Lord William Blackstone, an eminent English jurist of eighteenth-century A.D. that, “ Crime as an act committed or omitted in violation of public-law either forbidding or commanding it”. In this definition, Lord Blackstone has emphasized crime as the harm or injury carried out on the community at lar...

    Almost every legal system divides crimes into several categories for various purposes connected with the working of the court. The Common Law primitively divides crime into two Categories:

    Evaluating the extent of crime actually committed is a quite complicated and arduous task. Statistical data for recorded crime don’t generally provide a precise picture, because they are affected by variable factors like the willingness of the victim to report a crime. It is quite obvious that officially reported crimes are only a small fraction of...

    Crime is a relative and dynamic concept which keeps on changing with the passage of time. Consistent with the perspective of taking crime as an ordinary and unavoidable part of life, there are often very few expectations that reactions to crime will affect future criminality. The approaches to crime have been different in different stages of human ...

    Environmental determinants like physical, social, economical, cultural and political may shape the behaviour and attitude of people. Meager social, physical and family environment may lead the person to strengthen his intentions towards the crime. Living in poverty and destitution, lack of social support and pessimistic familial background may incr...

    Due to the collaboration of Psychology and Criminology, new fields and disciplines emerged in the field of education like Forensic Psychology, Legal Psychology and Criminological Psychology. Psychological researchers try to scrutinize the effect of individual differences, personality characteristics and psychological strands of criminal acts while ...

    During most of the time when the sphere of criminology was being developed, people supposed that crime was a behaviour that had been judged to be a violation of the criminal law. This concept was clearly expressed by an eminent criminologist, Paul Tappan in 1947 when he noticed that “ crime is an intentional act in violation of Criminal Law which i...

    The origin of criminal activities has been discussed by different scientific disciplines and various approaches. The article tended to rationalize the query of “why people commit a crime?”. It could be concluded that there are various factors which affect the behaviour of individuals and their decision to commit a crime. The article aimed to presen...

    • Rachit Garg
  4. Criminality means illegal activities or behaviour, or the fact of being illegal. Learn how to use this word in different contexts and see translations in Chinese and other languages.

  5. In this chapter, you will learn how criminologists define crime and the different ways societies respond to criminal behaviour. We will first consider how crime was explained in the classical period of criminology and compare these ideas with Indigenous views of law and justice.

  6. Criminality is the state of being criminal or a criminal act or practice. Learn the origin, usage and synonyms of this word from Dictionary.com, and see how it is used in sentences from various sources.

  7. Criminality is the state or quality of being criminal, or a criminal act or practice. See examples, synonyms, word origin and usage trends of criminality.

  8. criminology, scientific study of the nonlegal aspects of crime and delinquency, including its causes, correction, and prevention, from the viewpoints of such diverse disciplines as anthropology, biology, psychology and psychiatry, economics, sociology, and statistics.