The Historian's History of the United States


Book Description

Places the following historians' writings in perspective and provides the historical writing itself of Edward P. Cheney, John Fiske, Charles M. Andrews, Edward Gaylord Bourne, James Truslow Adams, Francis Parkman, Herbert L. Osgood, Edward Channing, Carl L. Becker, Sydney George Fisher, Moses Coit Tyler, George Bancroft, Richard B. Morris, Charles A. and Mary R. Beard, J. Franklin Jameson, Henry Adams, Claude G. Bowers, Theodore Roosevelt, John Bach McMaster, Alfred T. Mahan, Frederick Jackson Turner, Hiram Martin Chittenden, John Spencer Bassett, James Ford Rhodes, William E. Dodd, Albert Bushnell Hart, Ulrich Bonnell Phillips, Bruce Catton, Douglas Southall Freeman, John G. Nicolay, and William Archibald Dunning, Vernon Louis Parrington, Merle Curti, Walter Prescott Webb, Allan Nevins, Oscar Handlin, Arthur Meier Schlesinger, Ida M. Tarbell, Richard Hofstadter, Samuel Flagg Bemis, and Henry Steele Commager.




Bibliographical Contributions


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Foundations of Criminal Science: The development of knowledge


Book Description

Criminal science can best be conceptualized as the holistic and interdisciplinary study of crime and criminals. All major features of criminal development are taken into account, and all sources of data (including medical, legal, sociological, ecological, and psychological) are considered. Criminal scientists center their investigative energies on the individual offender, cognizant that this individual is part of a wider system of interacting physical, social, and psychological influences. Presented in two volumes, this tome explores the complex interplay of variables that give rise to criminal outcomes. Volume 1 considers knowledge development as represented by research examining the contextual, empirical, and theoretical foundations of crime. Building on knowledge reviewed in the first volume, Volume 2 addresses the issue of knowledge utilization. Assessment, prediction, classification, intervention, prevention, and several other categories of application science are featured. The author addresses ways in which society can inspire pro-social behavior and criminal offenders can find noncriminal solutions to their problems--something that is in the best interests of both groups. This book will be of great value to criminologists and students of criminology/criminal justice, as well as behavioral scientists and law enforcement officials.







The American Year Book


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World Authors, 1900-1950


Book Description

Provides almost 2700 articles on twentieth-century authors from all over the world who wrote in English or whose works are available in English translation.