Skip to content | Change text size
Handbooks Courses Units Related information
 

CRJ4004 - Criminal behaviours and enterprises: Individuals, groups and organisations

12 points, SCA Band 1, 0.250 EFTSL

Undergraduate Faculty of Arts

Leader(s): David Baker

Offered

Gippsland First semester 2009 (Off-campus)

Synopsis

This unit examines the complexity of criminal behaviours and the range of criminological theories espoused in order to explain such diverse behaviours. Humans are rule-making and rule-enforcing beings, but not all of us conform to these rules. Many violate the rules and are subject to sanctions and punishment. Individual, group and organisational criminal behaviours and enterprises are examined in this unit. A sophisticated analysis of criminal behaviours includes exploration of biological, psychological and social explanations of crime and the interactionist tradition including differential association theory. Crowd disorders and street gang behaviours will be examined. Organisational and institutional criminal behaviours extend from white-collar and corporate criminal activity to the dynamics of political crimes of violence, corruption and human rights violations that can be committed by the state and against the state. The unit involves study of definitional and conceptual issues, causes, methods of control and the effects of such organisational criminal behaviour. The unit examines the legal controls and responses by governments and other agencies in order to curb and prevent criminal behaviours of individuals, groups and organisations.

Objectives

Upon successful completion of this unit, students are expected to have developed:
(1) an understanding of definitions of criminal behaviour, including an awareness that the law is not static and changes over time; (2) the ability to identify the key characteristics of criminal behaviours and criminal enterprises; (3) knowledge about the core theoretical debates and issues of criminal behaviours that focus on individuals, groups and organisations; (4) the ability to identify traits about the nature of individuals, groups and organisations that engage in criminal activity; (5) an appreciation of the various models available for explaining the relationship between criminality, the individual and society; (6) an awareness of the contribution of the criminal behaviour theories to criminal justice policy and practice; (7) an understanding of what it means to be a victim of criminal behaviour instigated by individual, group or organisation

Assessment

Policy report (2500 words): 30%
Evaluation paper (2500 words): 30%
Essay (4000 words): 40%

Contact hours

Only offered by OCL.

Prerequisites

CRJ4001 and CRJ4002

Prohibitions

CRJ5004

[an error occurred while processing this directive]