tailieunhanh - Criminal Psychology
OF all disciplines necessary to the criminal justice in addition to the knowledge of law, the most important are those derived from psychology. For such sciences teach him to know the type of man it is his business to deal with. Now psychological sciences appear in various forms. There is a native psychology, a keenness of vision given in the march of experience, to a few fortunate persons, who see rightly without having learned the laws which determine the course of events, or without being even conscious of them. Of this native psychological power many men show traces, but very few indeed are possessed of as much as criminalists. | Criminal Psychology 1 Criminal Psychology BY HANS GROSS J. U. D. Get any book for free on Get any book for free on Criminal Psychology 2 Criminal Psychology A MANUAL FOR JUDGES PRACTITIONERS AND STUDENTS BY HANS GROSS J. U. D. _Professor of Criminal Law at the University of Graz Austria. Formerly Magistrate of the Criminal Court at Czernovitz Austria_ Translated from the Fourth German Edition BY HORACE M. KALLEN PH. D. _Assistant and Lecturer in Philosophy in Harvard University_ WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY JOSEPH JASTROW . PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PUBLICATION NO. 13 PATTERSON SMITH REPRINT SERIES IN CRIMINOLOGY LAW ENFORCEMENT AND SOCIAL PROBLEMS _Montclair New Jersey_ Get any book for free on Criminal Psychology 3 GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE MODERN CRIMINAL SCIENCE SERIES. AT the National Conference of Criminal Law and Criminology held in Chicago at Northwestern University in June 1909 the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology was organized and as a part of its work the following resolution was passed _Whereas_ it is exceedingly desirable that important treatises on criminology in foreign languages be made readily accessible in the English language _Resolved_ that the president appoint a committee of five with power to select such treatises as in their judgment should be translated and to arrange for their publication. The Committee appointed under this Resolution has made careful investigation of the literature of the subject and has consulted by frequent correspondence. It has selected several works from among the mass of material. It has arranged with publisher with authors and with translators for the immediate undertaking and rapid progress of the task. It realizes the necessity of educating the professions and the public by the wide diffusion of information on this subject. It desires here to explain the considerations which have moved it in seeking to select the treatises .
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