Abstract

The analysis of crime has become part of the mainstream of contemporary economics - including the central theoretical and policy controversies of the discipline. At the same time, economic analysis is increasingly recognized an essential component of the study of the decision making behavior of individuals and organizations as law breakers, law abiders, law enforcers, or as victims of crime. Many fields of economics - labor economics, urban economics, economics of discrimination, and especially public sector economics and business economics - can substantially enrich the criminal justice curriculum.

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