Search
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Area
Browse By Session Type
Search Tips
ASC Home
Sign In
X (Twitter)
Session Submission Type: Complete Thematic Panel
Taking a cross-cultural, comparative approach, the four papers in this panel employ a robust theoretical framework for understanding criminal justice behavior. The papers compare transnational organized crimes and law enforcement in China and the EU. They also explore the regional similarities and differences across Greater China regarding the predictive utility of delinquency theories, and they consider age-crime curve in China and the U.S.
Assessing the Predictive Utility of Delinquency Theories Across Greater China: A Study of Regional Similarities and Differences - Spencer De Li, University of Macau; Yiyi Chen, University of Macau
Habitus Conflicts and Transcultural Cooperation: Understanding Transnational Organized Crime and Law Enforcement between the EU and China - Hongming Cheng, University of Saskatchewan
Revisiting the Inverted āJā Age-Crime Curve: Comparing the Age-Homicide Distribution in the US and China - Hua Zhong, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Yuxuan Gloria Gu, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Darrell Steffensmeier, Pennsylvania State University
A New Theoretical Framework for Comparative Criminology: The Relationism Theory - Jianhong Liu, The University of Macau
The panel is co-sponsored by the Association of Chinese Criminology and Criminal Justice (ACCCJ), Asian Criminological Society (ACS), and the Division of International Criminology (DIC)