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Session Submission Type: Regular Session
This session advances and expands our understanding of choice and decision making by examining how education impacts perceptions of risk, costs, and rewards, how rational choice theories might explain cyberfraud, expanding our understanding of social context and choice, and examining how choice-related variables might explain the religiosity-offending link.
A Choice Approach to Education and Crime - Brandy R. Parker, The Pennsylvania State University
An Integrative Analysis of Cyberfraudsters’ Motivations: A Comprehensive Examination of Conventional Criminological Theories - Aikins Amoako Asiama, Lingnan University
The Desperation Threshold Model: Extreme Poverty, Risk Taking, and Crime - Benoît de Courson, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Crime, Security and Law; Jean-Louis van Gelder, Max-Planck-Institute
The Fear of God: Religiosity, Spiritual Deterrence and Youth Delinquency - Scot Wortley, University of Toronto; Chau Fung (Jeffrey) Wong, University of Toronto