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Crime and Everyday Life

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Crime and Everyday Life, Fourth Edition , provides an illuminating glimpse into roots of criminal behavior, explaining how crime can touch us all in both small and large ways. This innovative text shows how opportunity is a necessary condition for crime to occur, while exploring realistic ways to reduce or eliminate crime and criminal behavior by removing the opportunity to complete the act. Encouraging students to take a closer look at the true nature of crime and its effects on their lives, author Marcus Felson and new co-author Rachel L. Boba (an expert on crime prevention, crime analysis and mapping, and school safety) maintain the book’s engaging, readable, and informative style, while incorporating the most current research on criminal behavior and routine activity theory. The authors emphasize that routine daily activities set the stage for illegal acts, thus challenging conventional wisdom and offering students a fresh perspective, novel solutions for reducing crime . . . and renewed hope. New and Proven Features

264 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1994

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Marcus Felson

32 books

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Samara 1234.
16 reviews
January 24, 2026
This book was recommended to me as a beginner friendly text on criminology. I’d have to say that chapters 1 (Fallacies and Truths About Crime), 5 (Adolescence, Home Life, and Social Control), and 6 (Large Schools for Adolescence) were particularly interesting to me as they challenged what I thought I knew about crime and helped contextualize the work that I do (i.e. working with high school youths with school disciplinary referrals).

I’d recommend all civilians to read chapter 1 which pretty much discredits what I believed (and I think a lot of other people would too) crime to be: an overgrowing boogeyman constantly lurking behind us; and that as a society we stray further and further from God’s light lol. In reality, crime rates have decreased since the 90s, which just so happens to be when this book was published (1994). In that, the author describes most crimes as “ordinary” and “undramatic”, as well as “involving little ingenuity, draw(ing) offenders and victims who are much younger than is commonly believed, and are far less tied to the police and criminal justice system than is commonly stated” (pg. 20 and 21).

Bigger schools have lesser social control and this can explain why these larger physical spaces may produce more crime. Towards the end of the book, the author mentions the concept of natural crime prevention and lists different examples of its being “introduced incrementally into many parts of our society” by basically “imitating activity patterns of everyday life as already observed in nature”. Isn’t that such a beautiful way to put it ?!

More and more, I am drawn to the simplistic nature of doing and being. Let’s go back to the basics, man.
Profile Image for Victoria Chavez.
2 reviews
November 11, 2024
had to read this for a critique in my criminology class, both authors invite you to look past emotions and motivations and look at how opportunities contribute to crime. really interesting book and i definitely recommend it to those in the criminal justice world!
Profile Image for Hannah.
8 reviews
August 13, 2012
For my dissertation next year, Chapter 6 will be most useful: When Crime Feeds Crime. Probably wise to invest in this book when it's possible.
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