Reseña del editor:
What is the relevance of combining the topic of criminal behavior with economic theory? Combating crime is an ongoing public policy issue which impacts our behavior and our pocketbooks, while economic theory provides a set of analytical tools useful for discussing and solving some of the most pertinent issues of the day. In The Economics of Criminal Behavior: A Survey of Selected Topics, these two areas are brought together by reviewing specific criminal activity as it relates to our market structure. Criminal behavior involving topics such as airport profiling, illegal immigration, white-collar crime, and the illegal drug trade is chronicled and examined from an economic perspective. The book includes analyses by an array of prominent economists including Gary Becker, Philip Cook, Isaac Ehrlich, Milton Friedman, and Steven Levitt, and provides insight from the perspective of both crime prevention and the criminal. The Economics of Criminal Behavior is appropriate for courses in economics, criminal justice, and other social policy studies.
Biografía del autor:
Ron Liggett received his MBA with a concentration in economics from The University of Texas at Arlington. He is a lecturer in the Department of Economics at UT Arlington and has taught courses on the economics of crime, the economics of public policy, the principles of both macro- and microeconomics, money and banking, and the economics of social issues. His research interests include the economics of crime and the economics of social issues. In addition to his academic work, Professor Liggett is a Certified Public Accountant in the State of Texas.
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