[1]
Anthony, T. and Cunneen, C. 2008. The critical criminology companion. Hawkins Press.
[2]
Bosworth, M. and Hoyle, C. 2011. What is criminology?. Oxford University Press.
[3]
Burke, R.H. 2019. An introduction to criminological theory. London.
[4]
Carrington, K. and Hogg, R. 2002. Critical criminology: issues, debates, challenges. Willan Pub.
[5]
DeKeseredy, W.S. 2011. Contemporary critical criminology. Routledge.
[6]
DeKeseredy, W.S. 2021. Contemporary critical criminology. Routledge.
[7]
Eriksson, A.M. 2012. Justice in transition: community restorative justice in Northern Ireland. Routledge.
[8]
Glynn, M. 2014. Black men, invisibility and crime: towards a critical race theory of desistance. Routledge.
[9]
Lilly, J.R. et al. 2018. Criminological theory: context and consequences. SAGE.
[10]
Maruna, S. 2001. Making good: how ex-convicts reform and rebuild their lives. American Psychological Association.
[11]
McEvoy, K. and Newburn, T. 2003. Criminology, conflict resolution and restorative justice. Palgrave Macmillan.
[12]
Newburn, T. 2017. Criminology. Routledge, an imprint of Taylor and Francis.
[13]
Pepinsky, H.E. and Quinney, R. 1991. Criminology as peacemaking. Indiana University Press.
[14]
Potter, H. 2013. Intersectionality and criminology: gender, race, class and crime. Routledge.
[15]
Presser, L. and Sandberg, S. eds. 2015. Narrative criminology: understanding stories of crime. New York University Press.
[16]
Renzetti, C.M. 2013. Feminist Criminology. Routledge.
[17]
Taylor, I.R. et al. 2013. The new criminology: for a social theory of deviance. Routledge.
[18]
Tierney, J. 2013. Criminology: theory and context. Routledge.
[19]
Ugwudike, P. 2015. An introduction to critical criminology. Policy Press.
[20]
Ugwudike, P. 2015. An introduction to critical criminology. Policy Press.