A Brief Review by Grok Ai
Jeffrey H. Goldstein’s Aggression and Crimes of Violence (Oxford University Press, 1986) is a seminal yet somewhat dated textbook in forensic psychology and criminology, blending rigorous academic analysis with practical insights into the causes and manifestations of human aggression.
As a second edition, it builds on the 1975 original by incorporating emerging research from the early 1980s, such as advances in social learning theory and biological models of violence.
Goldstein, a prominent psychologist known for his work on media effects and aggression (e.g., his later book Why We Watch), approaches the topic with a multidisciplinary lens — drawing from psychology, sociology, biology, and law — making it accessible yet intellectually demanding for undergraduates, grad students, or professionals in criminal justice.
Strengths:
- Comprehensive Scope: Goldstein excels at synthesizing vast research into a cohesive narrative. He demystifies complex theories (e.g., frustration-aggression hypothesis, instinct theories) without oversimplifying, and ties them directly to real-world crimes like assault, homicide, and domestic violence. The inclusion of case studies and…