Technology and the guilty mind: When do technology providers become criminal accomplices/ Benton Martin and Jeremiah Newhall.
Material type:
TextPublication details: Evanston: Northwestern University Press, c2015.Description: v105 n1, pages 95-148; 25 cmISSN: - 0091-4169
- DPer 364.05 J82 2015 v105 n1
| Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
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Periodicals
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UM Digos College - LIC | Periodicals | DPer 364.05 J82 2015 v105 n1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | Periodical article |
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| DPer 364.05 J82 2015, v. 105 n. 3-4 The Journal of criminal law and criminology. | DPer 364.05 J82 2015 v105 n1 Reasonable doubt and moral elements/ | DPer 364.05 J82 2015 v105 n1 Reasonable doubt and moral elements/ | DPer 364.05 J82 2015 v105 n1 Technology and the guilty mind: | DPer 364.05 J82 2015 v105 n1 Criminals get all the rights: | DPer 364.05 J82 2015 v105 n1 Transforming piecemeal social engineering into "grand" crime prevention policy: | DPer 364.05 J82 2015 v105 n1 Correctional education can make a greater impact on recidivism by supporting adult inmates with learning/ |
The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology.
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