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Inside the Criminal Mind: Revised and Updated Edition [Hardcover]

Stanton Samenow
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (38 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Mar 30 2004
In 1984, this groundbreaking book presented a chilling profile of the criminal mind that shattered long-held myths about the sources of and cures for crime. Now, with the benefit of twenty years' worth of additional knowledge and insight, Stanton Samenow offers a completely updated edition of his classic work, including fresh perceptions into crimes in the spotlight today, from stalking and domestic violence to white-collar crime and political terrorism.

Dr. Samenow's three decades of working with criminals have reaffirmed his argument that factors such as poverty, divorce, and media violence do not cause criminality. Rather, as Samenow documents here, all criminals share a particular mind-set--often evident in childhood--that is disturbingly different from that of a responsible citizen.

While new types of crime have grown more prevalent, or at least more visible to the public eye--from spousal abuse to school shootings--little has changed in terms of our approach to dealing with crime. Rehabilitation programs based on the assumption that society is more to blame for crime than the criminal, an assumption for which a causal link has yet to be established, have proved to be grossly inadequate. Crime continues to invade every aspect of our lives, criminal court dockets and prisons are oppressively overcrowded and expensive, and recidivism rates continue to escalate.

To embark on a truly corrective program, we must begin with the clear understanding that the criminal chooses crime; he chooses to reject society long before society rejects him. The criminal values people only to the extent that he can use them for his own self-serving ends; he does not justify his actions to himself. Only by "habilitating" the criminal, so that he sees himself realistically and develops responsible patterns of thought, can we change his behavior.

It is vital that we know who the criminal is and how and why he acts differently from responsible citizens. From that understanding can come reasonable, compassionate, and effective solutions.

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

This revised edition of a 1984 study is long on assertion and short on evidence. Dr. Samenow, a clinical psychologist, is legitimately disdainful of explanations of criminal behavior that blame everyone (society, family, violent television, etc.) but the criminal for his actions, but his counter-arguments will persuade few. He makes frequent sweeping generalizations ("Even the most hardened criminals who spout anti-police rhetoric to one another recognize society’s need for police"), and provides nothing other than anecdotes in support of his position that all criminals break the law consciously and deliberately. A short new chapter on terrorism illustrates perfectly the limits of the author’s "methodology"—he defines the issue down to link Al Qaeda with any criminal whose actions frighten someone, and then simply discounts any outside influence as meaningfully contributing to the making of a criminal.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

STANTON E. SAMENOW, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist, has spent thirty-four years as a researcher, clinician, consultant, and expert witness specializing in criminal behavior. He has also served as an independent evaluator in adversarial child custody disputes for the past twenty years and has been appointed to three presidential task forces on law enforcement, victims' rights, and a drug-free America. In October 2003, he was appointed an expert witness for the prosecution in the trial against accused "Washington Sniper" Lee Boyd Malvo, aka John Lee Malvo. Dr. Samenow lives in Virginia.

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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars More dogma Dec 29 2002
Format:Hardcover
I work as a correctional educator. I agree that some hard-core types fit Samenow's descriptors, but for every one of the hard cases there are 10 inmates that can be rehabilitated by education, counseling and good community support. I know. I have seen it happen. Samenow's assertion that all that is accomplished by educating an inmate is to make a smarter criminal goes against volumes of research that conclude the opposite. The little research that Samenow does choose to mentioned seems carefully picked to agree with his dogma. His insulting diatribe against the work of those hard-working souls who labor in prisons to help rehabilitate inmates is both incorrect and unfair.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Inside the Criminal Mind May 30 2002
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
This book was recommended to me by officials of a maximum security prison where I work as a volunteer, as a means of understanding the reality of the people I deal with. I have not finished the rant, er book, yet. And I probably won't. It seems to play on every worst fear anyone ever had about a criminal. But there seems to be little or no scientific backup for the author's many right-wing, tough-on-crime-sounding conclusions. I can see why this book is so popular among corrections people, and why the author enjoyed some notoriety during the Reagan years. But for anyone seriously interested in understanding criminals, go elsewhere. The only insights this book provides are ones about those tough-on-crime types who have succeeded in expanding the US prison population by about 500 percent over the last 20 years or so.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Inside "Inside The Criminal Mind" Feb 21 2000
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
I do not want to minimize the contribution made by Mr Samenow to better understanding the criminal thought process. However, I believe the typical reader of this text would probably not require the more-than-extensive identification of the mental/emotional make-up of the common thief. I would suggest that the repetitious detail (which tends to make the observations seem more scientific than they really are) could be compressed with significantly more information about the therapeutic processes utilized in the change process receiving more emphasis. The relative brevity of the behavior-change portion of the book, in my opinion, detracts from the message, and tends to make the change process sound like little more than the traditional 12 step process used in alcohol/drug rehab. I would not discourage anyone from reading this book, however, if Mr Samenow ever re-visits this subject in the future, revision along the lines which I have suggested may be warranted.
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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Eviscerates any quaint notions you may have held about criminals and...
Inside the criminal mind is a must read for anyone who is baffled by the seemingly infinite capacity of some human beings for cruelty and depravity. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Melanie Hudson
5.0 out of 5 stars The Do Gooders Exposed!!
The incredibly naive lib-left, well intentioned but misguided fugitives from the '60's and '70's who believe that society is to blame for its crimnals, because it supposedly... Read more
Published on Mar 16 2006 by Lawrence Wood
1.0 out of 5 stars Polemic masquerading as science
This is a book of appalling, egregious broadsides, crass generalisations and posturing masquerading as insight. Read more
Published on Jan 29 2004 by Terribleman
4.0 out of 5 stars The Calculus of Crime
Criminals have to hit bottom before they change. Criminals strive to maximize benefit to cost. This simple truth - that criminals, psychopaths, and narcissists cannot be healed,... Read more
Published on Nov 19 2003 by Sam Vaknin
4.0 out of 5 stars Myths are complex, truths are simple
As a Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner with over 10 years experience, the last four in corrections I found Samenow's text to be mostly accurate and reinforced my own observations. Read more
Published on Aug 20 2003 by Scott W. Pecora
4.0 out of 5 stars Simple, yet eye opening
This book should be required reading for people dealing with the criminal element. The author tends to get rather simplistic in his conclusions and I tend to think that there might... Read more
Published on Feb 24 2003 by Don Roley
1.0 out of 5 stars Through a ten foot thick concrete wall darkly.
The praise for this book is telling: rather than confirming myths, it reinforces new ones that are dear to those who believe that we act without any reference to our surroundings. Read more
Published on May 8 2002 by Joel M Sax
5.0 out of 5 stars Inside the Criminal Mind
Stanton Samenow's look at how criminals think is a fascinating, although at times, upsetting view into the criminal mind. Read more
Published on Mar 27 2002 by Jacob
1.0 out of 5 stars Backwards
I read this book fifteen or so years ago. The author was on the staff of Regan. It exhibits this.
It is a complete distortion. Read more
Published on Sep 10 2001
1.0 out of 5 stars Unenlightening
The question what makes one person a criminal and the next a law abiding citizen is as old as the hills, and probably most people would agree with the common sense approach that it... Read more
Published on Sep 4 2001 by Karl Self
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