The “Kriminologisches Journal” (KrimJ) is a quarterly scientific journal which is published by Beltz-Juventa. The journal features original scientific articles, discussion papers, practice and research reports on criminological theory and practice in German and English language. The thematic focus is on critical approaches to the structures and measures of social control bodies. All manuscripts undergo selective editorial and peer-review assessment prior to acceptance for publication. The peer-review process is strictly anonymous.

The “Kriminologisches Journal” is available both in print and online. Single issues and subscriptions are available at Beltz Juventa.

Issue 1/2016

krimj1/2016
 

Themenheft "Methoden in der Kriminologie" - Special Issue "Methods in Criminology"

 
 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
Content

Quantitative Methods and their value for criminology (German)

Vom Wert quantitativer Methoden für eine kritische Kriminologie

Walter Fuchs/Veronika Hofinger/Arno Pilgram

In a first step, we explore the epistemological objections of critical and cultural criminology to the use of crime statistics and self-report or victim surveys, rejecting the mere possibility of counting and measuring criminality. As opposed to a naïve use of quantitative data and methods in criminology, we suggest the use of reflexive- quantitative research strategies beyond the positivist reification of criminalization processes. These considerations are underpinned by positive examples showing how to fruitfully use quantitative data and research methods in the critical analysis of penal policies. Finally, we examine new forms of "governing by numbers" and the role of criminology in contemporary society.

 

Crime Mapping as a method of critical criminology? (German)

Kriminalitätskartierung als Methode der Kritischen Kriminologie?

Bernd Belina/Mélina Germes

The aim of this paper is to discuss possibilities and limitations of crime mapping in critical criminology. Crime mapping is mostly used as a positivistic endeavor in the service of the police. Following the broad development of the theory and practice of mapping, the paper discusses this positivistic version of crime mapping, the constructivist critique directed against it, and praxeological alternatives.

 

Qualitative research as a method and technique of reification. Some critical comments on the success of the Grounded Theory. (German)

Qualitative Forschung als verdinglichende Methode und Technik. Einige kritische Anmerkungen zur Karriere der Grounded Theory

Johannes Stehr

Grounded Theory has distanced itself from its reflexive grounding in Symbolic Interactionism and has become a textbook methodology, with which authority for one´s own research can be claimed. This transformation has led to processes of reification of knowledge. With textbook grounded theory the application of coding processes has become the core activity of data analysis and the relevance of reflexive concepts like interaction, narration and interpretation is undermined. As a consequence of using textbook grounded theory the understanding of social phenomenons is made impossible and social conflicts and social contradictions are rather covered up than uncovered. Traditional criminology is using grounded theory to affirm the existing order and dominant concepts of normality and to create knowledge about problems and offenders.

 

Drug-testing in Germany. A qualitative inquiry (German)

Drogentestanwendungen in Deutschland

Katja Thane/Simon Egbert/Monika Urban/Henning Schmidt-Semisch

Although drug tests have been in use in Germany since the early/middle 1990s, there are still no systematic inquiries about the scope and distribution of the corresponding contexts of application. In this research report, we present the first results of the research project ´Rationalities of Drug Testing and their Social Consequences´, financed by the DFG. This specific contribution aims primarily at a qualitative survey of those social contexts in Germany.

 

Order/Subscribe

News

Open-Access publications

Open Access publications

From issue 1/2022 onwards all English-language papers published in the Kriminologisches Journals will be made available as open access papers. The papers can be downloaded from the publisher's homepage or via content-select. Additionally the download links can be found if you click on the respective issues.

German papers can also be published via open access within the framework of the usual conditions of our publisher Beltz Juventa.

Changes on the Editorial Board

New editors-in-chief of the Kriminologisches Journal

As of Issue 2/2021the position of editor-in-chief passed over from Meropi Tzanetakis to Christine Graebsch and Jens Puschke.

Drugs and Digital Technologies

Call for Abstracts for a special issue of the KrimJ

Illicit drug markets are undergoing a significant transformation: digital technologies have a profound influence on how illicit drugs are accessed, and they have also changed information- sharing about drugs. In addition, the proliferation of information and communication technologies has changed law enforcement activity. Digitalisation also comes with rapid changes in communicative environments across time and geographic location. While online forums and other internet resources have massively increased the amount of available information and discourse on psychoactive substances for more than two decades, mobile phones, encrypted platforms, cryptocurrencies, social media and messaging applications have recently diversified the ways in which illicit drugs are distributed. This diversity includes hybrid forms of distribution, e.g. using social media applications to make physical appointments.

Read more...

New Editorial Board

New Editors of the Kriminologisches Journal

As of January 1st 2021 the Editorial Board of the Kriminologisches Journal consists of Prof. Dr. Jens Puschke LL.M, Dr. Meropi Tzanetakis, Dr. Simon Egbert, Prof. Dr. Christine Graebsch, Prof. Dr. Dörte Negnal und Dr. Bernd Werse.