D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



3 . 



THE CRIMINOLOGY SERIES. 



^ Edited by W. Douglas Morrison. 



%^r^ t RIMINAL SOCIOLOGY. By Professor E. Ferri. 



^ > 421110. Cloth, $1.50. 



In ti.is volume, Professor Ferri, a distinguished member of the Italian 

 Parliament, deals with the conditions which produce the criminal popula- 

 tion, and with the methods by which this anti-social section of the commu- 

 nity' may be diminished. His view is that the true remedy against crime is 

 to' -.emove individual defects and social disadvantages where it is possible to 

 re ive them. He shows that punishment has comparatively little effect in 

 thi direction, and is apt to divert attention from the true remedy — the indi- 

 vidual and social amelioration of the population as a whole. 



T 



HE FEMALE OFFENDER. By Professor Lom- 



broso. Illustrated. i2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



" 'The Female Offender' must be considered as a very valuable addition to scien- 

 tific literature. ... It is not alone to the scientist that the work will recommend itself. 

 The humanitarian, anxious for the reform of the habitual criminal, will find in its pages 

 many valuable suggestions."— Philadelphia Item. 



" This work will undoubtedly be a valuable addition to the works on criminology, 

 and may also prove of inestimable help in the prevention of crime." — Detroit Free 

 Press. 



^ .. "The book is a very valuable one, and admirably adapted for general reading." — 

 * Boston Home yournal. 



"This book will probably constitute one of the most valuable contributions in aid 

 ■ of a nineteenth-century sign of advanced civilization known as prison reform." — Cin- 

 cinnati Times-Star. 



" There is no book of recent issue that bears such important relation to the great 

 subject of criminology as this book." — New Haven Leader. 



IN PREPARATION. 



f^LTR JUVENILE OFFENDERS. By W. D. Mor- 



^S R1SON. 



RIME A SOCIAL STUDY. By Professor Joly. 



C 



The study of criminal tendencies is occupying advanced students through- 

 out the world, but the science has been carried further by the Italian school 

 of criminologists than by any other scientists. This series embodies the 

 most interesting and suggestive results of extended investigations. The sub- 

 ject is dealt with from the scientific, not from the purely philanthropic 

 point of view, but the conclusions must necessarily form the basis fcr 

 humanitarian endeavor. 



New York : D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue. 



