GERMAN’S BIOLOGICAL THEORIES IN CRIMINOLOGY1 - mapping the beginnings

Marina M. Simović
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Abstract

In this paper, the author explores the early German criminology, pointing out that it was a result of interests stemming from the legalistic approach to crime. For this reason, the contribution of German criminologists to the development of criminology as an independent science is observed by examining the legalistic, anthropological, biological and sociological approaches to criminology. Each of these approaches is concurrently associated with a particular criminological orientation or a period of predominant influence of some criminological approach in explaining causality. The development of the German criminology at the time was reflected in the efforts of psychiatrists to expand their expertise into the field of criminal behaviour and to offer a medical solution to this problem. Tracing the historical development of the German criminology in the course of three different political regimes (including the German Empire, the Weimar Republic and the period of Nazism), the author of this article has an opportunity to assess the political impact on scientific research and its implications. Finally, the recent revival of the biological and genetic research into crimes makes this historical research into criminal biology (from Lombrose to Nazism) highly relevant. The historiography on crime and criminal justice in Germany is well-developed even though the German literature on these issues is considerably less extensive in volume than the respective literature in France and England. The knowledge of the social history of crime in Germany during the 19th and 20th century is still extremely limited. In the last decade of the 20th century, there were some significant developments in this process. In mapping the early development of criminology in Germany, Wetzell identifies the following historical periods. The first period is the beginning of the 19th century, marked by the learning of Lombroso on the inborn criminal offender as well as by the growing impact of the new criminal law reform in Germany. The second period involves the impact of the German reception of the Lombroso’s theory on establishing criminal psychology in Germany from 1880- 1914. The third period reflects the learning of criminal sociology, i.e. accepting the idea on the impact of social conditions on the development of crime. The next period covers the predominant position of the biological research in criminology at the time of the Weimar Republic. Finally, the last period in the development of the earlier German criminology is the period under the Nazi regime (including the sterilization of criminals as well as the Nazi policy of sterilizations of some ethnic groups).
德国人在犯罪学中的生物学理论1 -描绘其起源
在本文中,作者对早期德国犯罪学进行了探讨,指出它是由法律主义犯罪方法所产生的利益的结果。出于这个原因,德国犯罪学家对犯罪学作为一门独立科学发展的贡献是通过考察犯罪学的法律、人类学、生物学和社会学方法来观察的。这些方法中的每一种都同时与特定的犯罪学取向或某些犯罪学方法在解释因果关系方面的主导影响时期有关。当时德国犯罪学的发展反映在精神科医生努力将他们的专业知识扩展到犯罪行为领域,并为这一问题提供医学解决办法。追溯德国犯罪学在三个不同政体(包括德意志帝国、魏玛共和国和纳粹主义时期)的历史发展,本文的作者有机会评估政治对科学研究的影响及其含义。最后,最近对犯罪的生物学和遗传学研究的复兴使得对犯罪生物学(从龙布罗斯到纳粹主义)的历史研究具有高度相关性。德国的犯罪和刑事司法史学发展得很好,尽管德国关于这些问题的文献在数量上远不如法国和英国的文献那么广泛。对19世纪和20世纪德国犯罪社会史的了解仍然非常有限。在20世纪的最后十年,这一进程取得了一些重大进展。在描绘德国犯罪学的早期发展时,韦泽尔确定了以下几个历史时期。第一个时期是19世纪初,其标志是龙勃罗索对先天罪犯的研究以及德国新刑法改革的影响越来越大。第二部分涉及1880- 1914年德国人接受龙布罗梭理论对德国犯罪心理学建立的影响。第三个时期是对犯罪社会学的学习,即接受社会条件对犯罪发展影响的观点。下一个时期涵盖了魏玛共和国时期犯罪学生物学研究的主导地位。最后,早期德国犯罪学发展的最后一个时期是纳粹统治时期(包括对罪犯的绝育以及纳粹对某些族群的绝育政策)。
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