Criminology includes the study of all aspects of crime and law enforcement—criminal psychology, the social setting of crime, prohibition and prevention, investigation and detection, capture and punishment. Thus, many of the people involved—legislators, social workers, probation officers, judges, etc.—could possibly be considered criminologists, though the word usually refers only to scholars and researchers.
Examples of criminology in a Sentence
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The no-bill in the 1991 killing of Cynthia Gonzalez comes in a case on which a University of Texas at Arlington criminology class worked with police.—Emerson Clarridge
updated March 21, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 22 Mar. 2026 The 17-year-old has been accepted into the school’s criminology program as part of the class of 2030.—Essence, 17 Mar. 2026 While studying criminology at Western Kentucky University, Hall worked for the Kentucky court system, travelling to small-town jails to determine if arrestees should be granted pretrial release.—James Verini, New Yorker, 2 Mar. 2026 Richard Berk, emeritus professor of criminology and statistics at the University of Pennsylvania, said AI tools are just fancier versions of what humans already do, whether that is organizing data or finding connections between events.—Sarah Lapidus, AZCentral.com, 26 Feb. 2026 See All Example Sentences for criminology
Word History
Etymology
Latin crīmin-, crīmen "accusation, crime" + -o- + -logy