About the Book
Table of Contents:
What Is Deviant Behavior?
Positivist Theories
Constructionist Theories
Physical Violence
Sexual Assault and Child Molestation
Family Violence
Suicide and Self-Injury
Mental Disorder
Heterosexual Deviance
Gay People and Other Targets of Stigma
Internet Deviance
Drug Use
Drinking and Alcoholism
Privileged Deviance
Underprivileged Deviance
About the Author :
About our authors Jim D. Taylor is a lecturer of criminal justice and criminology at the University of Idaho. A native Texan, Dr. Taylor received his Ph.D. in sociology from the Ohio State University and served as a tenured Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice for many years in the Ohio University system. A lifelong motorcycle rider and enthusiast, hack songwriter/guitarist, bull rider, and former skydiver, Dr. Taylor specializes in the sociology of masculinity, deviant behavior, stigma management, self-injury, research methods, and race relations. Dr. Taylor has published books on both American gun culture and social problems, as well as scholarly articles on the topics of stigma management, self-injury, and teaching statistical methods. His current research focuses on American rodeo cowboy culture and the intersections of rodeo sports, masculinities, and music. Prior to working in academics, Dr. Taylor managed the background investigation and silent witness divisions for the Wackenhut Corporation. In 2009, Dr. Taylor co-founded a dropout intervention charter school (The RCCS Everest High School) in the greater Columbus, Ohio area, enrolling former high school dropouts and at-risk students. More than 200 former dropouts have graduated to date. Dr. Taylor has also worked with incarcerated students for the past decade. Dr. Taylor currently lives on a small farm in Ohio. When not lecturing, conducting research, or writing, he loves to visit new campground and amusement park destinations with his wife, Christine, sons Graham and Charlie, daughter Lily, and stepsons Ben and Noah.
Martin D. Schwartz is Professorial Lecturer of Sociology at George Washington University, and Professor Emeritus at Ohio University, where he served 2 terms as chair. He is the 2008 Fellow of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences and received the top scholar award of that group’s Section on Critical Criminology. He has received distinguished scholar awards from 2 of the largest divisions of the American Society of Criminology: Feminist Criminology, and Critical Criminal Justice and Social Justice. At Ohio University he was named Graduate Professor of the Year and Best Arts and Sciences Professor; he was also the first social scientist to be awarded the university’s research achievement award, the title of Presidential Research Scholar. He has written or edited (often with Walter S. DeKeseredy) 28 editions of 17 books, 80 journal articles, and another 75 book chapters, government reports, and essays. He has been a visiting scholar at the University of Melbourne in Australia and the National Institute of Justice in Washington, DC, and has guest-lectured in Europe, Australia, Canada, and throughout the United States. A former co-editor of Criminal Justice, he has served on the editorial boards of 11 other professional journals, while doing manuscript reviews for some 65 journals. He also was co-editor on 2 editions of the American Sociological Association’s publication Teaching the Sociology of Deviance. His most recent book is Skating on Thin Ice: Professional Hockey, Rape Culture and Violence Against Women (University of Toronto Press), with Walter DeKeseredy and Stu Cowan. He now lives in Cincinnati with his brilliant artist wife, Carol Blum, in a “pod” that includes his neighbor sisters-in-law Elizabeth and Barbara and best-selling mystery writer D. B. Borton (Lynette Carpenter), all of whom are cat ladies.
This book continues in the tradition begun by the late Alex Thio (pronounced TEE-oh), a sociology professor at Ohio University for over 30 years, who unfortunately and quite unexpectedly passed away in May 2011. Although mostly known for his textbooks on deviance, introductory sociology, and social problems, with over a million copies in circulation worldwide, Professor Thio also published a number of well-regarded research articles in a variety of professional journals. Born of Chinese parentage in Penang, Malaysia, in 1937, his family later moved to Indonesia, where he attended high school. There, his school brilliance came to the attention of missionaries and he was sent to the United States to obtain his bachelor’s degree at Central Methodist University in Missouri. Later he did graduate work at Kent State University and received a doctorate in sociology from the State University of New York at Buffalo. He was hired in 1969 at Ohio University, where he taught hundreds of courses in deviance, introductory sociology, social problems, and criminology. In addition to teaching, he always enjoyed writing and was in his retirement an enthusiastic entrepreneur. Aside from this book, he is the author of the popular text Sociology: A Brief Introduction, 7th Edition (2009), and, with Jim D. Taylor, Social Problems (2011), along with several edited volumes. Alex dedicated his career to the advancement of the social sciences. His contribution and legacy are indelible, and we are honored to continue to advance his body of work.