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Title: Crime and Punishment
Course Section Number: ECO-277-04
Department: Economics
Description: This class will investigate the social phenomena of crime and punishment through the analytical tool kit of political economy. Students will learn a variety of theoretical approaches and apply them to understand and explain historic and contemporary trends. Theoretical approaches will include rational and strategic decision making, public goods theory, bureaucratic incentives, comparative institutional analysis, and industrial organization. Key applied topics covered during the semester will include criminal behavior, the historic origins of criminal law and law enforcement services, the potentials and limits of both public and private provisions of policing and punishment, and the historic and contemporary patterns of crime and punitive trends across social contexts. Finally, students will assess the viability of historic and current criminal justice reform movements.
Credits: 1.00
Start Date: August 26, 2026
End Date: December 19, 2026
Meeting Information:
08/27/2026-12/17/2026 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Room to be Announced
Faculty: D'Amico, Daniel
Requisite Courses: ECO-101

Course Status & Cross-Listings

Cross-list Group Capacity: 25
Cross-list Group Student Count: 0
Calculated Course Status: OPEN
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