Gabriel Tarde, the Swallow of French Criminology

In Robert Leroux (ed.), The Anthem Companion to Gabriel Tarde (2018)
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Abstract

Gabriel Tarde is better known nowadays for his sociological theories and for his opposition to Emile Durkheim (1858-1917), but Tarde was above all one of the first to criticize the born-criminal theory of Cesare Lombroso (1835-1909) and was the author of an original theory on the perpetration of crime and penal responsibility. Tarde published widely in the field of criminology : he wrote commentaries on criminal statistics, he was in at the birth of crowd psychology, he put forward criteria for ensuring correct sentencing and he developed an original theory of crime and punishment. Tarde was one of Lacasssagne’s main collaborators on the Criminal Anthropology Records and he participated in numerous conventions on anthropology, sociology and penitentiary science. Although celebrated in his lifetime, Tarde’s reputation did not endure. One reason for this can be found in his writings : his books were in effect compilations of articles from which it was hard to distinguish a clear doctrine. Tarde was recognised as an erudite practicioner, but he was isolated and did not gain a wide following.

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