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Anthropological criminology
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Anthropological criminology (sometimes referred to as criminal anthropology, literally a combination of the study of the human species and the study of criminal behaviour) is a field of offender profiling, based on perceived links between the nature of a crime and the personality or physical appearance of the offender.[1][2][3]
Although similar to physiognomy and phrenology,[4] the term "criminal anthropology" is generally reserved for the works of the Italian school of criminology of the late 19th century (Cesare Lombroso, Enrico Ferri, Raffaele Garofalo, and Lorenzo Tenchini).[2][3][4] Lombroso thought that criminals were born with detectable inferior physiological differences.[2][3][4] He popularized the notion of "born criminal" and thought that criminality was a case of atavism or hereditary predisposition.[1][2][3] His central idea was to locate crime completely within the individual and divorce it from surrounding social conditions and structures. A founder of the Positivist school of criminology, Lombroso opposed the social positivism developed by the Chicago school and environmental criminology.
Mugshot and fingerprinting
[edit]French police officer and biometrics researcher Alphonse Bertillon (1853–1914) created a mugshot identification system for criminals prior to the invention of fingerprinting. Austrian criminal jurist and criminologist Hans Gross (1847–1915), regarded as the "Founding Father" of criminal profiling, was also involved in the development of the theory.[5]
Theory
[edit]In the 19th century, Cesare Lombroso and his students performed autopsies on the cadavers of convicted criminals and declared that they had discovered similarities between the physiologies of the formers' bodies and those of "primitive humans" (i.e., non-human primates), such as monkeys and apes.[2][3][4] Most of these similarities involved receding foreheads, height, head shape, and size; Lombroso postulated the theory of the born criminal based on these physical characteristics.[3] Moreover, he also declared that the female offender was worse than the male, as they had distinct masculine characteristics.
Lombroso outlined 14 physiognomic characteristics which he and his followers believed to be common in all criminals, some of which were (but are not limited to): unusually short or tall height; small head, but large face; fleshy lips, but thin upper lip; protuberances (bumps) on head, in back of head and around ear; wrinkles on forehead and face; large sinus cavities or bumpy face; tattoos on body; receding hairline; bumps on head, particularly above left ear; large incisors; bushy eyebrows, tending to meet across nose; large eye sockets, but deep-set eyes; beaked or flat nose; strong jaw line; small and sloping forehead; small or weak chin; thin neck; sloping shoulders, but large chest; large, protruding ears; long arms; high cheek bones; pointy or snubbed fingers or toes.[5]
Lombroso published several works regarding his research in the field of criminal anthropology: The Criminal Man, The Female Offender (originally titled Criminal Woman, the Prostitute, and the Normal Woman) and Criminal Man, According to the Classification of Cesare Lombroso.[2][3][4]
Social Darwinism
[edit]The theory of anthropological criminology was influenced heavily by the theory of evolution of Charles Darwin (1809–1882).[2] However, the influences came mainly from the political and racial views of Herbert Spencer that had reinterpreted Darwin's evolutionary theory in order to fit his own worldview based on the concept of social Darwinism, specifically that some human races were morally superior to others.[2] This idea was in fact spawned by Spencer but nevertheless formed a critical part of anthropological criminology.[5] The work of Cesare Lombroso was continued by social Darwinists in the United States between 1881 and 1911.
Modern times
[edit]Despite general rejection of Lombroso's theories, anthropological criminology still finds a place of sort in modern criminal profiling. Historically (particularly in the 1930s) criminal anthropology had been associated somewhat with eugenics as the idea of a physiological flaw in the human species was often associated with plans to remove such traits.
This was found primarily in the United States with the American Eugenics Movement between 1907 and 1939 and the Jim Crow laws that enforced racial segregation until the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and also in Nazi Germany between 1933 and 1945, where 275,000–300,000 people with disabilities were killed[6][7][8][a] in the concentration camps as part of Hitler's eugenics program to purify the "Aryan race" from perceived undesirable traits in accordance with the Nazi ideology and its racial policies.[5]
Criminal anthropology, and the closely related study of physiognomy, have also found their way into studies of social psychology and forensic psychology.[5] Studies into the nature of twins also combines aspects of criminal anthropology, as some studies reveal that identical twins share a likelihood of criminal activities more so than non-identical twins. Lombroso's theories are also found in studies of Galvanic skin response and XYY chromosome syndrome.
See also
[edit]- Biosocial criminology
- Criminal psychology
- Cultural bias
- Darwinian anthropology
- Evolutionary psychology
- Implicit stereotype
- List of unsolved murders (1900–1979)
- List of unsolved murders (before 1900)
- Marginalization
- Pathognomy
- Personality psychology
- Phrenology
- Physiognomy
- Pro-slavery thought
- Pseudo-scientific racist theories
- Racial bias in criminal news
- Sex differences in crime
- Sex differences in psychology
Notes
[edit]- ^ As many as 100,000 people may have been killed directly as part of Aktion T4. Mass euthanasia killings were also carried out in the Central and Eastern European countries and territories occupied by Nazi Germany during the war (see Nazi war crimes). Categories are fluid and no definitive figure can be assigned but historians put the total number of victims at around 300,000.[8]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Duntley, J. D.; Shackelford, T. K. (October 2008). "Darwinian foundations of crime and law". Aggression and Violent Behavior. 13 (5). Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier: 373–382. doi:10.1016/j.avb.2008.06.002. ISSN 1359-1789. LCCN 96640730. S2CID 143101230.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Bergman, G. (January–April 2005). "Darwinian criminality theory: A tragic chapter in history". Rivista di Biologia. 98 (1). Perugia, Italy: University of Perugia: 47–69. ISSN 0035-6050. LCCN 75646630. PMID 15889340.
- ^ a b c d e f g Mazzarello, Paolo (July 2011). "Cesare Lombroso: An anthropologist between evolution and degeneration". Functional Neurology. 26 (2). Rome, Italy: CIC Edizioni Internazionali: 97–101. ISSN 1971-3274. PMC 3814446. PMID 21729591. S2CID 42707544.
- ^ a b c d e Kellor, F. A. (January 1899). "Criminal Anthropology in Its Relation to Criminal Jurisprudence". American Journal of Sociology. 4 (4). Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press: 515–527. doi:10.1086/210825. ISSN 1537-5390. JSTOR 2761731.
- ^ a b c d e "Anthropological Criminology". faculty.ncwc.edu. Rocky Mount, North Carolina: North Carolina Wesleyan University. 2 October 2006. Archived from the original on 9 October 2006. Retrieved 1 October 2025.
- ^ "Exhibition catalogue in German and English" (PDF). Berlin, Germany: Memorial for the Victims of National Socialist ›Euthanasia‹ Killings. 2018. Archived (PDF) from the original on 16 May 2017. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
- ^ "Euthanasia Program" (PDF). Yad Vashem. 2018. Archived (PDF) from the original on 21 December 2022. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
- ^ a b Chase, Jefferson (26 January 2017). "Remembering the 'forgotten victims' of Nazi 'euthanasia' murders". Deutsche Welle. Archived from the original on 21 December 2022. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
Bibliography
[edit]- Black, Edwin (2018) [2003]. War Against the Weak: Eugenics and America's Campaign to Create a Master Race (Reprint ed.). New York City: Barnes & Noble. ISBN 9780914153399.
- Garbarino, Merwyn S. (1977). Sociocultural Theory in Anthropology: A Short History. New York City: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. ISBN 978-0-88133-056-4.
External links
[edit]- "APA Dictionary of Psychology: "Criminal anthropology"". dictionary.apa.org. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association. 19 April 2018. Retrieved 13 October 2025.
- "USLegal Dictionary: "Anthropological criminology"". definitions.uslegal.com. USLegal, Inc. Retrieved 13 October 2025.
Anthropological criminology
View on GrokipediaHistorical Origins
Cesare Lombroso and the Founding of Criminal Anthropology
Cesare Lombroso (1835–1909) was an Italian physician, psychiatrist, and anthropologist whose empirical studies of prisoners and asylum inmates laid the groundwork for criminal anthropology as a scientific discipline. Born on November 18, 1835, in Verona to a Jewish family, Lombroso trained in medicine at the universities of Pavia, Padua, and Genoa, earning his degree in 1858. He initially served as a military physician in southern Italy, where observations of regional differences in criminality sparked his interest in biological determinants of behavior, before transitioning to psychiatry as director of the San Giovanni asylum in Pesaro in 1862 and later professor of forensic medicine and psychiatry at Turin University in 1876.[1][11] Lombroso's foundational insight emerged from systematic physical examinations of over 6,000 convicts and cadavers, where he identified recurring anatomical anomalies—such as asymmetrical crania, prominent jaws, and low foreheads—that he interpreted as vestiges of primitive human or simian forms, influenced by Charles Darwin's theory of evolution. A pivotal case was the 1871 autopsy of Giuseppe Villella, a Calabrian brigand, whose skull displayed cranial sutures extending beyond infancy and other irregularities, which Lombroso viewed as evidence of atavism, or biological regression to an earlier evolutionary stage predisposing individuals to criminality. This deterministic view rejected classical criminology's emphasis on free will and moral choice, positing instead that a subset of criminals were "born" with innate, hereditary traits rendering them biologically incapable of conforming to civilized norms.[1][12] In 1876, Lombroso published L'Uomo Delinquente (The Criminal Man), a seminal 378-page volume documenting these findings through anthropometric data, illustrations of "stigmata," and statistical correlations drawn from his examinations. The book, which underwent multiple editions and expansions up to 1897, formalized criminal anthropology by advocating the application of empirical, laboratory-based methods—borrowed from physical anthropology—to classify and predict criminal propensity based on somatic features rather than post-hoc legal judgments. This approach established the Italian School of Positivist Criminology, with Lombroso as its progenitor, shifting the field's focus from the act of crime to the organic constitution of the offender and inspiring subsequent researchers to quantify physical deviations as causal factors in deviance.[1][12][13]Influence of Evolutionary Theory and Positivism
Anthropological criminology emerged as a direct application of positivist principles, which emphasized empirical observation and scientific determinism over the classical school's reliance on free will and rational choice in explaining criminal behavior. Cesare Lombroso, its primary founder, adopted positivism's methodological rigor—rooted in Auguste Comte's philosophy of applying natural sciences to social phenomena—to investigate crime as a measurable, pathological condition rather than a moral failing. This shift, formalized in Lombroso's foundational work L'Uomo Delinquente (1876), rejected metaphysical explanations and prioritized data from autopsies, anthropometric measurements, and prison observations to identify deterministic causes of criminality.[14][15] Positivism influenced the field's focus on the individual criminal's biology and psychology as key to prevention and treatment, advocating "social defense" through classification and segregation rather than uniform punishment. Lombroso's Italian School of Positivist Criminology extended this by integrating clinical and statistical methods, viewing crime as a symptom of underlying organic defects amenable to scientific intervention, such as medical treatment or isolation. This deterministic framework contrasted with earlier juridical notions, positing that societal responses should adapt to the criminal's innate traits rather than assuming equal capacity for choice.[16][5] Evolutionary theory, particularly Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species (1859), provided the biological mechanism for positivism's causal claims in anthropological criminology, framing criminals as evolutionary atavisms—regressive "throwbacks" to primitive human ancestors. Lombroso interpreted Darwinian natural selection to argue that certain individuals retained vestigial traits from earlier phylogenetic stages, manifesting as physical stigmata (e.g., asymmetrical skulls, large jaws) that predisposed them to instinctive, predatory behaviors unfit for civilized society. This atavistic model posited crime as an inherited degeneration, not environmental adaptation, influencing Lombroso's examinations of over 6,000 cadavers and living prisoners to catalog such anomalies as evidence of biological criminality.[1][8][5] The synthesis of evolution and positivism in Lombroso's theory extended beyond humans to comparative anatomy with animals and "savage" populations, drawing parallels between criminal traits and those observed in apes or prehistoric fossils to support claims of phylogenetic reversion. While Darwin's work emphasized gradual adaptation, Lombroso's application leaned toward a Lamarckian-influenced degeneracy, where atavism explained not just crime but also genius and madness as psychobiological extremes. This evolutionary underpinning justified positivist policies like lifelong segregation for "born criminals," estimated by Lombroso to comprise about one-third of offenders based on his empirical data.[3][17][1]Theoretical Framework
Atavism and the Born Criminal Concept
Cesare Lombroso introduced the concept of atavism in anthropological criminology as a biological regression to earlier evolutionary stages, positing that certain individuals exhibit primitive physical and psychological traits inherited from ancestral humans or pre-human forms, predisposing them to criminal behavior.[1] This idea emerged from his examination of a brigand's skull in 1870, where he observed features like a median occipital fossa resembling those in apes and early humans, leading him to hypothesize that such anomalies marked evolutionary throwbacks unfit for modern society.[8] In his seminal 1876 work L'Uomo Delinquente, Lombroso argued that these atavistic stigmata—physical deviations from the norm—explained innate criminality, drawing on Darwinian evolution to frame criminals as "savages born into the modern world."[2] [18] The "born criminal" (delinquente nato) represented the core of Lombroso's typology, describing individuals whose criminal tendencies were biologically determined and irreversible, negating free will and environmental influence as primary causes.[17] Lombroso estimated that born criminals comprised about one-third of offenders, identifiable through multiple atavistic traits rather than isolated anomalies, which he documented in over 6,000 autopsies and examinations of inmates.[5] These included cranial asymmetries, excessive jaw development, prominent supraorbital ridges, handle-shaped or large ears, and sparse cranial hair—features paralleling those of primates, fetal stages, or "savage" races as per 19th-century anthropological comparisons. [8] Psychological atavism complemented physical markers, manifesting in impulsivity, laziness, and lack of moral sense, akin to primitive impulsiveness rather than calculated rationality.[1] Lombroso distinguished born criminals from occasional offenders (driven by circumstance) and those with epilepsy or moral insanity, asserting that only the atavistic type warranted permanent segregation, as rehabilitation was futile due to their fixed biological inferiority.[17] This framework rejected classical criminology's emphasis on rational choice, instead applying positivist methods to measure and classify innate degeneracy, influencing early forensic practices like tattoo analysis as indicators of atavistic primitivism.[19] Later editions of L'Uomo Delinquente refined the theory by incorporating degeneration alongside atavism, acknowledging environmental aggravators but maintaining heredity as the root cause.[12]Classification of Criminal Types
Cesare Lombroso developed a typology of criminals rooted in biological determinism, arguing that distinct innate traits differentiated criminal propensity across types, with atavism as the core explanatory mechanism for the most dangerous offenders. In his seminal work L'Uomo Delinquente (1876, with subsequent editions refining the framework), Lombroso identified the born criminal (delinquente nato) as the archetypal figure, comprising roughly one-third of inmates in his Italian prison studies, marked by physical stigmata like cranial asymmetry, prominent supraorbital ridges, and handle-shaped ears—features evoking primitive human or animal ancestors.[20][5] These individuals were deemed predestined for recidivism, exhibiting moral insensibility and impulsivity independent of social influences, as evidenced by Lombroso's anthropometric data from over 6,000 convicts showing higher rates of such anomalies compared to non-criminals.[1] Complementing this, Lombroso categorized insane criminals (delinquenti pazzi) as those whose offenses stemmed from pathological mental conditions overlaid on partial atavism, including epileptics (whom he viewed as a bridge to born criminals due to shared tattooing prevalence and moral epilepsy), idiots, and alcoholics with degenerative traits.[5] His examinations, detailed in later editions of Criminal Man (e.g., 1896-1897), linked these types to neurological anomalies, such as microcephaly or hyperostosis frontalis interna, observed in autopsy and living subject measurements, positing that insanity amplified latent criminal instincts rather than arising solely from environment.[2] This group was distinguished from purely psychiatric cases by persistent criminal patterns post-insanity resolution, underscoring Lombroso's emphasis on heredity over transient psychosis. Lombroso further delineated criminaloids (or occasional and habitual criminals) as borderline cases lacking full atavistic degeneracy but prone to delinquency under provoking circumstances like poverty, intoxication, or vice, with tendencies to progressive moral decline.[21] Representing the majority of offenders in his typology—up to two-thirds—these included pseudo-criminals driven by passion or opportunity, whose physical traits showed milder irregularities, as per his statistical correlations from prisoner cohorts.[20] Habitual subtypes, such as alcoholics or prostitutes, illustrated environmental triggers activating dormant predispositions, though Lombroso maintained biology as the foundational cause, evident in their elevated rates of stigmata relative to law-abiding populations. This classification aimed to guide indeterminate sentencing and segregation, prioritizing biological profiling over uniform punishment.[1]Methods and Applications
Anthropometric Measurement and Physical Stigmata
Cesare Lombroso utilized anthropometric measurements to identify physical traits indicative of atavism in criminals, drawing on techniques from physical anthropology to quantify differences in cranial and bodily features between offenders and the general population.[1] These methods involved precise caliper measurements of skull dimensions, facial angles, limb proportions, and other somatic characteristics, often conducted on living prisoners as well as through postmortem examinations of 383 criminal skulls.[22] Lombroso extended this approach to a larger sample, performing anthropometric and physiognomic assessments on 832 criminals to catalog deviations from normative anatomy.[23] He also tested physiological responses, such as sensitivity to pain using a Ruhmkhorff coil, to further differentiate criminal types.[1] Central to Lombroso's framework were physical stigmata—congenital anomalies presumed to mark the "born criminal" as a biological throwback to primitive human or prehuman forms.[5] These included cranial irregularities like receding foreheads and low cephalic indices, as well as facial features such as protruding jaws, large chins, and asymmetrical structures.[24] Bodily stigmata encompassed long arms relative to torso length, sloping shoulders, and primitive ear shapes, including handle-like or protruding auricles.[8] Lombroso posited that the accumulation of multiple such traits—often cited as more than five—signaled innate criminal predisposition, with these markers observed more frequently in his criminal samples than in controls.[25] Lombroso identified the following key physical atavistic features, which when present in combination indicated the criminal type:- Asymmetrical face or cranium
- Protruding lower jaw (prognathism)
- Large or bulky jaws and high/prominent cheekbones (zygomata)
- Low/sloping forehead
- Prominent brow ridges (superciliary arches)
- Large or protruding ears (sometimes with Darwin’s tubercle)
- Irregular or abnormal teeth
- Excessive body hair
- Long arms
- Small cranial capacity
- Large orbits
- Darker skin
- Median occipital fossa/depression (a hollow at the base of the skull)
- Insensitivity to pain
Criminal Identification Techniques
Anthropological criminology utilized anthropometric measurements as primary techniques for criminal identification, seeking to establish unique physical profiles that could link individuals to crimes or indicate recidivist tendencies. These methods emerged in the late 19th century amid efforts to systematize police identification beyond unreliable descriptions or photographs. Alphonse Bertillon, a French police officer, developed the anthropometric system known as judicial anthropometry or Bertillonage starting in 1879, which was first implemented in Paris in 1882 for identifying repeat offenders.[26][27] Bertillonage standardized the recording of 11 specific body measurements, including standing height, arm span, length and breadth of the head, left middle finger length, left foot length, and ear-to-nipple distance, using calipers and other precise tools to minimize variability. These metrics, combined with full-face and profile photographs (mugshots) and descriptive notes on identifying marks like scars or tattoos, were filed on cards in a classification system that allowed rapid retrieval by sorting measurements into categories. The approach assumed skeletal dimensions stabilized after age 20 and were immutable, enabling probabilistic matching even without exact name matches; by 1890, it had identified over 1,000 recidivists in France.[26][28][29] In alignment with Cesare Lombroso's criminal anthropology, these techniques extended to detecting physical "stigmata" such as asymmetrical skulls or anomalous facial features, which Lombroso measured on prisoners to quantify atavistic traits from 1876 onward in studies like L'Uomo Delinquente. Lombroso applied craniometry and osteometry, influenced by earlier works like Anders Retzius's cephalic index (1830s), to differentiate "born criminals" through metrics like facial angle or orbital capacity, integrating them into identification dossiers for predictive classification.[1][30] The system's adoption spread internationally, with the United States implementing it in cities like New York by 1887 and Argentina establishing a Bertillon service in 1891, often alongside Lombrosian-inspired anthropological labs for criminal profiling. Despite its prevalence—used by over 200 police departments worldwide by 1900—reliability issues arose from measurement inconsistencies and identical twins, prompting supplementation with emerging dactyloscopy (fingerprinting) by the 1890s, though anthropometry persisted in some contexts until the 1910s.[31][28]Criticisms and Controversies
Methodological and Empirical Shortcomings
Anthropological criminology's methods relied heavily on anthropometric measurements and visual identification of physical "stigmata" such as asymmetrical skulls or prominent jaws, but these lacked standardization and objective criteria, leading to subjective interpretations prone to observer bias.[32] [33] Researchers often examined prison populations without adequate control groups from the general population, introducing selection bias as incarcerated individuals might exhibit physical variations due to socioeconomic deprivation, poor nutrition, or lifestyle factors rather than innate criminality.[34] Sample sizes were frequently small and non-representative, with Lombroso's initial studies drawing from limited autopsies and inmate observations that failed to account for confounding variables like age, ethnicity, or health status.[35] Empirically, the theory faltered under statistical scrutiny, as demonstrated by Charles Goring's 1913 study The English Convict, which analyzed anthropometric data from over 3,000 British convicts alongside comparisons to non-criminal groups such as military personnel and students, finding no significant physical anomalies or atavistic traits distinguishing criminals.[36] [17] Goring's application of rigorous statistical methods revealed that any observed differences, such as slightly shorter stature or lower body weight among convicts, correlated more strongly with socioeconomic status and intelligence levels than with supposed primitive regressions, directly contradicting Lombroso's claims of biological determinism.[37] [38] Subsequent replications in early 20th-century Europe and the United States failed to substantiate consistent correlations between physical stigmata and criminal propensity, with critics noting the absence of longitudinal data to establish causality over mere association.[8] [7] These shortcomings extended to the theory's neglect of environmental and psychological influences, as measurements did not differentiate between "born criminals" and those shaped by upbringing or opportunity, rendering predictive claims unverifiable.[39] The reliance on circular reasoning—identifying traits post hoc in criminals and attributing crime to them—undermined falsifiability, a core scientific principle, contributing to the field's marginalization by mid-20th-century criminology favoring multifactorial models.[1] Despite occasional correlations in aggregate data, no empirical threshold for "stigmata" reliably predicted recidivism or offense types across diverse populations.[32]Ideological and Ethical Objections
Anthropological criminology, particularly Lombroso's theory of the born criminal as an atavistic reversion, faced ideological opposition for promoting biological determinism that undermined notions of free will and moral responsibility, portraying crime as an inevitable hereditary trait rather than a product of individual choice or environmental influences. Critics argued this framework aligned with social Darwinist ideologies, rationalizing social hierarchies by classifying certain physical traits—such as asymmetrical faces or large jaws—as markers of evolutionary inferiority, thereby excusing societal failures to address poverty or injustice.[9][40] Such views were seen as ideologically complicit in eugenics movements, where identifying "degenerate" types justified selective breeding or elimination to "improve" the population, echoing racial pseudoscience that pathologized ethnic minorities and the underclass.[41][42] Ethically, the theory raised concerns over stigmatization and discriminatory practices, as anthropometric measurements were proposed to preemptively identify and isolate potential criminals, potentially leading to violations of due process and human dignity by predetermining guilt based on immutable traits. In Italy, Lombroso's ideas influenced early 20th-century eugenic policies, including the 1913 formation of an Italian Committee of Eugenic Studies, which advocated for controlling reproduction among those deemed atavistic to prevent crime transmission.[43][44] Opponents highlighted the risk of abuse in "preventive" interventions, such as indefinite detention or sterilization of individuals exhibiting supposed stigmata, framing these as ethically indefensible extensions of scientific authority into punitive social engineering without empirical validation of causal links between biology and behavior.[9][45] Further ethical critiques emphasized the theory's colonial and racial undertones, with Lombroso's classifications often correlating physical anomalies to "primitive" races, fostering ideologies that dehumanized non-European populations and supported imperial justifications for subjugation under the guise of criminological science. Scholars have noted that this not only perpetuated racism but also eroded ethical standards in research by prioritizing atavistic typology over holistic assessments of human variability, influencing policies like habitual offender laws that echoed eugenic sterilization aims as late as the mid-20th century.[40][42]Legacy and Modern Developments
Impact on Criminology and Policy
Anthropological criminology, pioneered by Cesare Lombroso in his 1876 work L'Uomo Delinquente, profoundly influenced the development of positivist criminology by emphasizing biological determinism over classical notions of free will and rational choice, thereby redirecting scholarly focus from the act of crime to the innate characteristics of the offender.[8] [1] This shift encouraged empirical measurement of physical and psychological traits to classify criminals, laying foundational methods for later interdisciplinary approaches in the field, though subsequent research has largely refuted the atavistic claims due to methodological flaws such as selection bias in anthropometric data.[1] In policy terms, Lombroso's theories advocated for differential treatment based on criminal typology: lifelong segregation in agricultural colonies or asylums for "born criminals" exhibiting pronounced atavistic stigmata to prevent reproduction and societal harm, while proposing rehabilitative measures like education and labor for less deterministic "criminaloids."[1] These ideas contributed to penal reforms favoring individualized sentencing, indeterminate periods of confinement, probation, and parole systems, which gained traction in Italy and influenced the establishment of juvenile courts emphasizing prevention over retribution.[8] The framework also shaped scientific policing practices, particularly in Italy, where Lombroso's disciple Salvatore Ottolenghi integrated anthropometric identification (e.g., Bertillonage) with emerging fingerprinting and psycho-biographical profiling, leading to the founding of the School of Scientific Policing in Rome in 1902.[47] This extended to the 1930 Italian Penal Code, which prioritized "security measures" like confinement for social defense over traditional punishment, reflecting positivist influence amid concerns over "dangerous classes."[47] Internationally, anthropological societies inspired by Lombroso's work proliferated in cities like Buenos Aires and Moscow by the early 20th century, disseminating ideas that indirectly bolstered eugenics-oriented policies advocating segregation or sterilization of hereditary offenders, though Lombroso himself emphasized containment over surgical intervention.[5] [45] Despite these applications, the lack of robust causal evidence linking physical traits to recidivism—evident in post-1900 refutations—limited long-term policy adoption, highlighting tensions between deterministic theory and empirical outcomes.[1]Biosocial Criminology as a Contemporary Extension
Biosocial criminology emerged in the late 20th century as an interdisciplinary approach integrating biological mechanisms—such as genetics, neurophysiology, and endocrinology—with social and environmental influences to explain variations in antisocial and criminal behavior.[48] Unlike the deterministic physical typology of Cesare Lombroso's anthropological criminology, biosocial perspectives emphasize gene-environment interactions (GxE), where biological traits confer susceptibility to criminogenic social conditions rather than predetermining outcomes.[49] Key proponents, including Kevin M. Beaver and Anthony Walsh, have advanced this framework through empirical research demonstrating that heritability estimates for antisocial behavior range from 40% to 60%, based on meta-analyses of twin and adoption studies.[50] These studies, such as those comparing monozygotic and dizygotic twins reared apart, reveal that genetic factors account for a substantial portion of variance in criminal propensity, independent of shared environments.[51] This extension refines anthropological criminology's focus on observable physical stigmata by incorporating molecular genetics and neuroimaging, revealing associations between polymorphisms in genes like MAOA (the "warrior gene") and aggression under conditions of childhood maltreatment—a classic GxE effect documented in longitudinal cohorts such as the Dunedin Study.[52] For instance, low-activity MAOA variants interact with adverse upbringing to elevate risks of violent offending by up to 44% in males, underscoring causal pathways from biology to behavior via neurodevelopmental disruptions.[53] Biosocial models also extend to physiological markers, such as low heart rate and skin conductance as predictors of impulsivity-linked crimes, with meta-analytic evidence linking autonomic nervous system underarousal to delinquency onset in adolescence.[50] These findings challenge purely sociological paradigms dominant in mid-20th-century criminology, which often dismissed biological inquiries due to ideological associations with eugenics, yet biosocial research prioritizes falsifiable hypotheses tested against large-scale genomic data.[49] Criticisms of biosocial criminology frequently echo historical objections to Lombroso, accusing it of reductionism or implicit determinism, though proponents counter that such charges misrepresent the interactive models, which explicitly incorporate social amplification of biological risks.[54] Empirical defenses highlight replicability across diverse populations, including genome-wide association studies (GWAS) identifying polygenic scores for educational attainment inversely correlated with criminality, explaining up to 10-15% of phenotypic variance.[52] Policy implications include targeted interventions, such as prenatal nutrition programs reducing low birth weight—a biosocial risk for later aggression—or cognitive-behavioral therapies attuned to neurobiological deficits, as evidenced by randomized trials showing reduced recidivism.[49] Despite academic resistance, partly attributable to entrenched sociological orthodoxies, biosocial criminology's accumulation of causal evidence positions it as a corrective to environmental-only explanations, fostering a more comprehensive etiology of crime.[55]References
- https://scholarship.law.[duke](/page/Duke).edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3958&context=dlj