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Shoplifting : a social history / by Kerry Segrave.

Van Pelt Library HV6651 .S44 2001
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Segrave, Kerry, 1944-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Shoplifting--History.
Shoplifting.
History.
Physical Description:
v, 182 pages ; 23 cm
Place of Publication:
Jefferson, N.C. : McFarland, [2001]
Summary:
Shoplifting is a practice that has been engaged in for centuries, but it was only after the Civil War that the prevalence of shoplifting and societal awareness of it, became significant. In the 1860s the typical shoplifter was from the lower classes; by 1900 it was an upper-class woman who shoplifted from a huge department store "because" she was a "kleptomaniac," and in the 1960s it was teenagers stealing for kicks. Shoplifting: A Social History looks at the activity of shoplifting for the last 140 years: the types of people singled out as the principal offenders, retailers' ambivalent responses to the activity, selective prosecution, the utilization of high-tech antitheft devices, and suing shoplifters to recover costs. Also examined are media accounts which have often used exaggerated numbers when discussing the activity and the effect of private justice on the offense. Discrepancies in treatment of lowe
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 167-177) and index.
ISBN:
0786409088
OCLC:
45320623

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