Olof Dahlbäck's book breaks new ground for the analysis of crime from a
rationality perspective by presenting models and methods that go far
beyond those with which researchers have hitherto been equipped. The
book examines single crimes, individual criminality, and societal crime,
and it discusses thoroughly the general decision theoretical
presuppositions necessary for analyzing these various types of crime. An
expected utility maximization model for a single discrete choice
regarding the commission of a crime is the foundation of most of the
analyses presented. A version of this model is developed that permits
interpersonal comparisons, and this basic model is used when deriving
more complex models of crime as well as when analyzing the potential for
such derivations. The rigorous, powerful methods suggested provide
considerable opportunities for improving research and for seeing old
problems in a new light.