Introduction John E. Conklin’s New Perspectives in Criminology (1995, ed.) gathers influential 1990s scholarship to reframe how crime, offenders, victims, and social responses are understood. Rather than presenting a single thesis, the volume assembles diverse essays that push criminology beyond narrow typologies toward interdisciplinary, structural, and life-course approaches. This essay synthesizes the book’s central contributions, highlights key themes and representative chapters, evaluates methodological and theoretical advances, and considers ongoing implications for research and policy.