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Mapping Murder: The Secrets of Geographical Profiling
 
 
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Mapping Murder: The Secrets of Geographical Profiling [Hardcover]

David Canter
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 242 pages
  • Publisher: Virgin Books (9 Oct 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1852270780
  • ISBN-13: 978-1852270780
  • Product Dimensions: 24.7 x 16.1 x 2.9 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 185,597 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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David V. Canter
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Product Description

Review

The eminent criminal psychologist and first British 'offender profiler', Professor David Canter, suggests that criminals reveal their identities not just by their methods but also from the chosen locations of their activities. This new science of 'geographical profiling' has enabled police throughout the world to solve a number of high-profile cases by revealing what criminals are trying to hide and what their next moves are likely to be. Professor Canter recounts some engrossing stories about well-known murders and rapists and how they were caught. He also writes of his theories about 'marauders and commuters' whose attempts to satisfy their brutal desires lead to their downfall. There are also in-depth studies of mass murderers such as Fred and Rose West and Dennis Nielsen who construct 'spiders' webs' to lure and destroy their victims.

Product Description

David Canter believes the roots of murder can be better understood by careful consideration of the parallels between the criminal's psychological journey and the actual paths he follows. He conducts a meticulous exploration of a number of notorious crimes, taking us on the murderers' journeys in both the psychological and geographical sense. His work has enable police departments across the world to solve a number of high-profile cases, since his contribution to the capture of the vicious "railway murderer", John Duffy. He describes how the uptake of this innovative approach is enriching detectives' mental maps of the how and why of murder, throwing light on previously unsolved crimes as far afield as Newfoundland, Las Vegas and New Zealand. With first-hand experience of applying his techniques, Canter expands on his theories of what distinguishes criminals from each other, probing depp into the twisted logic of men whose crimes have shocked the world. He gives a detailed profile of his "marauders and commuters" theory - looking at killers whose confused and devious attempts to satisy their brutal desires led to their capture. An in-depth study is made of murderers like Fred West and the Belgian Marc Dutroux - who constructed "spiders' webs" to lure and then destroy their victims. He shows how these webs operated like black holes, due to the absence of information relate to the disappearance of the victims. Details are also given of criminal "marauders" who venture out to find their victims, as well as the "travelling killers", like Robert Black, Peter Sutcliffe and Peter Moore. Most chillingly, the role of the victims is examined: how someone can unwittingly become etched on a murderer's map without realising the journey they are taking could be their last.

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Like a padded-out article with little to no real analysis, 14 Nov 2006
I picked this up second hand in Thailand while travelling for a few months. With a passing interest in real life crime, mainly the detective work involved, I bought it. My wife (a university lecturer herself) read it first and said it was very short on actual analysis and overall it was very disappointing. Since she has little interest in this sort of thing, I put her review down to that. Unfortunately she was quite right - this is an unnecessarily long, disjointed, poorly written and erratic book which will be of little interest to most people with an interest in criminology etc.

Amazingly, geographic profiling is hardly dealt with in terms of applying it to the actual murders/kidnappings/rapes reviewed. On most occasions Canter tells us about the case at hand, throws in a few details about a similar case and then concludes by saying (usually in one line), that geographic profiling could have helped. How? Why? What is he talking about? Who knows?

The writing style is very hard work too. For instance, the chapter on Black starts by telling us about the crimes and the criminal involved. Then he takes a detour onto some other unrelated topic, before starting another chapter and repeating almost word-for-word the opening gambit. This happens throughout - the case being "analysed" (and I use that word loosely) is suddenly abandoned for some other issue, and it's never anything related to geographical profiling. It's often interesting I will admit, eg the relevance of bodily mutilation, psychological profiling, the characteristics of criminals etc, but that is not what the book professes to be about. A whole chapter is devoted to how Jill Dando's fame obscured the polic investigation - interesting though that might be, isn't it in the wrong book?

Furthermore, the level of knowledge Canter has about each case is also wildly divergent. The best chapter is probably the one dealing with the NZ rapist - he was obviously privy to a lot of information about the case. But other cases are explained with scant facts almost as if the reader should know all the background.

One last peeve - why all the chapters? The NZ case is broken into 2 chapters but there is no reason for this whatsoever. The second chapter is no different in style or tone to the first - it could all have been one chapter. The West murders get at least 3 chapters, most of which deal with Fred's diary (no geographic profiling there). What was wrong with a single chapter on this one case? It's a small niggle but it just adds to the frustration reading the book.

The book is not all bad of course - some of the chapters are enlightening, but almost as if by accident. The issue of geographic profiling is barely addressed in practice and what I did learn - that the first rape/attack is often very close to the offender's home as it is impulsive and that someone like Sutcliffe or Black use their transport to move around and commit crimes - seem like commonsense, not science, to me.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Putting crime in its place., 23 Oct 2004
By 
Budge Burgess (Kilmarnock, Scotland) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
An intriguing book, translating the more widely known (or mythologised) role of the profiler into a consideration of the effects geography and place have on crime. Most burglars, we learn, rarely travel more than a short distance from their own homes.

Canter offers a stimulating insight into the way we all perceive the environment in which we live. There are places in which we feel safe, places in which we feel decidedly out of place. The same is true for anyone intent on the commission of a crime. You want to be somewhere you won't be noticed, somewhere you feel comfortable, somewhere you know your way around.

Canter goes a long way towards demystifying crime - criminals are not supermen, they are not master minds, nor are they so evil as to be instantly recognised. The vast majority of criminals (and I speak as a Probation Officer) are very ordinary individuals indeed. Profiling of criminals need not only apply to headline crimes - it can apply to the ordinary crimes committed by ordinary offenders, and can therefore offer clues to prevention, detection, and correction or rehabilitation.

Canter compares and contrasts classic failures in investigation - the false assumptions made about the Washington Sniper, the failure to catch Jill Dando's killer, the way Fred West created a 'normal' world for himself in his prison journals in contrast to the chaotic, murderous one in which he lived.

Canter had considerable success helping profile and catch the 'Railway Rapist' in England. He highlights the manner in which a criminal will begin with unplanned, opportunistic crimes, slowly elaborating upon his/her successes, becoming more sophisticated if not caught, learning how to plan and visualise, etc. The early crime is committed close to home or close to somewhere familiar to the offender; thereafter, it can be planned further and further from home.

A fascinating read, not always convincing - as when he claims to have identified Jack the Ripper - but with a vast amount of stimulating argument and analysis. An invaluable book for any serving police officer, for anyone involved in the crime and criminology field, or for crime writers.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing, 15 Oct 2008
By 
P. J. Craven "Book Shark" (England, Yorks) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
J.P above talks of Canter's book as a pretentious and disappointing read, and unfortunately, I must agree. His review sums up many of the thoughts I held as I read through the book twice in order to ingest the meaning and messages he was given.

I wrote about the book for a University Book Review, and wrote nearly 1500 words on how disappointed I was not to learn more about what seems a thoroughly interesting topic, other than the basics that really, I already knew or had guessed of even from fictional tv programmes. This shouldn't have been the case.

Although it was in some ways fascinating to read of his real life cases (not in to much detail) and to get an insight into a highly regarded gentleman's view on other forms of profiling, this was where the enjoyment ended.

My advice is to purchase one of Canter's other book, perhaps 'Mapping Murders' which seems a much more engaging read.
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