“…Originating in the 1950s, academic criminal justice has made great achievements and has developed into an independent discipline primarily in the United States and Europe. However, to date, a major deficiency of the discipline is the lack of a well-recognized general criminal justice theory, as concluded by some prominent criminal justice scholars (Bernard & Engel, 2001;Clear, 2001;Crank, 2002;Cullen, 1995;Duffee, 1980;Hagan, 1989;Kraska, 2006;Kraska & Brent, 2004;Macdonald, 2008;Marenin & Worrall, 1998;Sullivan, 1994;Zalman, 1981). Criminal justice teaching programs in Western countries by default assume that the content of "criminal justice theory" is about crime and crime rates, which essentially is the subject of criminology theory (Bernard & Engel, 2001;Cullen, 1995;Hagan, 1989;Henderson & Boostrom, 1989 ;Macdonald, 2008 ;.…”