CC 100- (6) History of Criminological Theory

Descrição

Criminology
Alyssa Elligson
Quiz por Alyssa Elligson, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Alyssa Elligson
Criado por Alyssa Elligson mais de 6 anos atrás
14
0

Resumo de Recurso

Questão 1

Questão
To be good, a theory must be logical , with premises that support a conclusion
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 2

Questão
Good theory should make [blank_start]statements or propositions[blank_end] about reality that can be tested
Responda
  • statements or propositions

Questão 3

Questão
KEY: [blank_start]theories[blank_end] do not emerge in isolation but, rather reflect what has gone on in the past and what is happening at the time of being proposed
Responda
  • theories

Questão 4

Questão
Positivist School- notion of criminality as an inherited (genetic) propensity
Responda
  • A. Reflection of Charles Darwin's 1959 theory of evolution
  • B. Gregor Mendel's 1865 work on genetics
  • C. a school of thought that attributed criminal behaviour to biological or psychological factors - often referred to as "Italian school"
  • D. All of the above

Questão 5

Questão
Chicago School:
Responda
  • the first school of sociology in US
  • contributed to social disorganization theory, cultural transmission theory, differential association theory, subcultural theory, the sociology of deviance and symbolic interactionism
  • both 1 and 2
  • none

Questão 6

Questão
Theories of crime inspired by Religious beliefs & superstition:
Responda
  • belief in evil spirits & magic
  • ascribed unusual phenomenon of nature to activities of evil spirits -leading to any pathology in human behaviour must be due to evil spirits
  • temptation- humans have free will, but Devil tempts (can resist through faith)
  • Possession- wrongdoers are possessed by evil spirits- severe and fatal methods used to rid person of spirits

Questão 7

Questão
Blaming social problems on the Devil was a means to achieve 2 objectives: 1. diversion of [blank_start]attention[blank_end] away from failings and placed blame on individuals who were possessed 2. those in power made themselves indispensable by saying only they could stop the Devil distinction between [blank_start]sin and crime[blank_end] was blurred (rise of influence of civil & religious authority) Witches became a [blank_start]scapegoat[blank_end] for anger
Responda
  • attention
  • thoughts
  • crimes
  • sin and crime
  • crime and religion
  • crime and authority
  • scapegoat
  • problem
  • displacement

Questão 8

Questão
the Enlightenment:
Responda
  • revolution caused a change in thinking - focus on systematic doubt, empirical and sensory verification of ideas
  • ideas shift to natural explanations based on reason and the scientific method (observation)
  • prompted a more specific approach to understanding crime & criminal behaviour
  • added ideas of fanaticism and religious superstition

Questão 9

Questão
Classical school of criminology c[blank_start]hallenged[blank_end] the way criminals were dealt with, c[blank_start]riticized[blank_end] absence of due process, and a[blank_start]rgued[blank_end] the death penalty & use of torture to extract confessions
Responda
  • hallenged
  • riticized
  • rgued

Questão 10

Questão
people voluntarily enter a social contract with the state:
Responda
  • give up some freedom for a safer society
  • state had to provide protection without violating rights of citizens
  • citizens had to obey rules or face punishment from state
  • roots of classical theory lie here

Questão 11

Questão
Core Principles: Human beings as rational, logical actors [blank_start]Hedonism[blank_end]- view that pleasure is the primary good, pursuit of pleasure [blank_start]Utilitarianism[blank_end]- philosophy suggests reasoned decisions will produce the greatest good for the greatest # [blank_start]Free Will-[blank_end] choices are not conditioned or determined by factors external to itself
Responda
  • Hedonism
  • Freedom
  • Hostility
  • Utilitarianism
  • Utilise it
  • Goodwill
  • Free Will
  • Freedom

Questão 12

Questão
Cesare Beccaria:
Responda
  • criticized the cruelty, inhumanity, and arbitrariness of current justice system
  • helped focus movement for humanitarian reform in Europe
  • born criminal
  • conditioned criminal

Questão 13

Questão
Jeremy Bentham:
Responda
  • argued humans are rational free-willed actors
  • behaviour is governed by hedonistic (pleasure-pain) calculus
  • punishment should be restricted just enough to achieve deterrence
  • none of the above

Questão 14

Questão
Classical theory of crime emerged from the rational criminal -penalties deter people from breaking law -punishment should fit crime and be proportional to harm done to society -to be effective punishment should be swift and certain
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 15

Questão
Examples of Classical School Thinking in modern CJS: 1. [blank_start]Codification of Criminal Offences[blank_end] - list of possible penalties/sentences for violation of law 2. [blank_start]Presumption of Innocence[blank_end]- right to fair trial, to know the case 3. [blank_start]Legal Concepts of Mens Rea[blank_end]- (Criminal Intent) 4. [blank_start]Contemporary Prisons[blank_end]- notion of imprisonment as form of punishment
Responda
  • Codification of Criminal Offences
  • Presumption of Innocence
  • Legal Concepts of Mens Rea
  • Contemporary Prisons

Questão 16

Questão
Early Biological Theories:
Responda
  • Physiognomy- facial features could reveal inner characteristics (deceitfulness)
  • Psychiatry- increasing interest in moral insanity (psychopathology)
  • Phrenology- abnormalities in shape of skull indicative of morality and intelligence
  • psychology- notion of psychological thought in terms of our actions

Questão 17

Questão
Cesare Lombroso (father of modern criminology) first to systematically apply scientific method to study of criminality concluded that criminals were:
Responda
  • Activists
  • Atavictic- degenerate (features like apes - retreating foreheads, large ears, etc.)
  • ugly

Questão 18

Questão
Enrico Ferri coined term "Born Criminal" - concept described the biologically determined criminal
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 19

Questão
different offenders had different stigmata: e.g. robbers have small, shifting, quick moving eyes deviant women were almost always : brunette, masculine, heavy eyebrows & thin lips
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 20

Questão
Phrenology sought to determine an indvidiuals:
Responda
  • character & personality traits
  • mental & moral faculties
  • criminality based on shape of their head
  • brains & brain activity
  • smaller brains have greater activity
  • promised to explain every form of criminal behaviour (serial killers etc.)

Questão 21

Questão
Lombrosos scientific method was flawed because:
Responda
  • control groups were poorly chosen
  • control groups were too small
  • statistical techniques were crude
  • measurements were sloppy
  • assumed those in prison were criminals (free people were not)
  • control groups were too large

Questão 22

Questão
this involved objectively mapping the relationship between human physique, personality & criminal propensity:
Responda
  • Criminology
  • Somatotyping
  • criminological studies
  • theories of crime

Questão 23

Questão
[blank_start]Somatotyping[blank_end] involved mapping the relationship between human physique, personality & criminal propensity Linked 3 distinct body types with behavioural dispositions: -The [blank_start]Asthenic[blank_end] (skinny, frail & weak) -The [blank_start]Athletic[blank_end] (muscular) -The [blank_start]Pyknic[blank_end] (short & round) Devised 3 Typifications: (a) [blank_start]Ectomorph[blank_end]-lean, fragile, introspective, sensitive, nervous (b) [blank_start]Mesomorph[blank_end] - hard, muscular, rectangular, restless, energetic, insensitive (c)[blank_start]Endomorph[blank_end] - soft, round, easygoing, sociable, self-indulgent
Responda
  • Somatotyping
  • criminology
  • behavioural psychologists
  • Asthenic
  • athletics
  • authentic
  • Athletic
  • Athlete
  • asthenic
  • Pyknic
  • picknic
  • fat
  • Ectomorph
  • ectamorph
  • mesamorph
  • Mesomorph
  • metamorphosis
  • Endomorph
  • endamorph
  • Mesomorph

Questão 24

Questão
delinquents possessed a mesomorphically dominant somatotype
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 25

Questão
The XYY genotypes:
Responda
  • 7 of 197 inmates of prison for mental disabilities and dangerous violent criminal propensities were XYY
  • XXY syndrome - might predispose men toward deviant behaviour
  • the XYY genotype was a kind of super-masculine- super male
  • syndrome linked to aggression, psychosis, sexual deviancy, criminal offending

Questão 26

Questão
[blank_start]Free will[blank_end]: -[blank_start]classical[blank_end] school -humans born [blank_start]without[blank_end] instincts -individuals make rational choices -crime is violation of social contract -solution to crime is [blank_start]deterrence[blank_end] [blank_start]Determinism[blank_end]: -[blank_start]Positivist[blank_end] school -behaviour determined by inherited genetic makeup -crime is caused by disease ([blank_start]medical model[blank_end]) -solution to crime is [blank_start]treatment[blank_end]
Responda
  • Free will
  • determinism
  • classical criminology
  • positive psychology
  • classical
  • behavioural
  • genetic
  • positive
  • without
  • with
  • with heightened
  • deterrence
  • retribution
  • revenge
  • medication
  • Determinism
  • free will
  • detention
  • Positivist
  • classical
  • psychological
  • medical model
  • medical perspective
  • biological issues
  • treatment
  • retribution
  • detention
  • deterrence

Questão 27

Questão
Emile Durkheim:
Responda
  • was highly critical of early positivist school
  • says all societies have crime, a certain amount must be normal
  • objected the idea of criminality as disease
  • originator of differential association theory

Questão 28

Questão
Edwin Sutherland:
Responda
  • sociologist
  • argued criminal behaviour was learned through interaction with social environment (differential association theory)
  • coined "white collar crime"
  • french

Questão 29

Questão
[blank_start]Conflict[blank_end]: -society, its laws, and legal system are rooted in social, political and economic conflict -those who have wealth and power get to decide what will be against the law & who will be targeted by legal authorities [blank_start]Consensus[blank_end]: -society and its laws are rooted in shared values & beliefs -society is viewed as a natural, organic entity that works to benefit all of its constituents -those who behave in a socially unacceptable manner are regarded as deviant or criminal (subject to punishment, incapacitation, or treatment)
Responda
  • Conflict
  • Consensus
  • Correctional
  • Corrections
  • consensus
  • conflict
  • choices
  • critical thinking

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