Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Criminal Justice ch. 4-6
Criminal Justice ch. 4-6
40
Criminal Justice
Undergraduate 1
10/28/2012

Additional Criminal Justice Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What is the cause of crime according to biological theories?
Definition

 

The cause of crime according to biological theories is that criminals are physiologically different from noncriminals. Criminals behave differently because structurally they are different.

 

Term
What is the cause of crime according to biological theories?
Definition
The cause of crime according to biological theories is that criminals are physiologically different from noncriminals. Criminals behave differently because structurally they are different.
Term
What were Lombroso’s ideas concerning the death penalty?
Definition
Lombroso was for the death penalty. He thought that Italy’s abolition of the death penalty was a mistake.
Term
. Is chemical castration currently a sentencing/crime prevention option?
Definition
Yes many states have adopted some form of chemical castration that may be used on sex offenders
Term
Who is the father of criminology?
Definition
Cesare Lomboso
Term
What are the key propositions of phrenology?
Definition
1. The exterior of the brain conforms to the shape of the brain
2. The “mind” consists of faculties of function
3. The faculties are related to the shape of the brain and skull.
4. The size of the faculty organs determines the strength in which each faculty is manifested
5. Each organ is considered engaged either independently or collectively.
Term
What theory is associated with William Sheldon?
Definition
Associated with body type theories
Term
Know the different somatotypes and examples?
Definition
 1. Endomorph – soft, fat, a comfortable person who loves luxury and is an extrovert
 2. Mesomorph – athletically built, muscular, with more active, assertive and aggressive temperament
 3. Ectomorph – tall, lean, delicate, fragile and introverted and shy
Term
What family was used in the family tree research?
Definition
Juke Family
Term
What is an atavist?
Definition
Someone who exhibits the characteristics of a primitive human being.
Term
What were the different methodologies in chapter 4 to study biologically related crime?
Definition
The different methods were physiognomy, phrenology, anthropology, body type, heredity
Term
Who wrote physinomical fragments?
Definition
Johann Lavater
Term
What were Lombosos beliefs concerning victim compensation, paying for imprisonment?
Definition
He was for the offender paying the victim or working to pay the victim and believed recidivist should get harsher punishments
Term
Explain in detail how adoption studies were used to measure crime tendencies?
Definition
The adoption study took criminal records of adopted boys and compared them to the records of their biological and adoptive fathers. The studies showed that the percentage of boys who were criminal was greater when their fathers were also criminal versus their stepfather being criminal. However an even larger percentage were criminal if both fathers had a criminal record.
Term
Does IQ play a part in controlling ones impulses?
Definition
No
Term
What was the primary lesson from the Stafford prison experiment?
Definition
The primary lesson is that situational and systematic factors influence good people to do evil things more so than individual or dispositional factors.
Term
According to Freud what caused little boys to repress their feeling for their mother.
Definition
Because they are afraid that their father will get jealous and castrate them.
Term
What is the upper threshold used by Goddard to identify feeblemindedness?
Definition
He set the upper threshold at 12 (IQ of 75)
Term
Who was first to promote IQ and crime in the US
Definition
H.H. Goddard
Term
What percent of human genetics is identical?
Definition
99%
Term
Freud is most associated with what type of theories?
Definition
Psychoanalytic theories
Term
Know frueds three parts of the mind and what they are responsible for?
Definition
Superego – Your source of morality (your conscience)
Id – The source of you instinctual sexual and aggression drives
Ego – The part of the mind that mediates between the individual and reality
Term
Who conducted the Stafford prison experiment?
Definition
Phillip Zimbardo
Term
Explain how migration causes different races.
Definition
The further north they went, the more they encountered different climates and geographies that required different skills and lifestyles
Term
5 stages of psycho-sexual development and the type of crime of each?
Definition
1. Oral stage alcoholism/ drug addiction
2. Anal stage embezzlement/armed robbery
3. Phallic stage rape/prostitution
4. Latency stage no crime reference
5. Genital stage homosexuality/prostitution
Term
Essay- 5 levels of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs?
Definition
1. Physiological needs (food, water, procreational sex)
2. Safety (Security, stability, freedom from fear)
3. Belongingness and love
4. Self-esteem (self-esteem and the esteem of others)
5. Need for self-actualization (being everything you are capable of being, being true to your nature)
Term
Collective conscious
Definition
the shared beliefs that unify a society
Term
Strain
Definition
feelings or emotions an individual experiences
Term
Defensible space
Definition
a model for residential environments designed to inhibit criminality through a range of mechanisms.
Term
Do funmctionist want to prevent crime?
Definition
They do not want to prevent crime only contain it within acceptable boundaries.
Term
Different problems with the routine activities theory
Definition
One problem is that it suggests all people will commit crime unless curbed to do so. It doesn’t specify which routine activities affect crime and it is critisized for only being applicable to ordinary crime.
Term
According to Durkheim what is the cause of crime?
Definition
Durkheim associates crime with anomie or the social breakdown of norms.
Term
. What percentage of kids in Chicago’s worse neiborhoods had criminal records?
Definition
20 percent
Term
The Chicago school found which zones to have the highest rates?
Definition
Zone 2
Term
Know the criticisms of the Chicago school?
Definition
1. Spurious relationship between the detachment from conventional group and delinquency
2. Not all inner city neighborhoods are disorganized
3. Over-prediction
4. Use of official police records
5. Circular reasoning
Term
Which theorist is associated with the Situational crime prevention?
Definition
Ronald Clarke
Term
According to Merton how do most people adapt to anomie?
Definition
Most people adapt by conforming
Term
Different sources of strain?
Definition
1. Loss of positively valued stimuli
2. Experience negative or noxious stimuli
3. Failing to achieve highly valued goals
Term
Know the different functions of crime?
Definition
1. It marks the boundaries of morality
2. Crime unites law abiding people
3. Crime provides a means of achieving necessary social change
Term
ESSAY- Three factors that make up the routine activities theory?
Definition
1. Motivated offenders – teenage boys, unemployed people, drug addicts
2. Suitable target – unlocked homes, cars
3. The absence of a capable guardian – absence of police officer, home owner, security system
Supporting users have an ad free experience!