Term
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Definition
People are social beings more than individuals. This means that society shapes their behavior, attitudes and life chances. |
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Term
How does perspective affect the defining of criminal actions? |
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Definition
Different societies or areas of a society view crimes differently. |
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Term
Define the Consensus Theory. |
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Definition
Durkheim, laws are based off of the CONSENSUS of public. Most people think killing is bad, make it illegal. |
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Term
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Definition
Laws are made by the rich and powerful to keep the gap between the rich and the poor as large as possible. |
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Term
RESEARCH METHODS:
Survey - ____________ |
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Definition
Administering a questionaire to a group of respondents. Usually the respondents are a random sample of the area / city / school. |
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Term
RESEARCH METHODS:
Experiments - _________ |
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Definition
Studies that take place in controlled environments. Usually using a test group and a control group. |
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Term
RESEARCH METHODS:
Interviewing - __________ |
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Definition
Interviewing criminal offenders. |
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Term
RESEARCH METHODS:
Research using existing data - _________ |
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Definition
Viewing, dissecting and combining previous data. Sometimes this is used to look at crimes in certain areas, sometimes it is used to place criminals in age, race or gender brackets. |
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Term
RESEARCH METHODS:
Historical Research - _______ |
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Definition
Used to find historical trends in crime. |
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Term
What is the difference between an "Independent Variable" and a "Dependant Variable"? |
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Definition
IV- Does the influencing.
DV- Is influenced. |
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Term
What is the criteria for causality? |
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Definition
IV and DV must be statistically related.
A must proceed B in time.
A relationship between A and B must not be spurious. |
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Term
Correlation does not equal... |
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Definition
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Term
What is the difference between Crime and Deviance? |
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Definition
Crime = breaking the law.
Deviance = breaking social norms.
Killing people is criminal.
Laughing maniacally in public places is deviant. |
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Term
What are the effects of media coverage? |
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Definition
- Public Ignorance
- Public fear and concern
- Stereotyping
- Perceptions of the police
- Seriousness of the crime
- Punitiveness of crim. sanctions
- CJ spending
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Term
The primary source of measuring crime statistics is... |
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Definition
The FBI's Uniform Crime Report (UCR) |
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Term
What is the Dark Figure of Crime? |
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Definition
Crimes not reported. About 60% of all crimes committed. |
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Term
What is a Part I offense? |
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Definition
Most serious crimes, murder, rape, robbery, agg. assault. |
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Term
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Definition
White collar, theft, vandalism, embezzlement, disorderly conduct, etc. |
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Term
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Definition
Women have lower crime rates than men. |
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Term
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Definition
Whites commit more crimes than blacks, but blacks commit a disproportionate amount of crime. |
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Term
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Definition
Most people arrested or street crimes are poorly educated with low incomes. |
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Term
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Definition
Crime peaks at ages 17 and 18 and then declines dramatically as age increases. |
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Term
What is the lifestyle theory and routine activities theory? |
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Definition
Lifestyle: Your lifestyle attributes to becoming a victim. Such as visiting nightclubs or bars.
Routine Activities: 1) The presence of an attractive target. 2) Presence of a likely offender. 3) The absence of guardianship. |
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Term
Explain the correlation between having a deviant lifestyle and the chances of becoming a victim. |
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Definition
Because criminals fear arrest, they will not report crimes against themselves. Example:
A prostitute is battered by one of her clients, she will not call the police because she fears she will be arrested for prostitution. |
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Term
Explain the Victim Precipitation Theory... |
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Definition
Victims have more control on being victims. Remove yourself from bad situations and you reduce the risk of being a victim. The victim actively initiates the encounter that leads them to becoming victims. |
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