Shared Flashcard Set

Details

criminology exam 1
na
25
Criminology
Undergraduate 4
09/22/2016

Additional Criminology Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Quetelet's 3 chief causes of crime
Definition
1. accidental causes, such as wars, famines, and natural disasters
2.variable causes, such as, free will and personality, that can oscillate between greater or smaller limits
3. constant causes, such as, gender, age, occupation, and religion
Term
Quetelet
Definition
Claimed society itself caused crime. eventually claimed crime was contagious and sometimes hereditary
32
Term
National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)
Definition
used to understand more about the volume and rate of crime. They examine representative samples of a general population in an attempt to discover what crimes have been experienced in a given period. -ability to discover info on crimes not reported to the police
Term
Eugenics
Definition
was hoped to be used to eliminate a broad spectrum of social undesirables. Including the physically unfit, alcoholics, the very poor, the morally and mentally depraved, and habitual criminals
Term
Positive eugenics
Definition
suggested that middle and upper classes should be provided with incentives to intermarry and produce offspring on the grounds that ordinarily only in these strata were intelligent and hard-working citizens found.
Term
Negative eugenics
Definition
demanded that socially undesirables be isolated, sterilized, or occasionally castrated, because their useless offspring were a drain on national resources.
Term
Forms of social control
Definition
1. Penal
2. Compensatory
3. Therapeutic
4. Conciliatory
Term
Penal form of social control
Definition
the problem is to establish guilt when an offender has violated a prohibition, and the solution is punishment.
Term
Compensatory form of social control
Definition
a person considered to have a contractual obligation and, therefore, owes the victim restitution.
Term
Therapeutic form of social control
Definition
a deviant’s conduct is defined as abnormal; the person needs help such as treatment by a psychiatrist.
Term
Conciliatory form of social control
Definition
deviant behavior represents one side of a social conflict in need of resolution without consideration as to who is right or who is wrong (example-marital disputes)
Term
Mala in se
Definition
acts that are evil in themselves
Term
Uniform Crime Report
Definition
National level database on crime pioneered in France
Term
Civil Law
Definition
(private law) consists of body of rules and procedures intended to govern the conduct of individuals in their relationship with others. (Violations of civil statues, called torts, are private wrongs for which the injured individuals may seek redress in the courts for the harm he/she experienced)
Term
Uniform Crime Report Part I offenses
Definition
omicide; forcible rape; robbery; aggravated assault; burglary; larceny-theft; motor vehicle theft; arson
Term
Uniform Crime Report Part II offenses
Definition
other assaults; embezzlement; loitering and curfew offenses; drug violations, sex offenses; driving under the influence; fraud; gambling; vandalism; vagrancy; prostitution; forgery and counterfeiting; disorderly conduc
Term
Problems with the UCR
Definition
- Unreported crime and chances of over or under-reporting
- Does not cover all police departments or federal crimes or drug offenses
- Possibility of misrepresentation
Term
Functionalism
Definition
•The influence of the social structure on human behavior
•Nature of solidarity defines a society
Term
Bentham's 1st rule
Definition
the ultimate goal is the prevention of all crime. To achieve this goal, legislators should ensure that the pleasure derived from any crime always be outweighed by the pain inflicted by the punishment
Term
Bentham's 2nd rule
Definition
a person about to commit a crime should be persuaded by the very threat of punishment either not to commit that crime at all or to commit a lesser offense.
Term
Bentham's 3rd rule
Definition
A person who has actually decided to commit a crime should be persuaded by the threat of punishment to do no more mischief than is necessary. In no instance should punishment for a crime be more than is necessary to prevent its occurrence.
Term
Bentham's 4th rule
Definition
Legislators should try to prevent crime as cheaply as possible
Term
Classical crimonology
Definition
The ultimate aim was not to lessen punishment, but to make it more efficient and to ensure that its principles applied to everyone75
Term
Deterrence theory
Definition
The argument that deterrence, rather than retribution, is the main justification for punishment
Term
Criminal Procedure
Definition
The framework of laws and rules that govern the administration of justice in cases involving an individual who has been accused of a crime, beginning with the initial investigation of the crime and concluding either with the unconditional release of the accused by virtue of acquittal (a judgment of not guilty) or by the imposition of a term of punishment pursuant to a conviction for the crime.
Supporting users have an ad free experience!