Exam 4: Enlightenment and Early Traditions
Exam 1: Introduction14 Questions
Exam 2: Histories of Crime16 Questions
Exam 3: Researching Crime19 Questions
Exam 4: Enlightenment and Early Traditions10 Questions
Exam 5: Early Sociological Thinking About Crime10 Questions
Exam 6: Radicalizing Traditions: Marxism, Feminism and Foucault10 Questions
Exam 7: Crime, Social Theory and Social Change11 Questions
Exam 8: Crime, Place and Space20 Questions
Exam 9: Victims and Victimization14 Questions
Exam 10: Life Course Criminology10 Questions
Exam 11: Theft, Fraud and Other Property Crimes9 Questions
Exam 12: Crime, Sexuality and Gender10 Questions
Exam 13: Crime, the Emotions and Social Psychology10 Questions
Exam 14: Organised Crime10 Questions
Exam 15: Corporate Crime and Crimes of the Powerful11 Questions
Exam 16: Drugs, Alcohol, Health and Crime9 Questions
Exam 17: Thinking About Punishment10 Questions
Exam 18: The Criminal Justice Process11 Questions
Exam 19: The Police and Policing10 Questions
Exam 20: Prisons and Imprisonment10 Questions
Exam 21: Green Criminology and Environmental Crime10 Questions
Exam 22: Crime and Media11 Questions
Exam 23: Digital Criminology and Cybercrime10 Questions
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Beccaria started to develop his ideas in a classic text. What was this called?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
B
Sociologist Peter Hamilton (1996) has suggested that the ´Enlightenment mind' valued ten features: which of these five is not one of them?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
A, B, C
The ´Back to Justice model suggested by Von Hirsch and his colleagues claimed that ´The severity of punishment should be commensurate with the seriousness of the wrong´ (Von Hirsch, 1976: 66), arguing that which of these should apply?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
A, C, D, E
Although Lombroso's experimental work was flawed he is still credited with re-focusing criminological thinking from the workings of the criminal law to an understanding of the criminal what?
(Multiple Choice)
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Cesare Lombroso (1796-1874) was a leading nineteenth-century statistician. Developing a theory of social mechanics, he believed that statistical research could outline the average features of a population, and that it would hence be possible to discover the underlying regularities for both normal and abnormal behaviour.
(True/False)
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Classicism had much less of a focus on the criminal per se and it had little concern with establishing the causes of crime.
(True/False)
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David Matza, in an opening chapter of his classic book, Delinquency and Drift (1964) summarized the positivist view (of which he was very critical) using three of the following:
(Multiple Choice)
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Bentham argued that punishments should be calculated to inflict pain in direct proportion to what?
(Multiple Choice)
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The view that human beings have ´free will´ - human actions are not simply determined by inside or outside ´forces´ but result from freely made personal decisions. What does this mean for the study of criminology?
(Essay)
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