Exam 6: Classicism and Positivism
Positivism is based on the premise that:
A,B,C,D,E
What were the four classes of criminal identified by Ferri's fellow Italian academic, Garofalo?
Like Ferri he was convinced of the importance of scientific methodology to the study of crime. he introduced the notion of 'natural crime', which was defined by two essential characteristics: offending the moral sentiment of pity (revulsion against the voluntary infliction of suffering on others) and probity (respect for others' property rights) He then identified four classes of criminal: the murderer (in whom altruism is wholly lacking); the violent criminal (characterised by a lack of pity); thieves (characterised by a lack of probity) and, finally, lascivious criminals such as some sexual offenders (characterised by a low level of moral energy and deficient moral perception) Garofalo worked very much in the positivist tradition. He was convinced of the importance of scientific method, and was much more concerned with social interests than individual rights.
At the heart of the classical school of criminological thought is the assumption that the criminal is someone exercising free will and rationality.
True
Early biological theories of criminality focused on physical attributes and appearance. In particular, criminality was associated with abnormality or defectiveness, the assumption being that it was those that were somehow biologically inferior who were most likely to become involved in deviant activities.
Taking forward Lombroso's work, Ferri concentrated more widely on other factors. What were these?
What was at the heart of Bentham's writing on preventing crime?
Much of Beccaria's approach to the prevention of crime is often distilled down to three ideas: that it is fundamentally a product of:
Systems of punishment for much of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were bloody and cruel; they rested on ideas of:
Women were held by Lombroso and Ferrero (Lombroso's son-in-law) to be less advanced from their primitive origins than men and, consequently, to be morally more deficient and have greater evil tendencies than men.
Where did Bentham believe his proposed prison, the 'panopticon' should be built?
Positivism aimed to eliminate crime using newly emerging scientific methods.
The early positivist school of criminology focused much more strongly on factors and features to explain criminal behaviour such as those:
Classical criminology proceeded from the assumption of free will and, consequently, assumed that criminal activity was the result of:
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