Deck 7: Deviance

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Question
Walter Reckless and Simon Dinitz claimed that "good boys" have the ability to control deviant impulses. They called their approach

A) containment theory.
B) differential opportunity theory.
C) differential association theory.
D) personality theory.
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Question
Which of the following statements is consistent with the thinking of Emile Durkheim?

A) Police and courts are needed to stem the tide of deviance caused by selfish human nature.
B) Deviance affirms cultural values and norms.
C) Responding to deviance divides people in a community.
D) When people engage in deviance, this behavior erodes moral boundaries.
Question
Both Albert Cohen and Walter Miller argue that deviance is more likely to arise among

A) high-income males.
B) middle-income men and women.
C) low-income youths.
D) all class levels.
Question
"Crime" differs from "deviance" in that crime

A) involves a larger share of the population.
B) is a violation of norms enacted into law.
C) is always less serious.
D) is always more serious.
Question
The value of psychological theories of deviance is limited because

A) very few people experience an "unsuccessful socialization."
B) there has been very little research of this kind.
C) there is no way to distinguish "normal" from "abnormal" people in psychological terms.
D) most people who commit crimes have normal personalities.
Question
Assume you were listening to a lecture on Durkheim's approach to deviance. Which of the following statements might well be the focus of the lecture?

A) Deviance is a normal element of social organization.
B) Deviance is a dysfunctional element of social organization.
C) Deviance is less common in modern societies than in traditional societies.
D) Deviance is defined by the rich and used against the poor.
Question
Every society regulates the thoughts and behavior of individuals. This process of regulation is called

A) social control.
B) childhood socialization.
C) neighborhood watch.
D) the legal system.
Question
Which of the following sociological terms refers to the recognized violation of cultural norms?

A) crime
B) juvenile delinquency
C) unsuccessful socialization
D) deviance
Question
"Crime" differs from "deviance" in that crime

A) refers to a much wider range of behavior.
B) is a violation of norms enacted into law.
C) is always less harmful.
D) is always more harmful.
Question
The basic idea behind labeling theory is that

A) deviance arises not so much from what people
B) deviance is actually useful in a number of ways.
C) power has much to do with how a society do as how others respond to what they do. defines deviance.
D) All of the above are correct.
Question
In legal terms, a crime is composed of which two components?

A) the act and the intent
B) a criminal and a victim
C) the act and the social harm
D) the law and the violation
Question
Based on your reading, it would be correct to say that biological approaches offer

A) a good explanation of only property crime.
B) a good explanation of only violent crime.
C) a good explanation of all crimes.
D) a very limited understanding of crime.
Question
Read the following statements about the social foundation of deviance. Which statement is NOT correct?

A) Norms and the way people define rule breaking involve differences in social power.
B) People become deviant as others define them that way.
C) Most acts that are deviant in one place are deviant everywhere.
D) Deviance exists only in relation to cultural norms.
Question
What does Chapter 7's opening story say about Bruce Glover's release from prison after serving twenty-six years?

A) Glover was wrongly convicted of a crime.
B) Glover immediately was arrested for a new crime.
C) Long cut off from the outside world, Glover had few resources with which to begin a new life.
D) Glover immediately became a celebrity and soon was making a high income.
Question
Criminal statistics gathered by the Federal Bureau of Investigation reflect

A) all crimes that take place.
B) offenses cleared by arrest.
C) offenses resulting in a criminal conviction.
D) offenses known to the police.
Question
Read the following four statements. Which comes closest to the correct view of the role of biology in causing people to commit crimes?

A) Genetics research has succeeded in explaining most criminality.
B) Biological factors may have a real but small effect in causing some people to commit crimes.
C) Lombroso proved a century ago that biological factors are a major cause of crime.
D) Males with one particular body type commit most serious crimes. (Applied;
Question
Which of the following concepts refers to the formal system that responds to alleged violations of the law using police, courts, and prison officials?

A) socialization
B) civil law
C) the criminal justice system
D) the normative system
Question
Which of the following illustrates the "medicalization of deviance"?

A) promiscuity being redefined as a "sexual
B) drinking too much being redefined as "alcoholism"
C) theft being redefined as a "compulsive addiction" disorder"
D) All of the above are correct.
Question
Research suggests that, with regard to social class, arrest for violent and property crime

A) is about the same for people of all class levels.
B) is higher for people in lower class levels.
C) is higher for people in higher class levels.
D) almost always involves middle-class people.
Question
In his study of New England Puritans, Kai Erikson concluded that

A) people everywhere define mostly the same things as deviant.
B) very religious people create very little deviance.
C) even this disciplined and highly religious group created deviance to clarify moral boundaries.
D) the proportion of people in the population that the Puritans defined as deviant kept rising over time.
Question
Thomas Szasz made the controversial assertion that

A) our society does far too little to treat mentally ill people.
B) mental illness is a myth; "insanity" amounts to differences that bother other people.
C) most people in the United States have been or will become insane for some period of time.
D) deviance is only what people label as deviant.
Question
Whether people respond to deviance as a moral or medical matter affects which of the following?

A) who responds--police or medical personnel
B) whether the person is subject to punishment or treatment
C) how personally competent the person is assumed to be.
D) All of the above are correct
Question
Edwin Sutherland's differential association theory links deviance to

A) the amount of contact a person has with others who encourage or discourage the behavior in question.
B) how officials define a person's behavior.
C) how others respond to the race, class, or gender of some individuals.
D) how able a person is to contain deviant impulses.
Question
Using the terms of Robert Merton's strain theory, which of the following terms would correctly describe a gangster like Al Capone who made a lot of money breaking the law?

A) innovation
B) ritualism
C) retreatism
D) rebellion
Question
According to the social-conflict approach, what a society labels as deviant is based mostly on

A) the moral values of the culture.
B) patterns of inequality and which categories of people have more power.
C) how harmful the act is to the public as a whole.
D) how often certain acts occur.
Question
Richard Cloward and Lloyd Ohlin extended Merton's theory of deviance by stating that crime

A) is typically a result of drug dependence or other substance addiction.
B) is defined in such a way as to overly criminalize the poor.
C) is more common among the rich who have more resources.
D) reflects not only limited legitimate opportunity but also accessible illegitimate opportunity.
Question
The basic idea behind labeling theory is that

A) deviance arises not so much from what people do as how others respond to what they do.
B) deviance is actually useful in a number of ways.
C) people rarely define even harmful wrongdoing as deviance.
D) power has much to do with how a society defines deviance.
Question
According to Robert Merton's strain theory, which of the following concepts correctly describes people, including alcoholics and drug addicts, who "drop out" of society?

A) ritualist
B) innovator
C) rebel
D) retreatist
Question
Travis Hirschi's control theory suggests which of the following categories of people would be most likely to engage in deviance?

A) young people who respect their parents and try to please them
B) youngsters who "hang out" on the corner waiting for something to happen
C) teenage athletes with after-school jobs
D) students enrolled in college
Question
The concept "retrospective labeling" refers to the process of

A) predicting that someone will become deviant at some point in the future.
B) delinquent children growing into criminal adults.
C) defining someone as deviant for things done long before.
D) interpreting someone's past as consistent with present deviance.
Question
Both Albert Cohen and Walter Miller argue that deviance is most likely to arise among

A) high-income males.
B) middle-class men and women.
C) low-income youths.
D) women at all class levels.
Question
The "Seeing Sociology in the News" article in Chapter 7 ("Deviance") claims that one factor that has pushed up the rate of crime, especially high-tech crime, is

A) parents who do not monitor their children after school.
B) the spread of soft drugs to the suburbs.
C) the recent economic recession.
D) layoffs by police departments reducing patrols.
Question
Edwin Lemert described "primary deviance" as

A) a passing episode of deviance that has little effect on the person's self-concept.
B) actions that parents or other family members define as seriously deviant.
C) the most serious episodes of deviance.
D) the experience of deviance early in life.
Question
Which of the following illustrates the "medicalization of deviance"?

A) a career criminal being required by prison officials to attend counseling
B) an older woman drinking more and more after losing a job
C) a girl's sexual activity being redefined by her psychologist as a "sexual addiction"
D) violence in the home by a man who abuses a prescription drug
Question
Participating in the subculture that Elijah Anderson describes as "the code of the street" raises the risk that young people will end up

A) conforming to conventional morality.
B) in jail or worse.
C) doing better than their parents.
D) having a career in law enforcement.
Question
Which of the following is Erving Goffman's concept that refers to a powerful and negative label that greatly changes a person's self-concept and social identity?

A) degradation ceremony
B) deviant ritual
C) stigma
D) secondary identity
Question
Using a Marxist approach, Steven Spitzer claims that a capitalist society is likely to label which of the following categories of people as deviant?

A) people who spend most of their time working hard to support their families
B) the rich in relation to the poor
C) people who get along with others and "play the game"
D) radicals who call for basic change in capitalistic society itself
Question
Alexander Liazos speaks for the social-conflict approach when he states that

A) powerless people are at the highest risk of being defined as deviant.
B) deviance has both functions and dysfunctions.
C) deviance exists only in the eye of the beholder.
D) society should ignore victimless crime.
Question
When friends began to criticize Juan as a "boozer," pushing him out of their social circle, he became bitter and began to drink even more. Juan ended up joining a new group of friends, all of whom are all heavy drinkers. According to Edwin Lemert, this situation illustrates

A) the onset of primary deviance.
B) the onset of secondary deviance.
C) the formation of a deviant subculture.
D) the process of retreatism.
Question
According to Robert Merton's strain theory, which of the following concepts correctly describes the behavior of a radical who rejects cultural goals and means in favor of some alternative system?

A) retreatism
B) rebellion
C) innovation
D) ritualism
Question
Victimization surveys show that the actual amount of crime in the United States is about_____________ what official reports indicate.

A) ten times greater than
B) twice as high as
C) the same as
D) half of
Question
The recent Wall Street scandals, such as Bernard Madoff's swindling thousands of people out of billions of dollars, are examples of

A) organized crime.
B) corporate crime.
C) primary deviance.
D) secondary deviance.
Question
Organized crime refers to

A) illegal actions by people with white-collar jobs.
B) illegal actions on the part of a corporation or large business.
C) crime involving cooperation between two or more large businesses.
D) any business that supplies illegal goods or services.
Question
Of all the serious crimes discussed in Chapter 7,______ occurs far more frequently than all the others.

A) motor-vehicle theft
B) larceny-theft
C) robbery
D) forcible rape
Question
A hate crime is defined as

A) any violation of federal, state, or local anti-discrimination laws.
B) a criminal act motivated by racial or other bias.
C) any crime involving powerful emotions.
D) any crime targeting a member of a minority.
Question
Which of the following terms refers to the illegal actions of a corporation or people acting on its behalf?

A) hate crime
B) capitalist crime
C) corporate crime
D) organized crime
Question
Prostitution is widely regarded as one example of

A) victimless crime.
B) corporate crime.
C) crime against the person.
D) crime against property.
Question
The category "crimes against property" includes all but one of the following. Which one is NOT included?

A) larceny-theft
B) arson
C) burglary
D) robbery
Question
Gender figures into the study of deviance because

A) most researchers in this area are women.
B) most of the people arrested for serious crimes in the United States are women.
C) every society in the world applies stronger normative controls to females than to males.
D) All of the above are correct.
Question
In legal terms, a crime is composed of which two elements?

A) a criminal and a victim
B) the act and criminal intent
C) the offender and the public
D) the act and the social harm
Question
Mike reports that his dirt bike was stolen from the front yard of his house. The police would record this as which of the following types of crime?

A) burglary
B) robbery
C) larceny-theft
D) auto-theft
Question
Edwin Sutherland stated that white-collar crime

A) is more likely to be resolved in a civil rather than a criminal court.
B) rarely involves serious harm to the public as a whole.
C) almost always leads to a criminal conviction.
D) provokes a strong response from the community.
Question
In terms of race and ethnicity, most people arrested for violent crime in the United States are

A) Latino.
B) African American.
C) people of mixed race.
D) white.
Question
In the United States, men account for about_______ of all arrests for violent crime.

A) 82 percent
B) 62 percent
C) 42 percent
D) 22 percent
Question
Research suggests that, with regard to social class, arrest for serious crime

A) is about the same for people of all class levels.
B) is higher for people in higher class levels.
C) is higher for people in lower class levels.
D) almost always involves middle-class people.
Question
The likelihood a person will be arrested for a street crime rises sharply

A) during the forties.
B) during the middle thirties.
C) in the late twenties.
D) during the late teenage years.
Question
Criminal statistics gathered by the Federal Bureau of Investigation reflect

A) only offenses cleared by arrest.
B) all crimes that take place.
C) only offenses known to the police.
D) only offenses resulting in a criminal conviction.
Question
Which of the following concepts refers to crime committed by persons of high social position in the course of doing their jobs?

A) street crime
B) organized crime
C) white-collar crime
D) victimless crime
Question
Men, who represent about half the U.S. population, account for about_______ of all arrests for property crime.

A) 85 percent
B) 65 percent
C) 45 percent
D) 25 percent
Question
_________is a legal term meaning "guilty mind" and refers to criminal intent.

A) Mens rea
B) Mea culpa
C) Homo sapiens
D) Habeas corpus
Question
The concept "criminal recidivism" refers to

A) the idea that crime "really does pay."
B) subsequent offenses by people previously convicted of crimes.
C) efforts by police to enlist help from a local community.
D) young people growing up in a "criminal" environment.
Question
In historical perspective, the oldest justification for punishing an offender is

A) rehabilitation.
B) social protection.
C) retribution.
D) deterrence.
Question
Biological factors, including genetics, offer a limited explanation of crime.
Question
What is considered deviant is mostly the same behavior all around the world.
Question
Caesare Lombroso, an Italian physician and early criminologist, claimed that most criminals were people who had been mistreated by society.
Question
If a parent threatens a child with punishment in order to discourage wrongdoing, the parent is using punishment to accomplish which of the following?

A) deterrence
B) retribution
C) social protection
D) rehabilitation
Question
The concept of due process refers to

A) the criminal justice system operating within the bounds of the law.
B) the idea that people get what they deserve.
C) the process of plea bargaining.
D) the obligation of all citizens to report crime.
Question
A judge orders that an offender be sentenced to prison for a short time, with most of the sentence served on probation. The sentence reflects a policy called

A) parole.
B) rehabilitation.
C) shock probation.
D) extended lockup.
Question
Because there are several hundred people in the United States for every police officer, police

A) cannot take time to ensure due process for suspects.
B) use personal judgment in deciding which situations warrant their attention.
C) ignore most crimes they learn about.
D) work, on average, far more hours than other workers.
Question
The only Western, high-income nation that routinely executes offenders convicted of serious crimes is

A) the United Kingdom.
B) Canada.
C) the United States.
D) France.
Question
Robert Merton claimed that the "strains of masculinity" are one important cause of crime.
Question
Surveys show that about_______ of U.S. adults support the death penalty as a punishment for murder.

A) 12 percent
B) 22 percent
C) 42 percent
D) 62 percent
Question
The death penalty

A) is legal in most states, but is actually carried out only in a few states.
B) was ruled unconstitutional in the United States in 2005.
C) is legal in all of the fifty states.
D) is being carried out more frequently as time goes on.
Question
Emile Durkheim's analysis suggests it would be impossible for a society to completely eliminate deviance.
Question
Walter Reckless and Simon Dinitz developed "containment theory," which claims that a strong conscience (or superego) helps boys stay out of trouble.
Question
Which of the following are advantages of community-based corrections?

A) reducing prison overcrowding
B) reducing costs of dealing with offenders
C) avoiding the hardships of prison life, including the stigma attached to being incarcerated
D) All of the above are correct.
Question
Most criminal cases brought to court in the United States are resolved

A) through a pre-sentence investigation.
B) with a trial judge deciding the case.
C) with a jury trial.
D) through plea bargaining.
Question
A judge sentences a young man who has committed several crimes to counseling and places him in a supportive foster home. Which of the following concepts describes these efforts to prevent further wrongdoing?

A) retribution
B) deterrence
C) social protection
D) rehabilitation
Question
Crime is only one type of deviance.
Question
According to Elliot Currie, factors that explain why the United States has a high crime rate by world standards include

A) having too few police officers.
B) an emphasis on individualism and economic success, which weakens families and neighborhoods.
C) our cultural homogeneity.
D) a lack of public interest in punishing offenders.
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Deck 7: Deviance
1
Walter Reckless and Simon Dinitz claimed that "good boys" have the ability to control deviant impulses. They called their approach

A) containment theory.
B) differential opportunity theory.
C) differential association theory.
D) personality theory.
A
2
Which of the following statements is consistent with the thinking of Emile Durkheim?

A) Police and courts are needed to stem the tide of deviance caused by selfish human nature.
B) Deviance affirms cultural values and norms.
C) Responding to deviance divides people in a community.
D) When people engage in deviance, this behavior erodes moral boundaries.
Deviance affirms cultural values and norms.
3
Both Albert Cohen and Walter Miller argue that deviance is more likely to arise among

A) high-income males.
B) middle-income men and women.
C) low-income youths.
D) all class levels.
C
4
"Crime" differs from "deviance" in that crime

A) involves a larger share of the population.
B) is a violation of norms enacted into law.
C) is always less serious.
D) is always more serious.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The value of psychological theories of deviance is limited because

A) very few people experience an "unsuccessful socialization."
B) there has been very little research of this kind.
C) there is no way to distinguish "normal" from "abnormal" people in psychological terms.
D) most people who commit crimes have normal personalities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Assume you were listening to a lecture on Durkheim's approach to deviance. Which of the following statements might well be the focus of the lecture?

A) Deviance is a normal element of social organization.
B) Deviance is a dysfunctional element of social organization.
C) Deviance is less common in modern societies than in traditional societies.
D) Deviance is defined by the rich and used against the poor.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Every society regulates the thoughts and behavior of individuals. This process of regulation is called

A) social control.
B) childhood socialization.
C) neighborhood watch.
D) the legal system.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Which of the following sociological terms refers to the recognized violation of cultural norms?

A) crime
B) juvenile delinquency
C) unsuccessful socialization
D) deviance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
"Crime" differs from "deviance" in that crime

A) refers to a much wider range of behavior.
B) is a violation of norms enacted into law.
C) is always less harmful.
D) is always more harmful.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The basic idea behind labeling theory is that

A) deviance arises not so much from what people
B) deviance is actually useful in a number of ways.
C) power has much to do with how a society do as how others respond to what they do. defines deviance.
D) All of the above are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
In legal terms, a crime is composed of which two components?

A) the act and the intent
B) a criminal and a victim
C) the act and the social harm
D) the law and the violation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Based on your reading, it would be correct to say that biological approaches offer

A) a good explanation of only property crime.
B) a good explanation of only violent crime.
C) a good explanation of all crimes.
D) a very limited understanding of crime.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Read the following statements about the social foundation of deviance. Which statement is NOT correct?

A) Norms and the way people define rule breaking involve differences in social power.
B) People become deviant as others define them that way.
C) Most acts that are deviant in one place are deviant everywhere.
D) Deviance exists only in relation to cultural norms.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
What does Chapter 7's opening story say about Bruce Glover's release from prison after serving twenty-six years?

A) Glover was wrongly convicted of a crime.
B) Glover immediately was arrested for a new crime.
C) Long cut off from the outside world, Glover had few resources with which to begin a new life.
D) Glover immediately became a celebrity and soon was making a high income.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Criminal statistics gathered by the Federal Bureau of Investigation reflect

A) all crimes that take place.
B) offenses cleared by arrest.
C) offenses resulting in a criminal conviction.
D) offenses known to the police.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Read the following four statements. Which comes closest to the correct view of the role of biology in causing people to commit crimes?

A) Genetics research has succeeded in explaining most criminality.
B) Biological factors may have a real but small effect in causing some people to commit crimes.
C) Lombroso proved a century ago that biological factors are a major cause of crime.
D) Males with one particular body type commit most serious crimes. (Applied;
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Which of the following concepts refers to the formal system that responds to alleged violations of the law using police, courts, and prison officials?

A) socialization
B) civil law
C) the criminal justice system
D) the normative system
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which of the following illustrates the "medicalization of deviance"?

A) promiscuity being redefined as a "sexual
B) drinking too much being redefined as "alcoholism"
C) theft being redefined as a "compulsive addiction" disorder"
D) All of the above are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Research suggests that, with regard to social class, arrest for violent and property crime

A) is about the same for people of all class levels.
B) is higher for people in lower class levels.
C) is higher for people in higher class levels.
D) almost always involves middle-class people.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In his study of New England Puritans, Kai Erikson concluded that

A) people everywhere define mostly the same things as deviant.
B) very religious people create very little deviance.
C) even this disciplined and highly religious group created deviance to clarify moral boundaries.
D) the proportion of people in the population that the Puritans defined as deviant kept rising over time.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Thomas Szasz made the controversial assertion that

A) our society does far too little to treat mentally ill people.
B) mental illness is a myth; "insanity" amounts to differences that bother other people.
C) most people in the United States have been or will become insane for some period of time.
D) deviance is only what people label as deviant.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Whether people respond to deviance as a moral or medical matter affects which of the following?

A) who responds--police or medical personnel
B) whether the person is subject to punishment or treatment
C) how personally competent the person is assumed to be.
D) All of the above are correct
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Edwin Sutherland's differential association theory links deviance to

A) the amount of contact a person has with others who encourage or discourage the behavior in question.
B) how officials define a person's behavior.
C) how others respond to the race, class, or gender of some individuals.
D) how able a person is to contain deviant impulses.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Using the terms of Robert Merton's strain theory, which of the following terms would correctly describe a gangster like Al Capone who made a lot of money breaking the law?

A) innovation
B) ritualism
C) retreatism
D) rebellion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
According to the social-conflict approach, what a society labels as deviant is based mostly on

A) the moral values of the culture.
B) patterns of inequality and which categories of people have more power.
C) how harmful the act is to the public as a whole.
D) how often certain acts occur.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Richard Cloward and Lloyd Ohlin extended Merton's theory of deviance by stating that crime

A) is typically a result of drug dependence or other substance addiction.
B) is defined in such a way as to overly criminalize the poor.
C) is more common among the rich who have more resources.
D) reflects not only limited legitimate opportunity but also accessible illegitimate opportunity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The basic idea behind labeling theory is that

A) deviance arises not so much from what people do as how others respond to what they do.
B) deviance is actually useful in a number of ways.
C) people rarely define even harmful wrongdoing as deviance.
D) power has much to do with how a society defines deviance.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
According to Robert Merton's strain theory, which of the following concepts correctly describes people, including alcoholics and drug addicts, who "drop out" of society?

A) ritualist
B) innovator
C) rebel
D) retreatist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Travis Hirschi's control theory suggests which of the following categories of people would be most likely to engage in deviance?

A) young people who respect their parents and try to please them
B) youngsters who "hang out" on the corner waiting for something to happen
C) teenage athletes with after-school jobs
D) students enrolled in college
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30
The concept "retrospective labeling" refers to the process of

A) predicting that someone will become deviant at some point in the future.
B) delinquent children growing into criminal adults.
C) defining someone as deviant for things done long before.
D) interpreting someone's past as consistent with present deviance.
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31
Both Albert Cohen and Walter Miller argue that deviance is most likely to arise among

A) high-income males.
B) middle-class men and women.
C) low-income youths.
D) women at all class levels.
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32
The "Seeing Sociology in the News" article in Chapter 7 ("Deviance") claims that one factor that has pushed up the rate of crime, especially high-tech crime, is

A) parents who do not monitor their children after school.
B) the spread of soft drugs to the suburbs.
C) the recent economic recession.
D) layoffs by police departments reducing patrols.
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33
Edwin Lemert described "primary deviance" as

A) a passing episode of deviance that has little effect on the person's self-concept.
B) actions that parents or other family members define as seriously deviant.
C) the most serious episodes of deviance.
D) the experience of deviance early in life.
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34
Which of the following illustrates the "medicalization of deviance"?

A) a career criminal being required by prison officials to attend counseling
B) an older woman drinking more and more after losing a job
C) a girl's sexual activity being redefined by her psychologist as a "sexual addiction"
D) violence in the home by a man who abuses a prescription drug
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35
Participating in the subculture that Elijah Anderson describes as "the code of the street" raises the risk that young people will end up

A) conforming to conventional morality.
B) in jail or worse.
C) doing better than their parents.
D) having a career in law enforcement.
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36
Which of the following is Erving Goffman's concept that refers to a powerful and negative label that greatly changes a person's self-concept and social identity?

A) degradation ceremony
B) deviant ritual
C) stigma
D) secondary identity
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37
Using a Marxist approach, Steven Spitzer claims that a capitalist society is likely to label which of the following categories of people as deviant?

A) people who spend most of their time working hard to support their families
B) the rich in relation to the poor
C) people who get along with others and "play the game"
D) radicals who call for basic change in capitalistic society itself
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38
Alexander Liazos speaks for the social-conflict approach when he states that

A) powerless people are at the highest risk of being defined as deviant.
B) deviance has both functions and dysfunctions.
C) deviance exists only in the eye of the beholder.
D) society should ignore victimless crime.
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39
When friends began to criticize Juan as a "boozer," pushing him out of their social circle, he became bitter and began to drink even more. Juan ended up joining a new group of friends, all of whom are all heavy drinkers. According to Edwin Lemert, this situation illustrates

A) the onset of primary deviance.
B) the onset of secondary deviance.
C) the formation of a deviant subculture.
D) the process of retreatism.
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40
According to Robert Merton's strain theory, which of the following concepts correctly describes the behavior of a radical who rejects cultural goals and means in favor of some alternative system?

A) retreatism
B) rebellion
C) innovation
D) ritualism
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41
Victimization surveys show that the actual amount of crime in the United States is about_____________ what official reports indicate.

A) ten times greater than
B) twice as high as
C) the same as
D) half of
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42
The recent Wall Street scandals, such as Bernard Madoff's swindling thousands of people out of billions of dollars, are examples of

A) organized crime.
B) corporate crime.
C) primary deviance.
D) secondary deviance.
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43
Organized crime refers to

A) illegal actions by people with white-collar jobs.
B) illegal actions on the part of a corporation or large business.
C) crime involving cooperation between two or more large businesses.
D) any business that supplies illegal goods or services.
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44
Of all the serious crimes discussed in Chapter 7,______ occurs far more frequently than all the others.

A) motor-vehicle theft
B) larceny-theft
C) robbery
D) forcible rape
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45
A hate crime is defined as

A) any violation of federal, state, or local anti-discrimination laws.
B) a criminal act motivated by racial or other bias.
C) any crime involving powerful emotions.
D) any crime targeting a member of a minority.
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46
Which of the following terms refers to the illegal actions of a corporation or people acting on its behalf?

A) hate crime
B) capitalist crime
C) corporate crime
D) organized crime
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47
Prostitution is widely regarded as one example of

A) victimless crime.
B) corporate crime.
C) crime against the person.
D) crime against property.
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48
The category "crimes against property" includes all but one of the following. Which one is NOT included?

A) larceny-theft
B) arson
C) burglary
D) robbery
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49
Gender figures into the study of deviance because

A) most researchers in this area are women.
B) most of the people arrested for serious crimes in the United States are women.
C) every society in the world applies stronger normative controls to females than to males.
D) All of the above are correct.
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50
In legal terms, a crime is composed of which two elements?

A) a criminal and a victim
B) the act and criminal intent
C) the offender and the public
D) the act and the social harm
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51
Mike reports that his dirt bike was stolen from the front yard of his house. The police would record this as which of the following types of crime?

A) burglary
B) robbery
C) larceny-theft
D) auto-theft
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52
Edwin Sutherland stated that white-collar crime

A) is more likely to be resolved in a civil rather than a criminal court.
B) rarely involves serious harm to the public as a whole.
C) almost always leads to a criminal conviction.
D) provokes a strong response from the community.
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53
In terms of race and ethnicity, most people arrested for violent crime in the United States are

A) Latino.
B) African American.
C) people of mixed race.
D) white.
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54
In the United States, men account for about_______ of all arrests for violent crime.

A) 82 percent
B) 62 percent
C) 42 percent
D) 22 percent
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55
Research suggests that, with regard to social class, arrest for serious crime

A) is about the same for people of all class levels.
B) is higher for people in higher class levels.
C) is higher for people in lower class levels.
D) almost always involves middle-class people.
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56
The likelihood a person will be arrested for a street crime rises sharply

A) during the forties.
B) during the middle thirties.
C) in the late twenties.
D) during the late teenage years.
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57
Criminal statistics gathered by the Federal Bureau of Investigation reflect

A) only offenses cleared by arrest.
B) all crimes that take place.
C) only offenses known to the police.
D) only offenses resulting in a criminal conviction.
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58
Which of the following concepts refers to crime committed by persons of high social position in the course of doing their jobs?

A) street crime
B) organized crime
C) white-collar crime
D) victimless crime
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59
Men, who represent about half the U.S. population, account for about_______ of all arrests for property crime.

A) 85 percent
B) 65 percent
C) 45 percent
D) 25 percent
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60
_________is a legal term meaning "guilty mind" and refers to criminal intent.

A) Mens rea
B) Mea culpa
C) Homo sapiens
D) Habeas corpus
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61
The concept "criminal recidivism" refers to

A) the idea that crime "really does pay."
B) subsequent offenses by people previously convicted of crimes.
C) efforts by police to enlist help from a local community.
D) young people growing up in a "criminal" environment.
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62
In historical perspective, the oldest justification for punishing an offender is

A) rehabilitation.
B) social protection.
C) retribution.
D) deterrence.
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63
Biological factors, including genetics, offer a limited explanation of crime.
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64
What is considered deviant is mostly the same behavior all around the world.
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65
Caesare Lombroso, an Italian physician and early criminologist, claimed that most criminals were people who had been mistreated by society.
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66
If a parent threatens a child with punishment in order to discourage wrongdoing, the parent is using punishment to accomplish which of the following?

A) deterrence
B) retribution
C) social protection
D) rehabilitation
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67
The concept of due process refers to

A) the criminal justice system operating within the bounds of the law.
B) the idea that people get what they deserve.
C) the process of plea bargaining.
D) the obligation of all citizens to report crime.
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68
A judge orders that an offender be sentenced to prison for a short time, with most of the sentence served on probation. The sentence reflects a policy called

A) parole.
B) rehabilitation.
C) shock probation.
D) extended lockup.
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69
Because there are several hundred people in the United States for every police officer, police

A) cannot take time to ensure due process for suspects.
B) use personal judgment in deciding which situations warrant their attention.
C) ignore most crimes they learn about.
D) work, on average, far more hours than other workers.
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70
The only Western, high-income nation that routinely executes offenders convicted of serious crimes is

A) the United Kingdom.
B) Canada.
C) the United States.
D) France.
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71
Robert Merton claimed that the "strains of masculinity" are one important cause of crime.
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72
Surveys show that about_______ of U.S. adults support the death penalty as a punishment for murder.

A) 12 percent
B) 22 percent
C) 42 percent
D) 62 percent
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73
The death penalty

A) is legal in most states, but is actually carried out only in a few states.
B) was ruled unconstitutional in the United States in 2005.
C) is legal in all of the fifty states.
D) is being carried out more frequently as time goes on.
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74
Emile Durkheim's analysis suggests it would be impossible for a society to completely eliminate deviance.
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75
Walter Reckless and Simon Dinitz developed "containment theory," which claims that a strong conscience (or superego) helps boys stay out of trouble.
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76
Which of the following are advantages of community-based corrections?

A) reducing prison overcrowding
B) reducing costs of dealing with offenders
C) avoiding the hardships of prison life, including the stigma attached to being incarcerated
D) All of the above are correct.
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77
Most criminal cases brought to court in the United States are resolved

A) through a pre-sentence investigation.
B) with a trial judge deciding the case.
C) with a jury trial.
D) through plea bargaining.
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78
A judge sentences a young man who has committed several crimes to counseling and places him in a supportive foster home. Which of the following concepts describes these efforts to prevent further wrongdoing?

A) retribution
B) deterrence
C) social protection
D) rehabilitation
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79
Crime is only one type of deviance.
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80
According to Elliot Currie, factors that explain why the United States has a high crime rate by world standards include

A) having too few police officers.
B) an emphasis on individualism and economic success, which weakens families and neighborhoods.
C) our cultural homogeneity.
D) a lack of public interest in punishing offenders.
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