Deck 9: New Directions: Integration and a Life-Course Perspective
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Deck 9: New Directions: Integration and a Life-Course Perspective
1
Defined as consistency in the rankings of individuals on an observable characteristic over time
A) absolute stability
B) relative stability
C) interactional continuity
D) cumulative continuity
A) absolute stability
B) relative stability
C) interactional continuity
D) cumulative continuity
B
2
This theory recognizes that antisocial behavior often emerges early in life and continues to develop and persist throughout adulthood.
A) convict criminology
B) theoretical integration
C) developmental criminology
D) criminal career criminology
A) convict criminology
B) theoretical integration
C) developmental criminology
D) criminal career criminology
C
3
Developed the "Duel Taxonomy" of life-course persistent and adolescence limited offenders
A) Robert Sampson
B) Terrie Moffit
C) Marvin Wolfgang
D) John Laub
A) Robert Sampson
B) Terrie Moffit
C) Marvin Wolfgang
D) John Laub
B
4
The population heterogeneity perspective contends that early antisocial behavior is related to later criminal behavior because of some underlying propensity for antisocial behavior.
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5
This concept suggests that antisocial behavior produces negative consequences, and these consequences promote stability of antisocial behavior.
A) relative continuity
B) absolute continuity
C) cumulative continuity
D) interactional continuity
A) relative continuity
B) absolute continuity
C) cumulative continuity
D) interactional continuity
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6
Adolescent-limited offenders typically engage in only a limited number of crimes during adolescence, and commit bigger crimes during adulthood.
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7
__________________________combines elements of traditional perspectives to provide a more comprehensive explanation of crime.
A) Developmental criminology
B) Life-course criminology
C) Theoretical integration
D) Criminal career paradigm
A) Developmental criminology
B) Life-course criminology
C) Theoretical integration
D) Criminal career paradigm
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8
Combining theories in a sequential model is known as the
A) end-to-end model
B) sequential model
C) final model
D) all of the above
A) end-to-end model
B) sequential model
C) final model
D) all of the above
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9
The work that found that a chronic 6% of offenders accounted for nearly 50% of delinquent acts.
A) Delinquency in a Birth Cohort
B) The Subculture of Violence
C) The Glueks Study
D) Moffit's Typologies
A) Delinquency in a Birth Cohort
B) The Subculture of Violence
C) The Glueks Study
D) Moffit's Typologies
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10
Structural factors are often ignored as contributing to delinquency in:
A) age graded theory
B) social bond theory
C) Moffit's Typology
D) integrated theory
A) age graded theory
B) social bond theory
C) Moffit's Typology
D) integrated theory
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11
This type of offender engages in antisocial behavior beginning in adolescence and typically desists from crime in early adulthood.
A) life-course persistent
B) adolescent-limited
C) career criminals
D) none of the above
A) life-course persistent
B) adolescent-limited
C) career criminals
D) none of the above
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12
Contends that individuals proactively select themselves into certain environments, consistently react to environments in a certain manner, or evoke certain reactions from their environment, and these interactions promote consistency in how one behaves.
A) absolute stability
B) relative stability
C) interactional continuity
D) cumulative continuity
A) absolute stability
B) relative stability
C) interactional continuity
D) cumulative continuity
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13
The criminal career paradigm suggests that __________________ will affect crime rates.
A) selective incapacitation
B) three-strikes laws
C) indeterminate sentencing
D) community corrections
A) selective incapacitation
B) three-strikes laws
C) indeterminate sentencing
D) community corrections
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14
A ________________ is defined as a set of developmental sequences that describe the unfolding of a behavior over time.
A) risk factor
B) trajectory
C) continuity
D) relative stability
A) risk factor
B) trajectory
C) continuity
D) relative stability
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15
A criminal career suggests that an individual makes his or her living by engaging in crime.
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16
Contends that antisocial behavior produces negative consequences and in turn these negative consequences promote the stability of antisocial behavior
A) absolute stability
B) relative stability
C) interactional continuity
D) cumulative continuity
A) absolute stability
B) relative stability
C) interactional continuity
D) cumulative continuity
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17
This type of stability describes the stability of behavior within individuals.
A) cumulative
B) interactional
C) relative
D) absolute
A) cumulative
B) interactional
C) relative
D) absolute
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18
The most common attempts at theoretical integration involve social control and ______________ theories.
A) strain
B) social learning
C) social control
D) none of the above
A) strain
B) social learning
C) social control
D) none of the above
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19
The ___________________ debate suggests that offending includes an initiation, duration, and termination period.
A) career criminal
B) developmental
C) criminal career
D) none of the above
A) career criminal
B) developmental
C) criminal career
D) none of the above
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20
The length of time of criminal offending for the criminal career is referred to as:
A) termination
B) frequency
C) initiation
D) duration
A) termination
B) frequency
C) initiation
D) duration
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21
The career criminal debate claims there is single group called active offenders.
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22
Life-course persistent offender's behavior is a function of the developmental stage and social interactions.
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23
Shaw & McKay's social disorganization theory and Cloward & Ohlin's subculture theory are examples of integrated theories.
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24
A set of developmental sequences that describe the unfolding of a behavior over time are risk factors.
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25
Risk factors that promote antisocial and criminal behavior are exactly the same as factors that promote desistance from antisocial behavior.
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26
Robert Sampson and John Laub were recently award the Stockholm award for outstanding research in criminology.
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27
Robert Sampson and John Laub are responsible for formulating the typologies of life-course persistent and adolescence limited offenders.
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28
Life-course criminology argues that antisocial behavior results from the intersection of biological, psychological, sociological, and situational risk factors.
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29
Terrie Moffitt is responsible for formulating the age-graded theory of informal social control.
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30
Social structure and social control theories are fundamentally opposed to each other.
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