Deck 1: Crime and Criminology

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Question
According to the conflict view of crime, criminal laws are viewed as acts created to protect the haves from the have-nots.​
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Question
Not all crimes are deviant and not all deviant acts are criminal.
Question
Members of a grand jury are made up of law enforcement officers and judges.​
Question
Criminology is an academic discipline that uses scientific methods to study the nature, extent, cause, and control of criminal behavior.​
Question
Chicago School sociologists argued that social forces operating in urban areas created a crime-promoting environment; some areas were "natural areas" for crime.​
Question
Bail is established at the preliminary hearing.​
Question
Over the past decades, it has been shown that criminological research has been influenced by government funding linked to topics the government wants researched and topics the government wishes to avoid.​
Question
Developmental criminologists trace criminal careers over the life course.​
Question
Critical criminologists contend that society's economic system plays a significant role in producing criminal behavior.​
Question
The mid-eighteenth-century belief stressing that the relationship between crime and punishment should be balanced and fair can be traced to Cesare Beccaria.​
Question
The juvenile delinquency research of Eleanor and Sheldon Glueck (in the 1940s and 1950s) profoundly influenced criminology and formed the basis for today's trait theory.​
Question
The branch of social science that uses the scientific method of the natural sciences and suggests that human behavior is a product of social, biological, or economic forces which one can measure empirically is known as the Classical School of Criminology.
Question
At the preliminary hearing, the judge decides whether there is probable cause sufficient for trial.​
Question
The criminological enterprise subarea of criminal statistics/crime measurement involves creating methodologies that are able to accurately measure activities, trends, and patterns in crime.
Question
The term criminal law refers to the written code that defines crimes and their punishments.​
Question
The consensus view of crime suggests that the definition of crime reflects the preferences and opinions of people who hold social power in a particular legal jurisdiction.​
Question
In the case of Miller v. Alabama, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that criminological research is obsolete in the court system and has set a precedent for its exclusion ever since.
Question
The distinction between whether a crime is classified as a felony or misdemeanor is based upon the age of the individual committing the crime.​
Question
Under common law, if a new rule was successfully applied in a number of different cases, it would become a precedent.​
Question
A crime becomes a deviant act when it is deemed by lawmakers as socially harmful or dangerous.​
Question
If a defendant is released on bail and fails to appear for his or her hearing, a court date, referred to as a recognizance hearing, is held to determine possible sanctions, which include forfeiture of bail money, property, and additional criminal sanctions.
Question
According to the text, recent research in the subarea of criminology involving terrorism found that mental illness is the primary cause in explaining why young people become terrorists.
Question
"Let the punishment fit the crime" refers to which criminological school of thought?​

A) ​Positivist criminology
B) ​Developmental criminology
C) ​Classical criminology
D) ​Sociological criminology
Question
A deviant act becomes a crime when it is defined, _____.

A) ​challenged, and banned under common law
B) ​stigmatized, and banned under procedural law
C) ​prohibited, and punished under criminal law
D) ​prohibited, and punished under civil law
Question
Nolle prosequi refers to the notion of "no prosecution," or cases in which the state has so much evidence against the defendant that a trial is not needed in order to convict the accused.
Question
Criminologists interested in computing criminal statistics focus on creating ________ measurements of criminal behavior.​

A) ​tactical and strategic
B) ​valid and reliable
C) ​legal and positivist
D) ​current and applicable
Question
The man who was considered the "father of criminology" and who referred to offenders as "born criminals" was​

A) Cesare Lombroso
B) ​Keith Bell​
C) ​Emile Durkheim
D) Jeremy Bentham
Question
According to the biological/psychological perspective, which type of forces account for crime?​

A) ​Internal
B) ​Political
C) ​Ecological
D) ​Situational
Question
Gathering valid crime data, devising new research methods, and measuring crime patterns and trends fall under the ______ subarea of the criminological enterprise.

A) ​victimology
B) ​penology/sentencing/corrections
C) ​theory construction
D) ​criminal statistics/crime measurement
Question
Marvin Wolfgang's 1958 study Patterns in Criminal Homicide is an example of which subarea of the criminological enterprise?​

A) ​Developing theories of crime causation
B) ​Understanding and describing criminal behavior
C) ​Criminal statistics/crime measurement
D) ​Sociology of law
Question
An evaluation of the Risk-Need-Responsivity (RNR) program, which classifies people on probation, among other things, has been found to cut recidivism rates for high-risk offenders by as much as 20 percent.
Question
To be truly ethical, criminological research must have social value to research participants rather than simply doing no harm.
Question
Individuals interact with various people, organizations, institutions, and social norms as they mature and develop. This process is referred to as ______.

A) ​integration
B) ​socialization
C) ​assimilation
D) ​civilization
Question
The ______ was a group of urban sociologists who examined how neighborhood conditions, such as poverty levels, influenced crime rates. Their sociological vision transformed into social structure theory.​

A) ​Philadelphia School
B) ​Seattle School
C) ​Chicago School
D) ​New York School
Question
Caesar Beccaria, in the 1700s, was one of the first scholars to develop a systematic understanding of why people commit crime. Beccaria helped to form the core of what today is referred to as ______________ criminology.​

A) ​determinism
B) ​classical
C) ​positivism
D) ​Marxism
Question
The academic discipline of criminology uses scientific methods to study the__________ of criminal behavior.​

A) ​nature, extent, cause, and control
B) ​history, economics, and control
C) ​prevalence, placement, and reduction
D) ​economics, politics, and policies
Question
Penology refers to the subarea of criminology that focuses on the correction and control of criminal offenders.​
Question
According to the structural perspective, crime rates are a function of _____ forces, such as neighborhood conditions, cultural factors, and norm conflict.​

A) ​situational
B) ​internal
C) ​political
D) ​ecological
Question
The writings of Karl Marx have had a great impact on _________ criminology, which faults the economic system for producing the conditions that lead to high crime rates.​

A) ​classical
B) ​positivist
C) ​developmental
D) ​critical
Question
A jury that is unable to agree on a decision, thus leaving the case unresolved and open for possible retrial is known as a hung jury.
Question
The _______ view of crime sees society as a collection of diverse groups who are in a constant and continuing struggle to gain political power in order to advance their economic or social situation.​

A) ​consensus
B) ​conflict
C) ​interactionist
D) ​legalistic
Question
Criminologists should be ethical in their research because ______.

A) ​they may face a jail sentence if they are not
B) ​they are moral entrepreneurs
C) ​the lives of millions of people may be influenced by their research
D) ​they are seeking to validate their own theories
Question
Which of the following is not a legitimate social goal of the criminal law?​

A) ​Enforcing social control
B) ​Encouraging revenge
C) ​Expressing public opinion and morality
D) ​Deterring criminal behavior
Question
Which concept of crime implies that crimes are behaviors that all members of society consider to be repugnant, be they rich and powerful or poor and powerless?​

A) ​Consensus view of crime
B) ​Conflict view of crime
C) ​Interactionist view of crime
D) ​Legalistic view of crime
Question
Mala prohibitum crimes, such as traffic offenses and gambling violations, change according to social conditions and attitudes. Criminal law is used to codify these changes, reflecting which purpose of law?​

A) ​Enforcing social control
B) ​Creating equity
C) ​Expressing public opinion and morality
D) ​Maintaining social order
Question
Which of the following offenses would be classified as a misdemeanor?​

A) ​Rape
B) ​Treason
C) ​Grand theft auto
D) ​Battery
Question
The American legal system is a direct descendent of _____.

A) ​Roman appellate law
B) ​British appellate law
C) ​British common law
D) ​Roman common law
Question
Not only should criminological research do no harm to subjects, but this research should also ______.​

A) ​lead to prestige and status for the researcher
B) ​result in financial gain for the researcher
C) ​result in financial gain for research subjects
D) ​be empowering and directly useful to research subjects
Question
Which of the following offenses would be classified as a felony?​

A) ​Petty larceny
B) ​Assault and battery
C) ​Burglary
D) ​Disturbing the peace
Question
In the 1930s, Harry Anslinger, then head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, launched a successful effort to criminalize marijuana, which had been legal until that time. Which concept of crime does Anslinger's moral crusade reflect?​

A) ​Consensus view of crime
B) ​Conflict view of crime
C) ​Interactionist view of crime
D) ​Legalistic view of crime
Question
Agencies of social control include all of the following except​

A) ​corrections
B) ​courts
C) ​police
D) ​legislatures
Question
Which of the following places the decision points of the criminal justice system in order of their occurrence?​

A) ​Complaint, arrest, arraignment, investigation
B) ​Plea bargaining, grand jury, correctional treatment, appeal
C) ​Custody, arraignment, adjudication, disposition
D) ​Disposition, investigation, correctional treatment, plea bargaining
Question
Under common law, if a royal judge successfully applied a ruling in a number of different cases and published that ruling in order that other judges could apply the ruling in their subsequent decisions, the ruling would become ______.​

A) ​a precedent
B) ​a royal order
C) ​statutory law
D) ​a key decision
Question
For the consensus view of crime, it is the ______ that defines crimes and their punishments.​

A) ​social contract
B) ​legal code
C) ​moral code
D) ​written code
Question
Which of the following situations reflect an act of deviance as opposed to a crime?

A) ​A thief who steals an unlocked automobile
B) ​A passerby who observes a person drowning and does not offer aid
C) ​A person who withdraws from family after joining a religious cult
D) ​A man who rapes a woman
Question
Mala in se crimes, such as murder and rape, reflect which view of crime?

A) ​Consensus view of crime
B) ​Conflict view of crime
C) ​Interactionist view of crime
D) ​Legalistic view of crime
Question
Approximately how many people are arrested each year for serious felony offenses?​

A) ​2 million
B) ​12 million
C) ​24 million
D) ​40 million
Question
Criminologists may face an ethical issue when ______.

A) ​studying only poor, minority subjects while ignoring white-collar criminals
B) ​using a mail survey instead of face-to-face interviews
C) ​publishing findings in a public journal
D) ​all of the above​
Question
Police assume which role in the criminal justice system?​

A) ​Apprehending suspects
B) ​Advocates for victims
C) ​Sentencing defendants
D) ​Incarcerating the guilty
Question
The most famous set of written laws of the ancient world was a code based on punishment via physical retaliation, "an eye for an eye," but the severity of punishment was dependent on one's class standing. This code was known as the ______.​

A) ​Code of Hammurabi
B) ​Mosaic Code
C) ​Judeo-Christian Code
D) ​Code of the Israelites
Question
_______ consists of actions that depart from the social norm.​
Question
A _______ is an act deemed socially harmful or dangerous and is prohibited under the criminal law.​
Question
The lawyers on his team believe that acts prohibited by the criminal law constitute behaviors considered unacceptable and impermissible. They believe that government should achieve a number of social goals when outlawing certain behaviors. Which common goal is said to have been met by applying criminal punishments that are designed to prevent crimes before they occur?​

A) ​Enforcing social control
B) ​Discouraging revenge
C) ​Teaching moral values
D) ​Deterring criminal behavior
Question
A relapse into criminal behavior after apprehension, conviction, and correction for a previous crime is known as ______.

A) ​Neutralization theory
B) ​Recidivism
C) enology
D) ​Responsivity
Question
What is the term used to describe a jury that is unable to agree on a decision?​

A) ​Broken
B) ​Hung
C) ​Mixed
D) ​Tied
Question
Which of the following is not one of the subareas of criminology listed outlined in the text?

A) ​Biosocial Behaviorism
B) ​Victimology
C) ​Penology
D) ​Criminal Statistics
Question
What subarea of criminology would be most interested in understanding the victim's role in Donald's case?​

A) ​Crime statistics
B) ​Penology
C) ​Sociology of law
D) ​Victimology
Question
Edwin Sutherland is most known for his pioneering research in which of the following fields?

A) White-collar crime
B) Environmental crime
C) Social bond theory
D) Techniques of neutralization
Question
According to Marvin Wolfgang, the incident described above is best characterized as a ______.

A) ​criminological enterprise
B) ​misdemeanor
C) ​victim-precipitated homicide
D) ​white-collar homicide
Question
The written code that defines crimes and their punishments is ________________.​
Question
____________ is the branch of social sciences that uses the scientific method of the natural sciences and suggests that human behavior is a product of social, biological, psychological, or economic forces that can be empirically measured.​
Question
The treatment of criminal offenders that is aimed at preventing future criminal behavior is _______________.​
Question
Assuming Donald's guilt, rehabilitation would begin at what phase of the criminal justice process?​

A) ​Preliminary hearing
B) ​Arrest
C) ​Trial
D) ​Incarceration
Question
A lack of norms or clear social standards is referred to as ____________.​
Question
______________ is the study of the victim's role in criminal events.​
Question
A statutory requirement that a certain penalty shall be carried out in all cases of conviction for a specified offense or series of offenses is known as ______.

A) ​mandatory sentencing
B) ​specified sentencing
C) ​selective sentencing
D) ​required sentencing
Question
The view that criminality is a function of people's interactions with various organizations, institutions, and processes in society is known as ______.

A) social process theory
B) techniques of neutralization
C) social conflict theory
D) social structure theory
Question
The accused is brought before the trial judge and formal charges are read during which step in the criminal justice process?​

A) ​Adjudication
B) ​Arrest
C) ​Arraignment
D) ​Disposition
Question
A(n) _________ measure is a measure that actually measures what it purports to measure.​
Question
Who would argue that Donald weighed the potential costs and benefits of shooting the victim and decided to pull the trigger as a result of free will?​

A) ​A conflict theorist
B) ​A critical criminologist
C) ​A positivist
D) ​A rational choice theorist
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Deck 1: Crime and Criminology
1
According to the conflict view of crime, criminal laws are viewed as acts created to protect the haves from the have-nots.​
True
2
Not all crimes are deviant and not all deviant acts are criminal.
True
3
Members of a grand jury are made up of law enforcement officers and judges.​
False
4
Criminology is an academic discipline that uses scientific methods to study the nature, extent, cause, and control of criminal behavior.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Chicago School sociologists argued that social forces operating in urban areas created a crime-promoting environment; some areas were "natural areas" for crime.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Bail is established at the preliminary hearing.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Over the past decades, it has been shown that criminological research has been influenced by government funding linked to topics the government wants researched and topics the government wishes to avoid.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Developmental criminologists trace criminal careers over the life course.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Critical criminologists contend that society's economic system plays a significant role in producing criminal behavior.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The mid-eighteenth-century belief stressing that the relationship between crime and punishment should be balanced and fair can be traced to Cesare Beccaria.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The juvenile delinquency research of Eleanor and Sheldon Glueck (in the 1940s and 1950s) profoundly influenced criminology and formed the basis for today's trait theory.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The branch of social science that uses the scientific method of the natural sciences and suggests that human behavior is a product of social, biological, or economic forces which one can measure empirically is known as the Classical School of Criminology.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
At the preliminary hearing, the judge decides whether there is probable cause sufficient for trial.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The criminological enterprise subarea of criminal statistics/crime measurement involves creating methodologies that are able to accurately measure activities, trends, and patterns in crime.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The term criminal law refers to the written code that defines crimes and their punishments.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The consensus view of crime suggests that the definition of crime reflects the preferences and opinions of people who hold social power in a particular legal jurisdiction.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
In the case of Miller v. Alabama, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that criminological research is obsolete in the court system and has set a precedent for its exclusion ever since.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The distinction between whether a crime is classified as a felony or misdemeanor is based upon the age of the individual committing the crime.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Under common law, if a new rule was successfully applied in a number of different cases, it would become a precedent.​
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
A crime becomes a deviant act when it is deemed by lawmakers as socially harmful or dangerous.​
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Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
If a defendant is released on bail and fails to appear for his or her hearing, a court date, referred to as a recognizance hearing, is held to determine possible sanctions, which include forfeiture of bail money, property, and additional criminal sanctions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
According to the text, recent research in the subarea of criminology involving terrorism found that mental illness is the primary cause in explaining why young people become terrorists.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
"Let the punishment fit the crime" refers to which criminological school of thought?​

A) ​Positivist criminology
B) ​Developmental criminology
C) ​Classical criminology
D) ​Sociological criminology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
A deviant act becomes a crime when it is defined, _____.

A) ​challenged, and banned under common law
B) ​stigmatized, and banned under procedural law
C) ​prohibited, and punished under criminal law
D) ​prohibited, and punished under civil law
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Nolle prosequi refers to the notion of "no prosecution," or cases in which the state has so much evidence against the defendant that a trial is not needed in order to convict the accused.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Criminologists interested in computing criminal statistics focus on creating ________ measurements of criminal behavior.​

A) ​tactical and strategic
B) ​valid and reliable
C) ​legal and positivist
D) ​current and applicable
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The man who was considered the "father of criminology" and who referred to offenders as "born criminals" was​

A) Cesare Lombroso
B) ​Keith Bell​
C) ​Emile Durkheim
D) Jeremy Bentham
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
According to the biological/psychological perspective, which type of forces account for crime?​

A) ​Internal
B) ​Political
C) ​Ecological
D) ​Situational
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Gathering valid crime data, devising new research methods, and measuring crime patterns and trends fall under the ______ subarea of the criminological enterprise.

A) ​victimology
B) ​penology/sentencing/corrections
C) ​theory construction
D) ​criminal statistics/crime measurement
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Marvin Wolfgang's 1958 study Patterns in Criminal Homicide is an example of which subarea of the criminological enterprise?​

A) ​Developing theories of crime causation
B) ​Understanding and describing criminal behavior
C) ​Criminal statistics/crime measurement
D) ​Sociology of law
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
An evaluation of the Risk-Need-Responsivity (RNR) program, which classifies people on probation, among other things, has been found to cut recidivism rates for high-risk offenders by as much as 20 percent.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
To be truly ethical, criminological research must have social value to research participants rather than simply doing no harm.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Individuals interact with various people, organizations, institutions, and social norms as they mature and develop. This process is referred to as ______.

A) ​integration
B) ​socialization
C) ​assimilation
D) ​civilization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The ______ was a group of urban sociologists who examined how neighborhood conditions, such as poverty levels, influenced crime rates. Their sociological vision transformed into social structure theory.​

A) ​Philadelphia School
B) ​Seattle School
C) ​Chicago School
D) ​New York School
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Caesar Beccaria, in the 1700s, was one of the first scholars to develop a systematic understanding of why people commit crime. Beccaria helped to form the core of what today is referred to as ______________ criminology.​

A) ​determinism
B) ​classical
C) ​positivism
D) ​Marxism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The academic discipline of criminology uses scientific methods to study the__________ of criminal behavior.​

A) ​nature, extent, cause, and control
B) ​history, economics, and control
C) ​prevalence, placement, and reduction
D) ​economics, politics, and policies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Penology refers to the subarea of criminology that focuses on the correction and control of criminal offenders.​
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
According to the structural perspective, crime rates are a function of _____ forces, such as neighborhood conditions, cultural factors, and norm conflict.​

A) ​situational
B) ​internal
C) ​political
D) ​ecological
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
The writings of Karl Marx have had a great impact on _________ criminology, which faults the economic system for producing the conditions that lead to high crime rates.​

A) ​classical
B) ​positivist
C) ​developmental
D) ​critical
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
A jury that is unable to agree on a decision, thus leaving the case unresolved and open for possible retrial is known as a hung jury.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The _______ view of crime sees society as a collection of diverse groups who are in a constant and continuing struggle to gain political power in order to advance their economic or social situation.​

A) ​consensus
B) ​conflict
C) ​interactionist
D) ​legalistic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Criminologists should be ethical in their research because ______.

A) ​they may face a jail sentence if they are not
B) ​they are moral entrepreneurs
C) ​the lives of millions of people may be influenced by their research
D) ​they are seeking to validate their own theories
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Which of the following is not a legitimate social goal of the criminal law?​

A) ​Enforcing social control
B) ​Encouraging revenge
C) ​Expressing public opinion and morality
D) ​Deterring criminal behavior
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Which concept of crime implies that crimes are behaviors that all members of society consider to be repugnant, be they rich and powerful or poor and powerless?​

A) ​Consensus view of crime
B) ​Conflict view of crime
C) ​Interactionist view of crime
D) ​Legalistic view of crime
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Mala prohibitum crimes, such as traffic offenses and gambling violations, change according to social conditions and attitudes. Criminal law is used to codify these changes, reflecting which purpose of law?​

A) ​Enforcing social control
B) ​Creating equity
C) ​Expressing public opinion and morality
D) ​Maintaining social order
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Which of the following offenses would be classified as a misdemeanor?​

A) ​Rape
B) ​Treason
C) ​Grand theft auto
D) ​Battery
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The American legal system is a direct descendent of _____.

A) ​Roman appellate law
B) ​British appellate law
C) ​British common law
D) ​Roman common law
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Not only should criminological research do no harm to subjects, but this research should also ______.​

A) ​lead to prestige and status for the researcher
B) ​result in financial gain for the researcher
C) ​result in financial gain for research subjects
D) ​be empowering and directly useful to research subjects
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Which of the following offenses would be classified as a felony?​

A) ​Petty larceny
B) ​Assault and battery
C) ​Burglary
D) ​Disturbing the peace
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
In the 1930s, Harry Anslinger, then head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, launched a successful effort to criminalize marijuana, which had been legal until that time. Which concept of crime does Anslinger's moral crusade reflect?​

A) ​Consensus view of crime
B) ​Conflict view of crime
C) ​Interactionist view of crime
D) ​Legalistic view of crime
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Agencies of social control include all of the following except​

A) ​corrections
B) ​courts
C) ​police
D) ​legislatures
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 86 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Which of the following places the decision points of the criminal justice system in order of their occurrence?​

A) ​Complaint, arrest, arraignment, investigation
B) ​Plea bargaining, grand jury, correctional treatment, appeal
C) ​Custody, arraignment, adjudication, disposition
D) ​Disposition, investigation, correctional treatment, plea bargaining
Unlock Deck
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53
Under common law, if a royal judge successfully applied a ruling in a number of different cases and published that ruling in order that other judges could apply the ruling in their subsequent decisions, the ruling would become ______.​

A) ​a precedent
B) ​a royal order
C) ​statutory law
D) ​a key decision
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54
For the consensus view of crime, it is the ______ that defines crimes and their punishments.​

A) ​social contract
B) ​legal code
C) ​moral code
D) ​written code
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55
Which of the following situations reflect an act of deviance as opposed to a crime?

A) ​A thief who steals an unlocked automobile
B) ​A passerby who observes a person drowning and does not offer aid
C) ​A person who withdraws from family after joining a religious cult
D) ​A man who rapes a woman
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56
Mala in se crimes, such as murder and rape, reflect which view of crime?

A) ​Consensus view of crime
B) ​Conflict view of crime
C) ​Interactionist view of crime
D) ​Legalistic view of crime
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57
Approximately how many people are arrested each year for serious felony offenses?​

A) ​2 million
B) ​12 million
C) ​24 million
D) ​40 million
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58
Criminologists may face an ethical issue when ______.

A) ​studying only poor, minority subjects while ignoring white-collar criminals
B) ​using a mail survey instead of face-to-face interviews
C) ​publishing findings in a public journal
D) ​all of the above​
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59
Police assume which role in the criminal justice system?​

A) ​Apprehending suspects
B) ​Advocates for victims
C) ​Sentencing defendants
D) ​Incarcerating the guilty
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60
The most famous set of written laws of the ancient world was a code based on punishment via physical retaliation, "an eye for an eye," but the severity of punishment was dependent on one's class standing. This code was known as the ______.​

A) ​Code of Hammurabi
B) ​Mosaic Code
C) ​Judeo-Christian Code
D) ​Code of the Israelites
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61
_______ consists of actions that depart from the social norm.​
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62
A _______ is an act deemed socially harmful or dangerous and is prohibited under the criminal law.​
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63
The lawyers on his team believe that acts prohibited by the criminal law constitute behaviors considered unacceptable and impermissible. They believe that government should achieve a number of social goals when outlawing certain behaviors. Which common goal is said to have been met by applying criminal punishments that are designed to prevent crimes before they occur?​

A) ​Enforcing social control
B) ​Discouraging revenge
C) ​Teaching moral values
D) ​Deterring criminal behavior
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64
A relapse into criminal behavior after apprehension, conviction, and correction for a previous crime is known as ______.

A) ​Neutralization theory
B) ​Recidivism
C) enology
D) ​Responsivity
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65
What is the term used to describe a jury that is unable to agree on a decision?​

A) ​Broken
B) ​Hung
C) ​Mixed
D) ​Tied
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66
Which of the following is not one of the subareas of criminology listed outlined in the text?

A) ​Biosocial Behaviorism
B) ​Victimology
C) ​Penology
D) ​Criminal Statistics
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67
What subarea of criminology would be most interested in understanding the victim's role in Donald's case?​

A) ​Crime statistics
B) ​Penology
C) ​Sociology of law
D) ​Victimology
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68
Edwin Sutherland is most known for his pioneering research in which of the following fields?

A) White-collar crime
B) Environmental crime
C) Social bond theory
D) Techniques of neutralization
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69
According to Marvin Wolfgang, the incident described above is best characterized as a ______.

A) ​criminological enterprise
B) ​misdemeanor
C) ​victim-precipitated homicide
D) ​white-collar homicide
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70
The written code that defines crimes and their punishments is ________________.​
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71
____________ is the branch of social sciences that uses the scientific method of the natural sciences and suggests that human behavior is a product of social, biological, psychological, or economic forces that can be empirically measured.​
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72
The treatment of criminal offenders that is aimed at preventing future criminal behavior is _______________.​
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73
Assuming Donald's guilt, rehabilitation would begin at what phase of the criminal justice process?​

A) ​Preliminary hearing
B) ​Arrest
C) ​Trial
D) ​Incarceration
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74
A lack of norms or clear social standards is referred to as ____________.​
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75
______________ is the study of the victim's role in criminal events.​
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76
A statutory requirement that a certain penalty shall be carried out in all cases of conviction for a specified offense or series of offenses is known as ______.

A) ​mandatory sentencing
B) ​specified sentencing
C) ​selective sentencing
D) ​required sentencing
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77
The view that criminality is a function of people's interactions with various organizations, institutions, and processes in society is known as ______.

A) social process theory
B) techniques of neutralization
C) social conflict theory
D) social structure theory
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78
The accused is brought before the trial judge and formal charges are read during which step in the criminal justice process?​

A) ​Adjudication
B) ​Arrest
C) ​Arraignment
D) ​Disposition
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79
A(n) _________ measure is a measure that actually measures what it purports to measure.​
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80
Who would argue that Donald weighed the potential costs and benefits of shooting the victim and decided to pull the trigger as a result of free will?​

A) ​A conflict theorist
B) ​A critical criminologist
C) ​A positivist
D) ​A rational choice theorist
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Unlock Deck
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