Deck 15: Contemporary Classicism

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Question
Rational choice theory is based on the idea that individuals will commit offences if the 'expected utility' of doing so is positive, and will not do so if it is negative.
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Question
What is 'defensible space'?
Question
In what year was the Home Office's 'Crime Prevention Unit set up and what was its target?
Question
What did Felson describe as the 'chemistry for crime'?
Question
According to Cornish and Clarke (2006) what are two of the main classes of life events that are said to affect desistance from offending?

A)lack of friends
B)marriage and family
C)long prison sentences
D)legitimate job opportunities
Question
Which theories does situational crime prevention draw upon primarily?

A)positivism
B)rational choice
C)labelling theory
D)routine activity theories
Question
What is meant by 'bounded rationality'?

A)offenders are sometimes forced to commit crimes
B)offenders think before they act
C)offenders are irrational
D)offenders' decisions are based on some immediate benefits
Question
According to rational choice theorists crime is 'purposive'; it is never 'senseless' there is always some anticipated or intended benefit to the offender, including:

A)excitement
B)prestige
C)fun
D)sexual gratification
E)material reward
Question
From the 1970s onwards criminologists from various perspectives found two approaches to crime control increasingly popular:

A)deterring offenders prior to the act rather than rehabilitating them afterward
B)much longer sentences for burglars
C)'three strikes and you're out'
D)manipulating environments rather than humans
Question
Situational approaches focus on:

A)the opportunities for crime and the risks involved
B)situations where domestic violence might occur
C)the lack of police on street patrol
D)persistent offenders
Question
As faith in rehabilitation receded from the 1960s onward greater emphasis began to be placed on:

A)arming the police
B)the Probation Service
C)judges' decision making
D)deterrence and on 'justice' approaches
Question
Rather than focussing on the offender and the state's response, since the 1970s some different approaches have enjoyed growing popularity.

A)concentration on prison population literacy
B)focus on 'criminal events' and the circumstances in which those events occur
C)the role of women in criminal justice
D)police corruption
Question
Contemporary classicism emerged from:

A)the late 1960s onwards
B)the early nineteenth century
C)the 1500s
D)the early 1990s
Question
'Classical' criminology's assumption is:

A)that people are basically selfish
B)that society should monitor people
C)that offenders are essentially rationally-calculating actors
D)that people can be trained to be criminal
Question
Felson's acronym VIVA was concerned with the theft of motor vehicles.
Question
Routine activity theory, like other control-style theories, starts from the assumption that a key question is 'Why do people not commit crime?'
Question
Routine activity theory states that offenders learn routines in prison that are criminogenic.
Question
'Crime scripts' are the basis for television police documentaries.
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Deck 15: Contemporary Classicism
1
Rational choice theory is based on the idea that individuals will commit offences if the 'expected utility' of doing so is positive, and will not do so if it is negative.
True
2
What is 'defensible space'?
Newman argued that a sense of 'ownership' of spaces was important to their security - and that public spaces needed to be both observable and used in order for social control to flourish.
3
In what year was the Home Office's 'Crime Prevention Unit set up and what was its target?
The recent history of the development of situational prevention theory begins with a body of work undertaken by the Home Office in the 1970s, which illustrated how opportunities for offending could be manipulated in ways which would prevent or reduce crime. It quickly grew in popularity in part, as suggested in the introduction of this chapter, because of growing disenchantment with alternative, more sociological perspectives that focused on social structural conditions leading to crime. By 1983 the Home Office had set up a 'Crime Prevention Unit' and was conducting an increasing amount of research in this area. Such work had also been influenced by two cognate developments in America: Oscar Newman's idea of 'defensible space' and Herman Goldstein's work on 'problem-oriented policing'.
4
What did Felson describe as the 'chemistry for crime'?
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5
According to Cornish and Clarke (2006) what are two of the main classes of life events that are said to affect desistance from offending?

A)lack of friends
B)marriage and family
C)long prison sentences
D)legitimate job opportunities
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Unlock for access to all 18 flashcards in this deck.
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6
Which theories does situational crime prevention draw upon primarily?

A)positivism
B)rational choice
C)labelling theory
D)routine activity theories
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7
What is meant by 'bounded rationality'?

A)offenders are sometimes forced to commit crimes
B)offenders think before they act
C)offenders are irrational
D)offenders' decisions are based on some immediate benefits
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Unlock for access to all 18 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
According to rational choice theorists crime is 'purposive'; it is never 'senseless' there is always some anticipated or intended benefit to the offender, including:

A)excitement
B)prestige
C)fun
D)sexual gratification
E)material reward
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 18 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
From the 1970s onwards criminologists from various perspectives found two approaches to crime control increasingly popular:

A)deterring offenders prior to the act rather than rehabilitating them afterward
B)much longer sentences for burglars
C)'three strikes and you're out'
D)manipulating environments rather than humans
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 18 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Situational approaches focus on:

A)the opportunities for crime and the risks involved
B)situations where domestic violence might occur
C)the lack of police on street patrol
D)persistent offenders
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Unlock for access to all 18 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
As faith in rehabilitation receded from the 1960s onward greater emphasis began to be placed on:

A)arming the police
B)the Probation Service
C)judges' decision making
D)deterrence and on 'justice' approaches
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Unlock for access to all 18 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Rather than focussing on the offender and the state's response, since the 1970s some different approaches have enjoyed growing popularity.

A)concentration on prison population literacy
B)focus on 'criminal events' and the circumstances in which those events occur
C)the role of women in criminal justice
D)police corruption
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Unlock for access to all 18 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Contemporary classicism emerged from:

A)the late 1960s onwards
B)the early nineteenth century
C)the 1500s
D)the early 1990s
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Unlock for access to all 18 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
14
'Classical' criminology's assumption is:

A)that people are basically selfish
B)that society should monitor people
C)that offenders are essentially rationally-calculating actors
D)that people can be trained to be criminal
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15
Felson's acronym VIVA was concerned with the theft of motor vehicles.
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16
Routine activity theory, like other control-style theories, starts from the assumption that a key question is 'Why do people not commit crime?'
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17
Routine activity theory states that offenders learn routines in prison that are criminogenic.
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18
'Crime scripts' are the basis for television police documentaries.
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