Deck 6: Critical Theories, Life-Course, and Integrated Theories
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Deck 6: Critical Theories, Life-Course, and Integrated Theories
1
We use this term to include types of explanations that are sometimes called conflict, Marxist, or radical.
A) sociological
B) strain
C) criminological
D) critical
A) sociological
B) strain
C) criminological
D) critical
D
2
Which is not one of Cullen and Agnew's central themes of critical theories that help to differentiate them from other types of sociological theories of crime and delinquency?
A) The concepts of inequality and power are integral to any understanding of crime and its control.
B) Crime is not a political concept, but a value-free concept.
C) Capitalism is a system of economics that causes a large degree of crime.
D) The solution to crime is the creation of a more equitable society.
A) The concepts of inequality and power are integral to any understanding of crime and its control.
B) Crime is not a political concept, but a value-free concept.
C) Capitalism is a system of economics that causes a large degree of crime.
D) The solution to crime is the creation of a more equitable society.
B
3
Marx divides society into two parts, the _____, who control and own the means of production, and the _____, the workers who are exploited by this economic system.
A) proletariat; bourgeoisie
B) bourgeoisie; petit bourgeoisie
C) bourgeoisie; proletariat
D) capitalists; impoverished
A) proletariat; bourgeoisie
B) bourgeoisie; petit bourgeoisie
C) bourgeoisie; proletariat
D) capitalists; impoverished
C
4
In Marxist theory, this is the belief that the arrangement of some people owning of the means of production and some people working for the owners is legitimate.
A) false consciousness
B) ascertainable criteria
C) bourgeoisie
D) proletariat
A) false consciousness
B) ascertainable criteria
C) bourgeoisie
D) proletariat
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5
Critical theories are also called which of the following?
A) Marxist
B) conflict
C) radical
D) all of the above
A) Marxist
B) conflict
C) radical
D) all of the above
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6
This theorist saw egoism as the reason people break the law in capitalist societies.
A) Hirschi
B) Bonger
C) Cullen
D) Marx
A) Hirschi
B) Bonger
C) Cullen
D) Marx
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7
According to Bonger, for which two reasons are impoverished people living in a capitalist state stimulated to break the law?
A) In order to survive and because the bourgeoisie own the means of production
B) Because workers are exploited and because wealth is how people are judged
C) Because workers are exploited and because the bourgeoisie own the means of production
D) In order to survive and because wealth is how people are judged
A) In order to survive and because the bourgeoisie own the means of production
B) Because workers are exploited and because wealth is how people are judged
C) Because workers are exploited and because the bourgeoisie own the means of production
D) In order to survive and because wealth is how people are judged
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8
According to Chambliss, crime serves to divert our attention from the exploitive nature of _____ and focus it on the offenses of impoverished people.
A) socialism
B) capitalism
C) communism
D) all of the above
A) socialism
B) capitalism
C) communism
D) all of the above
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9
According to Michalowski, crime becomes common when there is a vast _____ between the impoverished and the wealthy.
A) distance
B) understanding
C) difference
D) sameness
A) distance
B) understanding
C) difference
D) sameness
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10
This form of criminology contends that the idealism of Marxist criminology sacrifices the interests of impoverished people for the interests of lower-class offenders.
A) feminist criminology
B) critical race theory
C) left realism
D) integrated criminology
A) feminist criminology
B) critical race theory
C) left realism
D) integrated criminology
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11
According to DeKeseredy, several activities could help lower poverty and unemployment rates. Which is not one of these?
A) government-sponsored day care
B) a lower minimum wage
C) job creation and training programs
D) universal health care
A) government-sponsored day care
B) a lower minimum wage
C) job creation and training programs
D) universal health care
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12
The characteristics attributed to and accorded to males and females by society and/or culture on the basis of sex.
A) sex
B) responsibilities
C) gender
D) all of the above
A) sex
B) responsibilities
C) gender
D) all of the above
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13
This theory focuses on how racial issues determine the quality of justice available to people of color.
A) cultural criminology
B) critical race theory
C) left realism
D) postmodern criminology
A) cultural criminology
B) critical race theory
C) left realism
D) postmodern criminology
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14
These theorists use allegories, storytelling, and imagined dialogues to illustrate important concepts.
A) postmodern
B) left-realist
C) critical race
D) Marxist
A) postmodern
B) left-realist
C) critical race
D) Marxist
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15
According to Arrigo, postmodern criminology has three key issues. Which is not one of these?
A) first-person narratives
B) the centrality of language
C) partial knowledge and provisional truth
D) deconstruction, difference, and possibility
A) first-person narratives
B) the centrality of language
C) partial knowledge and provisional truth
D) deconstruction, difference, and possibility
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16
According to _____, our concepts of justice, law, fairness, responsibility, and authority are all affected by the context in which we live and aren't absolute.
A) postmodernism
B) left realism
C) critical race theory
D) strain theory
A) postmodernism
B) left realism
C) critical race theory
D) strain theory
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17
This form of criminology considers how the media and popular culture intersect with the lives of offenders and the criminal justice system.
A) cultural criminology
B) peacemaking criminology
C) critical race theory
D) postmodern criminology
A) cultural criminology
B) peacemaking criminology
C) critical race theory
D) postmodern criminology
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18
This form of criminology affixes responsibility for crime not only to the individuals involved, but also to the social structure that accepts, enables, or encourages the harm that individuals do to others.
A) peacemaking criminology
B) Marxist criminology
C) critical race theory
D) postmodern criminology
A) peacemaking criminology
B) Marxist criminology
C) critical race theory
D) postmodern criminology
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19
Which is not a level in the peacemaking pyramid?
A) correct means
B) exclusion
C) nonviolence
D) social justice
A) correct means
B) exclusion
C) nonviolence
D) social justice
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20
This means that the language and procedures used to pursue justice must be made clear to all.
A) correct means
B) ascertainable criteria
C) social justice
D) inclusion
A) correct means
B) ascertainable criteria
C) social justice
D) inclusion
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21
What is the primary issue that life-course theories examine in relationship to crime?
A) age
B) race
C) gender
D) sex
A) age
B) race
C) gender
D) sex
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22
Moffitt specified two types of life-course offenders who engage in antisocial behavior in distinctly different patterns: _____.
A) life-course persistent offenders and adolescence-limited offenders
B) adult offenders and juvenile delinquents
C) long-term offenders and short-term offenders
D) none of the above
A) life-course persistent offenders and adolescence-limited offenders
B) adult offenders and juvenile delinquents
C) long-term offenders and short-term offenders
D) none of the above
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23
According to Moffitt, cognitive disabilities, poor parenting, impoverished economic neighborhoods, and limited opportunities combine to produce the _____.
A) life-course persistent offender
B) adolescent-limited offender
C) neither
D) both
A) life-course persistent offender
B) adolescent-limited offender
C) neither
D) both
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24
There are more _____ than _____, and the group may include nearly every juvenile.
A) life-course persistent offenders; adolescence-limited offenders
B) life-course limited offenders; adolescence-persistent offenders
C) adolescence-limited offenders; life-course persistent offenders
D) none of the above
A) life-course persistent offenders; adolescence-limited offenders
B) life-course limited offenders; adolescence-persistent offenders
C) adolescence-limited offenders; life-course persistent offenders
D) none of the above
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25
Sampson and Laub's _____ theory of crime combines life-course theory with control theory of delinquency and examines these concepts in light of data developed by the Gluecks.
A) life-course
B) peacemaking
C) pathways and turning points
D) strain
A) life-course
B) peacemaking
C) pathways and turning points
D) strain
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26
According to Sampson and Laub, for adolescents, social controls and turning points are related to _____ and _____.
A) consistent discipline; emotional attachment to parents
B) age; steady employment
C) supervision; warmth
D) school attachment; peers
A) consistent discipline; emotional attachment to parents
B) age; steady employment
C) supervision; warmth
D) school attachment; peers
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27
In considering how individuals bond to conventional society, Sampson and Laub use Hirschi's _____ theory of delinquency.
A) life-course
B) strain
C) social control
D) postmodern
A) life-course
B) strain
C) social control
D) postmodern
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28
According to Sampson and Laub, the pathways to crime may be interrupted as a youth grows by significant _____.
A) turning points
B) pathways
C) events
D) peers
A) turning points
B) pathways
C) events
D) peers
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29
Which theory does Elliott's integrated theory of delinquent behavior draw from?
A) social learning
B) strain
C) social control
D) all of the above
A) social learning
B) strain
C) social control
D) all of the above
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30
Elliott argues that middle-class delinquents, in the pursuit of their goals, suffer from this.
A) delinquent peers
B) strain
C) racism
D) sexism
A) delinquent peers
B) strain
C) racism
D) sexism
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31
According to Elliott, this theory is not enough to explain delinquency and must be combined with social control and social learning theories.
A) strain
B) postmodern
C) life-course
D) critical
A) strain
B) postmodern
C) life-course
D) critical
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32
An additional function of Thornberry's interactional theory is his attempt to specify how this might change for the individual over the life course.
A) attachment to peers
B) attachment to family
C) attachment to subcultural values
D) attachment to society's conventional bonds
A) attachment to peers
B) attachment to family
C) attachment to subcultural values
D) attachment to society's conventional bonds
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33
Thornberry's interactional perspective draws on these two theories.
A) peacemaking; postmodern
B) social control; social learning
C) strain; labeling
D) social control; strain
A) peacemaking; postmodern
B) social control; social learning
C) strain; labeling
D) social control; strain
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34
According to Tittle, when there is an imbalance of control, this is one way that we attempt to put the condition back into balance.
A) therapy
B) deviant behavior
C) education
D) religion
A) therapy
B) deviant behavior
C) education
D) religion
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35
According to Tittle, how might a person respond to being humiliated?
A) the victim might conform and endure the humiliation
B) the victim might respond by attacking the attacker
C) the victim may engage in an act of defiance
D) all of the above
A) the victim might conform and endure the humiliation
B) the victim might respond by attacking the attacker
C) the victim may engage in an act of defiance
D) all of the above
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36
Critical theories of crime and delinquency don't distinguish between "bad people" (offenders) and "good people" (citizens).
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37
The creation of a more equitable society is not a solution to crime, according to critical theories.
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38
Karl Marx had little to say about crime.
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39
According to Michalowski, many impoverished societies have low crime rates.
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40
Critics of Marxist criminology believe that it romanticizes offenders.
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41
Offenders most often victimize those in the upper classes.
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42
Race, according to critical-race theorists, is a deciding factor in how individuals view justice.
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43
Age is a poor variable with which to conduct research because it's not collected in a consistent manner.
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44
Young children and elderly adults commit very little crime
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45
According to Sampson and Laub, the pathways to crime might be interrupted by significant transitions or turning points.
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46
One problem for life-course theories is that they are better at looking backward than looking forward.
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47
It is possible that a single theory could encompass the entire range of delinquent behavior.
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48
According to interactional theory, crime and delinquency are the result of the social interactions between two people.
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49
Elliott states that middle-class delinquents suffer from a very similar type of strain as lower-class delinquents.
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50
According to Tittle's control balance theory, the optimum condition is when others have more control over us than we have over them.
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