criminal justice chapter 3

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/38

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

39 Terms

1
New cards

theory

An assumption that attempts to explain why or how things are related to each other.

2
New cards

criminological theory

The explanation of criminal behavior, as well as the behavior of police, attorneys, prosecutors, judges, correctional personnel, victims, and other actors in the criminal justice process.

3
New cards

classical theory

A product of the Enlightenment, based on the assumption that people exercise free will and are thus completly responsible for their actions. In classical theory, human behavior, including criminal behavior, is motivated by a hedonistic rationality, in which actors weigh the potential pleasure of an action against the possible pain associated with it.

4
New cards

utility

The principle that a policy should provide "the greatest happiness shared by the greatest number."

5
New cards

social contract

An imaginary agreement to sacrifice the minimum amount of liberty necessary to prevent anarchy and chaos.

6
New cards

special or specific deterrence

The prevention of individuals from committing crime again by punishing them.

7
New cards

general deterrence

The prevention of people in general or society at large from engaging in crime by punishing specific individuals and making examples of them.

8
New cards

neoclassical theory

A modificaton of classical theory in which it is conceded that certain factors, such as insanity, might inhibit the exercise of free will.

9
New cards

biological inferiority

According to biological theories, a criminal's innate physiological makeup of produces certain physical or genetic characteristics that distinguish criminals from noncriminals.

10
New cards

criminal anthropology

The study of "criminal" human beings.

11
New cards

atavist

A person who reverts to a savage type.

12
New cards

limbic system

A structure surrounding the brain stem that, in opart controls the life functions of hertbeat, breathing, and sleep. It also is believed to moderate expressions of violence; such as anger, rage, and fear; and sexual response.

13
New cards

psychopaths, sociopaths, or antisocial personalities

Persons characterized by no sense of guilt, no subjective conscience, and no sence of right and wrong. They have difficulty in forming relationships with other people; they cannot empathize with other people.

14
New cards

anomie

For Durkheim, the dissociation of the individual from the collective conscience.

15
New cards

collective conscience

The general sense of morality of the times.

16
New cards

Chicago School

A group of cociologists at the University of Chicago who assumed in their research that delinquent behavior was a product of social disorganization

17
New cards

social disorganization

The condition in which the usual controls over delinquents are largely absent, delinquent behavior is often approved of by parents and neighbors, there are many opportunities for delinquent behavior, and there is little encouragement, training, or opportunity for legitimate employment.

18
New cards

anomie

For Merton, the conrtadiction between the cultural goal of achieving wealth and the social structure's inability to provide legitimate institutional means for achieving the goal. For Cohen, it is caused by the inability of juveniles to achieve status among peers by socially acceptable means.

19
New cards

imitation or modeling

A means by which a person can learn new responses by observing others without performing any overt act or receiving direct reinforcement or reward.

20
New cards

differential association

Southerland's theory that persons who become criminal do so because of contacts with criminal patterns and isolation from anticriminal patterns.

21
New cards

learning theory

A theory that explains criminal behavior and its prevention with the concepts of positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement, extinction, punishment and modeling or imitation.

22
New cards

positive reinforcement

The presentation of a stimulus that increases or maintains a response.

23
New cards

negative reinforcement

The removal or reduction of a stimulus whose removal or reduction increases or maintains a response.

24
New cards

extinction

A process in which behavior that previously was positively reinforced is no longer reinforced.

25
New cards

punishment

The presentation of an aversive stimulus to reduce a response.

26
New cards

social control theory

A view in which people are expected to commit crime and delinquency unless they are prevented from doing so.

27
New cards

labeling theory

A theory that emphasizes the criminalization process as the cause of some crime.

28
New cards

criminalization process

The way people and actions are defined as criminal.

29
New cards

conflict theory

A theory that assumes that society is based primarily on conflict between competing interest groups and that criminal law and the criminal justice system are used to control subordinate groups. Crime is caused by relative powerlessness.

30
New cards

power differentials

The ability of some groups to dominate other groups in a society.

31
New cards

relative powerlessness

In conflict theory, the inability to dominate other groups in society.

32
New cards

radical theories

Theories of crime causation that are generally based on a Marxist theory of class struggle.

33
New cards

class struggle

For radical criminologist, the competition among wealthy people and among poor people and between rich people and poor people, which causes crime.

34
New cards

left realists

A group of social scientists who argue that critical criminologists need to redirect their attention to the fear and the very real victimization experienced by working-class people.

35
New cards

relative deprivation

refers to inequalities that are defined by a person as unfair or unjust.

36
New cards

peacemaking criminology

An approach that suggest that the solutions to all social problems, including crime, are the transformation of human beings, mutual dependence, reduction of class structures, the creation of communities of caring people, and universal social justice.

37
New cards

feminist theory

A perspective on criminality that focuses on women's experiences and seeks to abolish men's control over women's labor and sexuality.

38
New cards

patriarchy

Mern's control over women's labor and sexuality.

39
New cards

postmodernism

An area of critical thought that, among other things, attempts to understand the creation of knowledge, and how knowledge and language create hierarchy and domination.