Beccaria and Becker
Social Change
Measurement
Crime Trends
Correlates of Crime
Sampson et al.
100

Beccaria's (1764) "On Crimes and Punishment" was written as a....

Critique of Power

100

Mechanical vs Organic Solidarity

Mechanical: Solidarity based on shared beliefs due to low division of labor


Organic: Solidarity based on economic interdependence because of high division of labor

100

What percentage of crimes are known to police?

Between 1/2 and 1/3


100

General crime trends from 1960 to present?

General increase from 1960 to 1980 with some dips. Decrease from 1980 to 1894. From 1985 to 1994, increased to historic levels. Then from 1995 to present, crime has consistently decreased.

100

Peak arrest age for property and violent crime?

Property: 16 Violent: 18

100

How many data sources were used?

2

200

Becker's 4 definitions of deviance

Abnormal, Pathology, Social pathology, and Simple rule breaking

200

Punishments have become less severe as ___

-Power has become decentralized

-Higher division of labor 

-Changes in the justification of power

200

What are index crimes?

Part I crimes of the UCR (Murder, aggravated assault, forcible rape, robbery, burglary, arson, larceny, motor vehicle theft)

200

The biggest reason for the crime increase of the 1980's according to Baumer, and the proportion of the crime increase it is responsible for?

 Crack market (25-40%), 

200

Three primary reasons for gender gap in offending?

1) Gender norms 2) Strain 3) Biology

200

How many waves of data were utilized from the first data source?

3

300

What is bad in it itself?

Male in se

300

What is the difference between the conflict model and the consensus model?

Conflict model: Laws and rules made by those with power Consensus model: Laws are made because they appeal to the the intuitive sense of justice people feel

300

Factors that influence crime reporting

-Offender relationship to victim 

-Severity of crime

-If offender has a weapon

-If force was used 

-Amount stolen 

-Threat of death

-Invasion to home

300

Big three reasons for crime decrease from 1993 to present?

Baumer's big three: Incarceration (10-35%), Economy (10-30%), Teen births (10-35%)

300

Two explanations for desistance from crime?

Biology


Life events/turning points 

300

What offenses were measured? 

1) Hit someone outside of the house; 2) Thrown objects such as rocks or bottles at people; 3) carried a hidden weapon; 4) maliciously set fire to a building, property, or car; 5) snatched a purse or picked a pocket; 6) attacked someone with a weapon; 7) used a weapon to rob someone; or 8) been in a gang fight

400

Two determinants of punishment severity

How tempting the crime is AND the harmfulness/destructiveness of behavior 

400

Under the consensus model, what determines law

Collective conscious or the totality of shared beliefs

400

Describe the design used by the NCVS

Rotating panel design. Households are interviewed every 6 months for 3.5 years for a total of 7 interviews About 30,000-50,000 households participate yearly, for a total of 75,000-100,000 total participants.  Interviews everyone in the household with the exception of children under 12

400

Three arguments Rosenfeld made?

1) Crime decrease is real 2) Long enough to be considered a trend 3) Crime decrease will eventually stall or crime will increase

400

This emotion is criminogenic, and because men experience it more often, they commit more crime

Anger

400

The odds of violence among first generation immigrants are ____ of those of third generation immigrants

Half 

500

Beccaria's major points on torture?

1)Erases distinguish between innocent and guilty 2)Worse for innocents 

500

Two problems with the consensus model

-Arbitrary traditions/collective conservatism 

-Pluralistic ignorance 

500

Under-reported crimes:

-Minor

-Attempted

-Crimes committed by family/friends

-Sexual crimes

-Property crimes committed outside the home

500

This time period was characterized by a expanding circle of empathy and the Republic of Letters

Humanitarian Revolution

500

This broad explanation of the racial gap in offending points to a historical explanation/antecedent that points to globalization, migration, and a shift to a service based economy

The Great Migration

500

Racial differences in offending were explained away after adjusting for these neighborhood characteristics. 

Immigrant concentration, percentage professional/managerial, concentrated disadvantage, and residential stability

600

Four reasons why punishments should be mild

Certainty principle, declining sensitivity, brutalization effect, egitimacy

600

This is really a Crime Trends question. What data did Baumer use to test the factors related to the crime increase and decrease?

114 cities with populations of 100,000 or more in 1980

600

Problem with the unweighted crime rate

All offenses given equal weight so that crime rates reflect lesser offenses


600

Two types of changes in policing potentially related to the crime decline

-Changes in style: This did not matter

-Changes in size: This had a small effect (3-7%)


600

What are the two positions in the age-crime debate? Describe each position

"Everyone desists"

The propensity to offend decreases with age, and eventually everyone will desist. 

"Life course persistent"

The reason for the age crime curve is that most people become involved in delinquency during adolescence. But a small group of offenders never desists

600

The odds of violence for those in neighborhoods that are comprised of 40% immigrants are ____ lower

4/5

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