MEASURING CRIME
CLASSICAL THEORIES
OPPORTUNITY & BIOLOGICAL
SOCIAL DISORGANIZATION & SOCIAL LEARNING
ANOMIE & STRAIN
100

This is the year/period of time when crime started to decline in the United States.

What is 1995 / mid-90s?

100

A punishment must be swift, certain, and severe in order for this theory to work.

What is deterrence theory?

100

This is what CPTED stands for.

What is Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design?

100

Collective efficacy and crime – as variables, do they have a positive or inverse relationship?

What is inverse?

100

The clash of culturally defined goals and socially approved means results in a state of normlessness, also known as what?

What is anomie?

200

This is the age range when crime peaks (is at its highest).

What is 19-24?

200

_________ deterrence targets offenders who have already been apprehended, while __________ deterrence aims to divert would-be offenders from engaging in criminal activity.

What is specific and general deterrence?

200

These are the three key elements of Cohen & Felson’s Routine Activities Theory.

  

What are motivated offenders, suitable targets, and absence of capable guardians?

200

We discussed four elements of pro-criminal definitions (illustrated by videos from The Wire). Name at least two of them.

What are frequency, priority, duration, and intensity?

200

Agnew’s General Strain Theory broaden’s Merton’s idea of strain beyond economic strain to include what?

What are negative emotional states and lack of coping skills?

300

This is one way that the NIBRS (National Incident Reporting System) improves upon the UCR.

Collects info on when and where the offense occurred.

Gathers victim information

Gathers offender information

Records all offenses for each incident

300

Much of the “Get _____” or “_______ on crime” movement was driven by deterrence theory.

What is “TOUGH”?

300

We discussed four principles of Newman’s defensible space. Name two of them.

         

What are territoriality, natural surveillance, image, and milieu?


300

D’Angelo teaching Bodie and Wallace how to play chess is a great example of which theory?

What is Sutherland's Differential Association theory and Social Learning theory?

300

If someone accepts the goals of the American Dream and accepts the means to achieve that goal, then he/she is likely using which adaptation to strain?


What is a conformist?

400

We discussed weaknesses of Victimization Statistics and Measures (NCVS). Name one.

Lack of knowledge of what = crime

Respondent recall (memory)

Issues of question wording

Head of household completes it  affects reporting of juvenile victimization how?

400

The ____________ school of thought is associated with rational choice, while the ____________ is more associated with individual traits (factors outside an individual’s control) as predicting delinquency.

What are the classical school and the positive school?

400

This person is considered the father of the Positive School of criminology. He moved focus from the offense (deterrence) to the offender, conducted autopsies of 66 criminals, and discovered atavistic anomalies among them, suggesting they were “born criminal.”


Who is Lombroso?

400

Residential turnover, immigration/heterogeneity, and disorder (i.e. deteriorated housing) are characteristics of which area, according to Shaw & McKay’s theory of Social Disorganization?

What is the Zone of Transition?

400

If someone rejects the goals of the American Dream and rejects the means to achieve that goal, then he/she is likely using which adaptation to strain, illustrated by someone like Bubbles from The Wire who is severely addicted to drugs?

What is retreatism?

500

We discussed some weaknesses of the Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) - official data from the F.B.I. Describe two of them.

1) Voluntary for police to report their county's crime rates

2) Police have great discretion in arrest

3) Many crimes are not officially reported.

500

Wilson & Kelling’s Broken Windows theory has a three-stage sequence. Describe one stage:

  • Disorderly people are allowed to take over public spaces
  • Decent people become fearful and change behavior
  • Disorder sends message “no one cares” about how people behave
500

According to Place Management Theory, crime increases when managers do one of three things:      

  • Fail to protect vulnerable targets
  • Attract potential offenders
  • Fail to control people’s behavior
500

We discussed NINE tenets of Sutherland’s Differential Association Theory. Describe THREE of them.


1. Criminal behavior is learned. 

2. …in interaction with other persons 

3. Intimate personal groups 

4. Techniques of crime, specific directions of motives, drives, rationalizations, and attitudes. 

5. Definitions of the legal codes as favorable or unfavorable. 

6. Excess of pro-criminal definitions causes delinquency 

7. Vary in frequency, duration, priority, and intensity. 

8. Same as any other learning. 

9. Criminal behavior is not explained by general needs and values

500

Akers improved upon Sutherland’s Differential Association by adding what to his Social Learning Theory?

What are punishments and rewards (positive and negative reinforcement)? These are necessary components for delinquency to stop (desist) or continue (persist).

M
e
n
u