Critical Perspective
Policing
Crime control vs due process
Movies
Important People
100

This perspective focuses on aspects of women's criminality, including the problems that women inmates face in jail and prison

Feminist

100

Police are most effective at reducing crime when they do this

When they work to address the particular crimes affecting communities and have a good relationship with that community

100

It is estimated that between 1 percent and 6 percent of all felony convictions are mistaken. These are called this

Wrongful convictions

100

This US city is considered the epicenter of the so-called crack epidemic

Los Angeles

100

Jerome H. Skolnick studied this about police officers

Their working personality 

200

Labeling theory adopts a relativist definition of crime by claiming this

Nothing about a given behavior automatically makes it deviant.

 

200

Community policing

In this style of policing, police work closely with community groups and residents on various activities designed to reduce crimes


200

One aspect that slows the adjudication process is this 

The heavy caseload of lawyers and judges

200

The Central Park Five case is considered this

The test of the criminal justice system

200

This reflects the tensions of crime control in a democratic society

Bonus: who coined these models

crime-control and due process models

Bonus: Packer

300

This is the major difference between conflict and radical theories on crime

Radical theories are based in Marx’s ideas on economic inequality, while conflict theories are based in Weber’s ideas on status group conflict.

300

Police spend most of their time doing this

Directing traffic, responding to traffic incidents, and paperwork

300

True or False: the increased rate use of the death penalty has decreased crime rates

False
300

In the 1980s, when Congress was unwilling to fund rebels groups in Central American in their civil wars, top officials in the Reagan administration illegally sold arms to Iran to use the profit to support Anti-communist ____________ rebels in Central American, who in turn were able to smuggle cocaine into the US.

Contra

300

This person argues that Capitalist societies have higher rates of crime because they promote competition and greed. 

Williem Bonger

400

Labeling theory

The formal labels placed upon convicted criminals increase their chances of recidivism.

400

Police corruption is said to arise from this type of roots, similar to those motivating brutality 

structural

400

This term is used to describe the US justice system

adversary model

400

True or False: the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act was based on research, it supported healthcare access for drug users 

False

400

This individual developed the concept of normal crime

David Sudnow

500

According to Edwin Lemert, just about everyone commits ______(i)______, but it is those who are officially labeled deviants who are most likely to commit ______(ii)_______.

(i) primary deviance; (ii) secondary deviance

 

500

This police model emphasizes the importance of Miranda Rights

Due process model

500

This insisted that crime causes real distress, and thus crime prevention and control are essential.

the Left Realists
500

What impacted the wrongful conviction of the Central Park Five?

The pressure felt by police officers to obtain a quick resolution to the incident.

The unstable political and social climate within New York City. 

The boys' families' lack of understanding of their rights and of the legal process

500

This individual coined the term re-integrative shaming, the type of shaming associated with decreased criminality

John Braithwaite

M
e
n
u