Criminology
Victimology
Crime & Opportunity
CJ Policy
Evaluating Theories
100

A set of ideas used to explain why a particular behavior or phenomenon occurs

What is theory?


100

When a person experiences victimization again after already being victimized once. 

What is revictimization?

100

_____ efforts include education, job skills, and mental health programming. 

What is rehabilitation?

100
Before a CJ policy can be developed, what has to occur first in the policy process?

What is issue identification?

100

A good scientific theory must be supported by this type of research evidence rather than personal opinions. 

What is empirical evidence?

200

These criminological theories focus on LARGE-SCALE social explanations for crime, such as poverty, inequality, or social institutions. 

What are macro theories?

200

This term describes when someone experiences multiple types of victimization. 

What is poly-victimization?

200

_____ efforts include the use of punishment to stop individuals from committing future crimes. 

What is deterrence?

200

Which branch of government generally has the greatest influence over CJ policy?

What is congress?

200

This characteristic of a theory refers to how well it is supported by research findings and scientific studies. 

What is empirical validity?

300

This school of criminology argues that individuals commit crimes based on free will and rational decision making. 

What is the classical school?


300

A person who did not contribute to their victimization is any way. 

What is an innocent victim?

300

What term describes theories that are concise and easy to understand?

What is parsimony?

300

During moral panics, these actors are often portrayed as protectors of society and the moral order. 

Who are the law enforcers?

300
If a theory explains many different types of crime across multiple situations and populations, it is said to have strong____. 

What is scope?

400

Merton argued that crime occurs when there is a gap between cultural ___ and legitimate ___ used to achieve them. 

What are goals and means?

400

This hypothesis suggests that people believe victims get what they deserve and deserve what they get. 

What is the just-world hypothesis?

400

This theory argues that everyday patterns of behavior and activities influence a person's risk of victimization.

What is lifestyle theory?

400

What does it mean when a theory makes sense and aligns with criminological views?

What is logical consistency?

400

When criminologists test a theory by collecting data and examining patterns in crime, they are using this type of method. 

What is the scientific method? 

500

According to Agnew's General Strain Theory (GST), strain can come from 3 major sources. Name them. 

Failure to achieve positively valued goals

Loss of positive stimuli

Presence of negative stimuli

500

In moral panic theory, the individuals or groups portrayed as the main threat to society are called this. 

What are folk devils?

500

Name all three elements required for crime to occur according to Routine Activities Theory (RAT). 

Motivated ofender

Suitable target

Absence of a capable guardian

500

Someone who pretends they are victim but is not one. 

What are imaginary victims?

500

Why do criminologists prefer theories that can be tested rather than ideas that cannot be scientifically examined?

Short answer: allows researchers to collect evidence and determine whether a theory accurately explains crime. 

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