True or False
What's the purpose of...
1, 2, 3!
Defining Crime
Story Time
100

U.S. incarceration rates increased at the same time U.S. crime rates decreased. 

True

100

the criminal legal system for Marx?

maintain the smooth functioning of the capitalist economy and protect the interests of the powerful (bourgeoisie) 

100

What are three reasons the news covers crime incorrectly?

1. News values (stories about conflict between good and evil are newsworthy)
2. Organizational needs (i.e. need to make profits)
3. Reliance on official sources (government and law enforcement officials perceived as authoritative)

100

Crime is behavior the authorities label criminal

Symbolic Interactionist (Howard Becker)

100

A worker recently lost his job and has become homeless. He was sleeping in the door front of a local business, but the shop owner called the police and he was told to move along or he would be arrested for trespassing.

Marxist understanding of crime and the criminal justice system

200

The news covers violent crime because it occurs most frequently in the U.S.

False - property crime is 7 times more common than violent crime

200

punishment for a structural functionalist (Durkheim)?

To reinforce our shared commitment to moral values

200

Wacquant's definition of hyperincarceration focuses on three components. What are they?

1. Class - poor people are incarcerated the most
2. Race - Black incarceration has increased sharply
3. Place - targets "remnants of the ghetto" 

200

Structural Functionalism (Emile Durkheim)

Crime is behavior that offends our shared moral values (collective consciousness)

200

A wall-street banker goes to a party where his colleagues are talking and laughing about a new way to secretly move small amounts of money to a private account. Later, he decides to try it out himself even though he knows it's not allowed under U.S. law.

Sutherland's theory crime called of differential association

300

Bill Clinton's policies on crime and punishment were as punitive as the Republican presidents before him.

True - Democrats did not want to appear weak on crime in the 1990s.

300

building new prisons, according to Ruth Wilson Gilmore?

Solve the problems of surplus:
1. Labor (create new jobs)
2. Lands (use idle farms)
3. Finance Capital (safe government loans)
4. State Capacity (bureaucracy from New Deal)  

300

What are three key "rules" of understanding crime using a symbolic interactionist lens, according to Becker? 

1. Not every rule-breaker will be labeled deviant
2. Not every person labeled deviant has actually broken a rule
3. Whether an act is considered deviant depends on how people react to it

300

Crime is behavior that threatens the relations of production in capitalist societies

Marxian theory (Steven Spitzer)

300

A woman really wants a new pair of earrings to go with her outfit, but she has recently spent all of her money and can't afford to buy them. She quickly slips them into her pocket and walks out of the store.

Structural functionalist cause of crime - Strain/frustration caused by the disparity between
goals and means

400
Increased fear of crime led to changes in political rhetoric

False - shifts in political rhetoric cannot be explained by increases in fear of crime

400
"tough on crime" rhetoric?

1. Win over swing voters
2. Avoid looking "soft on crime"
3. Associate crime with Black people (racially-coded rhetoric) 

400

List three of Forman's critiques of Alexander's New Jim Crow theory of the criminal justice system.

1. Obscures history (crime in Black communities)
2. Black leaders support for punitive policies
3. Minimizes violent crime
4. Obscures the role of class (wealth/education)
5. Overlooks other impacted racial groups

400

Race-based Theory (W.E.B. du Bois)

Crime is the open rebellion of an individual against the wrong social conditions

400

A teen boy lives in a neighborhood that is predominately Black, heavily policed and lacks job opportunities for youth. He is stopped and searched by a police officer on his way home from school. 

Du Bois's theory of the "wrong social conditions"

500

Marx believed that the criminal justice system is shaped by capitalist relations of production,
and, it turn, it maintains and legitimates capitalist relations of production.

True - Economic base shapes ideological superstructure; the ideological superstructure maintains the economic base

500

prisonfare for Wacquant?

Responding to poverty, urban decay, and social insecurity by boosting and deploying the police, the courts, and prisons.

500

Name three laws or policies associated with the increased punititiveness during the "tough on crime" period.

1. Mandatory minimums
2. Three strikes laws
3. Death penalty for some drug-related crimes
4. Weaken defendant protections (Supreme Court)
5. Restricted ability to challenge racial discrimination (Supreme Court)

500

Differential Association Theory (Sutherland)

Crime is learned in association with those who define such behavior favorably and in isolation
from those who define it unfavorably

500

A judge sentences one man to the mandatory minimum of 5 years in prison for possessing 5 grams of crack cocaine. The next drug case she hears is club promoter who was arrested with 500 grams of powder cocaine. She also sentences him to the mandatory minimum of 5 years. The difference between how the court handles these two different crimes is best explained by what theorist from Module 2?

Alexander's understanding that the criminal legal system is the latest version of the U.S. racial caste system (New Jim Crow).

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