True or False
Fill in the Blank
Short Response
Definitions
Mystery Questions
100

Criminology is not a social science.

False. It is a social science. 

100

The 3 C's of criminal justice are: courts, cops, and ...

corrections.

100

How does the stigmatization process impact offenders?

Answer can vary.

100

What is considered a 'born criminal'?

Answers could vary.

The ‘born criminal’: abnormal anatomic, biological, and
psychological traits, many of which are atavistic, because
they ‘repeat’ traits typical of the pre-human ancestors of
man.

100

What are the assessments for this course?

Quizzes, Case study, 2 Critical Reading Assignments, Final Take Home Exam

200

There is an agreement on what constitutes crime.

False. There is not an agreement on what constitutes crime.

200
The media & popular culture play an .... role in depicting crimes.

important

200

Why is there no agreed-upon universal definition of criminology?

Answers can vary.

200

What is the process of criminalization?

How certain behaviours become criminalized over a period of time.

200

When did the discipline of criminology become established in Canada?

Until the mid-20th century.

300

The systematic study of crime began in the 16th century.

False. The systematic study of crime began in the 19th century.

300

Criminology is a very empirically driven... field

research. 

300

What are the three key 19th-century themes for the emergence of criminology?

Moral insanity, evolution, crime as a social phenomenon.

300

What is stigmatization?

How offenders come to be demonized and labeled.

300

List 3 different fields the study of criminology draws on?

Sociology, psychology, law, biology, geography, economics.

400

Rafter emphasizes that to understand ‘what is criminology’ we need to put together a sense of its historical development.

True.

400

Punishment should be swift, certain and …..

proportionate

400

What is the 'gold digging' approach to criminology?

Search for truth; definitive science of criminology

400

What does the statement 'crime as a social phenomena' refer to?

Viewing crime as a 'normal' function of society.
400

List two barriers to criminology's development.

(Hint: From Rafter Reading)

Geographical distance, language barriers, and criminology was not yet conceptualized as a field (pg. 146). 

500

The Classical School of Criminology believes there is a difference between criminals and non-criminals.

False. The Classical School of Criminology, namely Bentham & Beccaria believes there is no difference between criminals & non-criminals.

500

.... —how new laws and new methods of supervision (e.g., electronic monitoring) may increase the size of the population under “social control”.


net widening

500

Why does Rafter use an analogy of a river to describe criminology?

“[an approach] that conceives of criminology more like a
river, an ongoing effort flowing through time, hitting rocks,
absorbing current, from other fields, picking up new
methods or concepts as it travels."

500

What is criminology?

Answers can vary.

500

Who are two prominent scholars in the 'Classical School of Criminology'?

Jeremy Bentham & Cesare Beccaria