Criminal Body
Don't Do It
Growing Up
War and Peace
Inception
100

A modern, Classical School–based framework for explaining crime that includes the traditional formal deterrence aspects as well as informal factors that have been shown to consistently and strongly influence behavior

What is rational choice theory?
100

Based on Becker’s typology, an individual who has been identified as disobeying the rules but did not violate the rules

What is falsely accused?

100

A learning model that assumes that animals, as well as people, learn through associations between stimuli and responses

What is classical conditioning?

100

Criminal behavior theories that assume that most people disagree on what the law should be and that law is used as a tool by those in power to oppress other groups

What is conflict theory?

100

A perspective on criminal offending that assumes that many offenders believe in a normative system distinctly different from and often at odds with conventional norms

What is cultural/subcultural theory?

200

A theory of crime associated with the Classical School; proposes that individuals make rational decisions regarding their behavior

What is deterrence theory?
200

In strain theory, an adaptation to strain in which an individual buys into conventional goals (wealth, success, etc.) but does not buy into conventional means of attaining them (work, school, etc.)

What is innovation?
200

A theory of criminal behavior that emphasizes various types of social learning, specifically classical conditioning, operant conditioning, and imitation or modeling

What is differential remodeling theory?
200

Vold argued that people’s lives are a part, and a product, of their group associations; groups come into conflict with one another due to conflicting and competitive interests

What is group-conflict theory?

200

An individual’s behavior is presumed to be due to the three aspects of his or her personality: the id, ego, and superego.

What is psychoanalytic perspective?

300

Studies of crime that focus on the genetic makeup of individuals, with a specific focus on chromosomal abnormalities

What is cytogenetic studies?

300

The scientific study of crime and the reasons why people engage (or don’t engage) in criminal behavior

What is criminology?

300

The belief that certain characteristics or behaviors of a person are throwbacks to an earlier stage of evolutionary development

What is atavism?
300

A primary measure of crime in the United States; collected by the DOJ and the Census Bureau, based on interviews with victims of crime

What is National Crime Victimization Survey?

300

The only conscious domain of the psyche; according to Freud, it functions to mediate the battle between id and superego.

What is ego?

400

These are naturally occurring chemicals in the brain and body that help transmit electric signals from one neuron to another.

What is neurotransmitters?

400

This type of analysis focuses on crime places. One major aspect is mapping crimes, which illustrates the location of crimes, the distance between them, the direction in which the crimes seem to be moving, and other patterns

What is spatial analysis?

400

A theory that suggests that individuals, especially in their teenage years and early adulthood, make excuses to alleviate their guilt about committing certain criminal acts.

What is techniques of neutralization?

400

This concept refers to the repair of justice by reaffirming a shared consensus of values involving a joint or multisided approach; emphasizes victim, community, and offender

What is restorative justice?

400

A theory that proposes that individuals either develop self-control by age 10 or do not; those who do not will manifest criminal or deviant behaviors throughout life

What is low self-control?

500

The portion of the nervous system that controls our anxiety levels, such as the fight-or-flight response, as well as our involuntary motor activities (e.g., heart rate)

What is autonomic nervous system?

500

In labeling theory, this refers to the serious, frequent offenses people commit after they have been caught and labeled as offenders.

What is secondary deviance?

500

This includes deterring factors—such as family, church, or friends—that do not involve official aspects of criminal justice, such as police, courts, and corrections (e.g., prisons)

What is informal deterrence?

500

An Enlightenment ideal or assumption that stipulates an unspecified arrangement among citizens in which they promise the state or government not to commit offenses against other citizens, and, in turn, to gain protection from being violated by other citizens

What is social contract?

500

According to somatotyping, the body type associated with an emphasis on the outer layer of tissue (ectoderm) during embryonic development.

What is ectomorphic?