Crime 1
Crime 2
Crime 3
Crime 4
Crime 5
100

Sociological concept of crime

Any act that violates written criminal law, crime only exists when an act has been identified as being against the law

100

Functionalist theory of crime

Durkheim suggests that some crime is important for social order.

100

Recidivism

Reoffending Rates 

100

Crimes against the person

crimes that direct violence or the threat of violence against others; also known as violent crimes



100

Crimes against property


One of the most common crimes in australia it includes destruction of homes, businesses, burglary and theft of vehicles eg house burglary



200

Deterrent and example


An aim to discourage someone from doing something. It could be the threat of a fine or some other punishment.

200

Rehabilitate and example

Refers to the idea that we can restore someone to a normal life (such as being away from crime or other deviant behaviour) by offering therapy, support and training as part of or after imprisonment or addiction treatment.



200

7 Types of Crime

- Crimes against the person
- Crimes against property
- Victimless crime
- White-collar crime
- Corporate
- Hate Crime
- Organised Crime

200

Victimless crime


Acts that involve a crime whereby all individuals consent to the criminal activity and whereby nobody is harmed in the process.



200

White-collar crime


Nonviolent crime committed by individuals of respectability and high social status in the course of thier occupation to obtain a personal or business advantage.



400

Corporate crime and example

Committed by large corporations which impacts individuals, groups or society. Types include
- administrative (paperwork)
- environmental (pollution)
- financial (tax violation)
- labor (working conditions
- manufacturing (labelling of goods)
- unfair trade practices (false advertising)

400

Factors leading to likelihood of committing crimes - Provide 3

Low or under-education
- Lack of employment opportunities
- Mental health issues
- Lack of appropriate housing
- The increasing availability of alcohol and drugs
- The increase and diversity of the population

400

Aims of punishment


-  Retribution
- Deterrence
- Rehabilitation
- Societal protection
- Restoration

400

Aims of Punishment: Deterrence

Focuses on offender, the idea that the pain of punishment should outweigh the pleasure of committing the crime, e.g. expensive fines related to traffic laws

400

3 restorative justice approaches

sentencing circles
victim-offender mediation
conferencing

500

Aims of Punishment: Retribution

Focuses on victims and society oldest justification of punishment where punishment should be equal in severity to the crime, e.g. eye for an eye mentality



500

Aims of Punishment: Rehabilitation

Focuses on the offender, aims to change the criminal, a more modern strategy where a crime is seen as a social or personal problem e.g. mental health services

500

Aims of Punishment: Societal Protection

Focuses on society making the offender incapeable of future offences

500

Benefits and negatives of societal protection

Allows criminals to engage only with criminals and form wider isolation from society.

Protects the wider society as people deemed 'dangerous' are taken away





500

pros and cons of rehabilitation


Negative

Less of a punishment, is rehabilitation proper justice?
-Need a case by case approach, which is hard to achieve with the current legal system. 

Benefits

Dismantles labels of the offender which reduces the risks like possibly committing that crime again

600

Australian data - Related to ethnicity

There is a lot of over representation of Indigenous Australians in prisons this could be due to disadvantage such as living rurally where there are limited resources and that some police could be racist



600

Australian data - Related to gender


Men are 4 times more likely to commit crime than women. crime in men may be due to gender roles and toxic masculinity as men don't always call out bad behaviour



600

Australian data - Related to age


Assault, drug and alcohol offences are most common in young people. this could be due to hormonal changes and potentially the need to be rebellious



600

Australian data - Related to Socioeconomic Status


Those that have immigrated may not be financially stable which could lead to a disadvantage, low ses could also result in a lack of healthcare and education leading to more crime



600

How can we link the labelling theory to the aims of punishment, in particular rehabilitation and societal protection?

Once being labelled as a criminal and excluded as you do in societal protection, a personal may be more likely to engage in crime and increases the chance of recidivism
Rehabilitation on the other hand dismantles the label and offers them alternatives to the harsh sentencing that may contribute to labelling