Forensics Flashcards

1
Q

genetic explanation

A

inherit a gene or combination which predispose them to commit a crime
twin studies- crowe- found that adopted children whose biological mother had a criminal record had a 50% chance of having one by 18
- mothers who hadnt had 5% risk
candidate genes- tihonen- genetic analysis of 800 Finnish offenders found 2 genes associated with violent crimes (MAOA and CDH13)
Brunner- studied large dutch family found abnormal violent behaviour, impulsive aggression, all had mutations in MAOA gene
diathesis sm- combination of genetic predisposition and psychological triggers
Mednick- 13000 danish adoptees
bio and adop parent no conviction= 13.5% child convicted
bio and/or ado parent conviction= 24.5%/20%
genetics and env play a part

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2
Q

genetic evaluation

A

not all children are adopted at birth, some will spend years in dysfunctional family environment
reductionist as basing whole personality on genes
twin studies ignore effect of environment but adoption studies don’t
arguements surrounding if an offender is guilty if they have a gene that predisposes certain behaviour

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3
Q

neural explanation

A

involves dysfunctions of brain/ nervous system, involves individuals with APD- lack of empathy
Raine- studies of APD brain, found reduced activity in prefrontal cortex, regulates emotional behaviour
11% reduction in grey matter compared to a control group
Blair- looked at PET scans of psychopaths and found impairments of pathways between amygdala and frontal lobe which make it difficult to moderate emotional reactions, cant develop emotional connections; act impulsively

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4
Q

neural evaluation

A

may be intervening variables between crime + frontal lobe
Farrington studied a group of men who scored highly on psychopathy (APD )and found they had experienced risk factors in childhood eg convicted parent, reduced neural activity that goes with APD may be due to this
biological determinism- should offenders be held responsible for a crime which is found to be determined by brain or genes 🧬

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5
Q

historic explanation

A

lombroso wrote a book which proposed that criminals are a primitive species, biologically different to us
lack evolutionary development
studied 383 dead and 4000 living criminals
identified markers- asymmetrical face, large ears, prominent eyebrows, jawbone + cheekbones
40% of criminal acts committed by people with atavistic characteristics

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6
Q

historic evaluation

A

changed face of study of crime- more scientific
DeLisi- racist undertones- features identified as atavistic seen in africans
study didnt use a control group so no control of confounding variables
Goring compared 3000 offenders to 3000 non offenders and found no evidence of distinct differences

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7
Q

differential association

A

sutherland- criminal behaviour is learned in interaction with other people
occurs in intimate personal groups
learning includes techniques of committing crimes
may be learned in prison and explains why many people reoffend
learn attitudes and if pro crime attitudes> anti crime attitude= offending
frequency, intensity and duration
-not just lower class but can be across all classes depending on who you associate with eg white collar crimes

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8
Q

dif asso evaluation

A

farrington- focused on 411 boys aged 8-9 in deprived areas of south london
looked at sample 40 years later and 40% had cmmited a crime
7% had- convicted parent, delinquent sibling, large family
criminal behaviours were learned
hard environmental determinism as children dont always end up as criminals
difficult to measure theory
doesn’t count for all crimes
may turn to crime/ gangs for sense of belonging, especially if they have had a disturbing upbringing (Farmington)
practical applications as social workers can intervene to prevent later offending for people growing up in the ‘chronic’ conditions
nature vs nurture- idea that offending behaviour runs in families etc may be explaining the genetic exp

siegel and mccormick– argued that people who hold deviant values at a young age are more likely to associate with peers of the same nature- they are more fun and thus the reinforcement of this deviant behaviour is a two-way process rather than the SLT in itself.

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9
Q

cog explanations

A

cognitive distortions- faulty/biased ways of thinking that mean we perceive ourselves or others negatively
HAB- distorted thinking when offender percieves another person as angry- misinterpretation of actions/ expressions as aggressive
Schonenburg- 55 offenders presented with emotionally ambiguous pictures- more likely to say they were hostile compared to a control group
Eyes task
Mini- reducing the effect of a crime, downplaying seriousness
barbaree- amongst 26 rapists 54% denied committing an offence and 40% minimised the effect it had on the victim
LOMR- how people think about right and wrong
Kohlberg- criminals have lower level of moral reasoning - linked with punishment and reward
used moral dilemmas (Heinz, drug, wife)+ found that violent youths were at sig. lower levels of moral reasoning than others
at pre conventional stage concerned with avoiding punishment and gaining rewards so commit crimes as they think they’ll get away with it

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10
Q

cog evaluation

A

hab- may have had it before they came to prison or developed it in prison, small sample

mini- difficult to generalise to other crimes eg murder, small sample

LOMR- kohlberg used males- beta bias as minimising differences between men and women
Thornton- pre conventional stage associated with crimes like robbery where offender is more likely to get away with it- not relevant to all crimes
Gilligan- kohlberg’s scenarios prioritise justice so women score lower than men due to their duty of care but there are less women in prison
cog approach is descriptive but doesn’t explain why
difficult to obtain empirical evidence

support for LOMR in offenders- Palmer and Hollin compared 332 non offenders to 126 offenders on moral dilemmas and found that offender group were less mature moral reasoning

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11
Q

psychodynamic explanation

A

superego works on the morality principle
formed at end of the phallic stage- oedipus or electra
Blackburn
weak superego- lack of same sex parent during phallic stage so child cant internalise a superego
= selfish, uncaring for self and others
deviant superego- if child internalises immoral or deviant values eg boy has convicted father- imitates behaviour
overharsh superego- develops when a child identifies with a strict parent which leads to feelings of guilt, indulge in criminal acts to satisfy need to be punished

Bowlby- 44 thieves- maternal deprivation
44 thieves compared to control group
14 showed affection less psychopathy (selfish, uncaring, lack of guilt) and 12 of these had experienced prolonged separation

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12
Q

psychodynamic evaluation

A

Goreta- conducted analysis on 10 offenders and found disturbances in superego of all of them, unconscious feelings of guilt
not empirical evidence, falsifiability
not all children who grow up without same sex parent are selfish- may become criminals as they look for sense of belonging eg gangs
Lewis- replicated 44 thieves with a sample of 500 children and found that MD was a poor predictor for future offending behaviour
-not cause and effect
-issues with bolwby’s methodology

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13
Q

gilligan moral reasoning

A

sex differences in moral reasoning
kohlberg’s theory was based on male thinking process
proposed justice based and care based morality
justice based- found in men
care based- found in women

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14
Q

top down profiling

A

qualitative approach which looks at the whole picture then uses typologies
top includes motives and characteristics of offender + crime scene
down decided the typology that the offender fits into
-was developed by FBI behavioural science unit through in-depth interviews of 36 sexually motivated killers and the crime scenes
Organised- average to high intelligence, control, plan crime, socially competent
Disorganised- low intelligence, unskilled, no evidence of planning, live alone
Stages to construct a profile-
1- Data assimilation
2- Crime scene classification
3- Crime reconstruction
4- Profile generation

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15
Q

top down ao3 s

A

was developed using sexually motivated serial killers but the same approach can be used for different crimes so there are wider applications of the theory

Meteka found that top down profiling has been applied to burglaries and led to an 85% rise in solved case, also adding two new categories; interpersonal and opportunistic

canter analysed data from 100 murder cases using smallest space analysis
found that there is a distinct subset of features that match the organised typology
has validity/ research support
however doesn’t support disorganised type

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16
Q

top down ao3 w

A

Godwin (2002) argued that the two types are not mutually exclusive and that many offenders and their crime scenes can fit into characteristics of both of the types which may show the the organised- disorganised type is more of a continuum.

the sample consisted of 36 serial killers, a very small sample of similar offenders, who were all interviewed in very different way (not standardised) so they are not very comparable and this profiling doesn’t have a scientific basis.

assumes that personality is stable and that people can be classified on small shows of behaviour eg in a crime scene but this isn’t accurate and many offenders fit into both organised and disorganised types
eg may have high intelligence but be very out of control when they are angry

17
Q

bottom up

A

Profilers work their way up from the evidence at the crime scene to develop hypotheses about the likely characteristics, social background and motivations of the offender
-doesn’t have fixed typologies, is more data driven and involves statistical analysis of minor details at the crime scene

18
Q

investigative

A

matches details of crime scene to statistical analysis of typical offender behaviour patterns which acts as a baseline for comparison

  • interpersonal coherence; the way in which an offender acts with the victim/at the crime scene can reflect how they are as a person/ their everyday behaviour
  • small space analysis; use of statistical analysis to compare offenders
  • forensic awareness; refers to individuals who have been investigated before and theur ability to cover their tracks
19
Q

geographical

A

based on the principles of spatial consistency and possible future offences are revealed by the location of previous crimes
Canter circle theory- spatial pattern of behaviour provides investigators with a ‘centre of gravity’ and pattern of offending forms a circle around an offenders main base
an lead to describing what type of offender they are-
Marauders who operate in close proximity to their home base
Commuters who travel distances from their usual residence

20
Q

bottom up ao3-s

A

research support for investigative psychology form Heritage and Canter (1990) who conducted analysis on 66 SA cases, using small space analysis and found that each individual displayed characteristic patterns of behaviour which could be used to establish if two or more crimes are linked

Lundrigan + Canter collected date from 120 murder cases and small space analysis revealed spatial consistency of the offender and the body disposal sites created a centre of gravity with the offenders’ home base in the middle.

21
Q

bottom up ao3- w

A

Copson (1995) found that out of 48 police departments, 83% found the advice from profilers useful however it only led to the accurate identification of the offender in 3% of cases.

geographical profiling may not be sufficient on its own and there are other, more important factors eg timing of offence, age of offender that will lead to the correct identification of an offender

22
Q

eysenck criminal personality

A

Hans Eysenck (1970) proposed the theory that criminality is a result of genetics and this affects the type of personality a person has, which can lead to a ‘criminal personality’- type of NS
-said that behaviour can be presented on 2 dimensions-
introversion (focused on their own thoughts) extroversion (open and talkative)- I-E
neuroticism (full of anxiety and worry) stability (stable) N-S
he then added a third dimension- psychotic sociability P-S
extraverts- have an underactive NS so they constantly seek excitement and stimulation making them harder to condition
neurotic- have a strong response to adverse stimuli making their behaviour hard to predict and will be prone to mood swings making them harder to condition
psychotic- have higher levels of testosterone so are prone to aggression

23
Q

EPI- eysenck

A

Eysenck developed the EPI (personality test) where respondents are located along the E,P,N dimensions to determine their personality type
He assessed 2070 male prisoners, comparing them to 2422 controls on E,P,N and prisoners had higher average scores across all ages which agrees with his theory that high E,N,P scores = criminal personality

24
Q

eysenck ao3- s

A

He used a large sample and found the same results across the whole of the sample so the results are reliable and can be generalised

25
Q

eysenck ao3

A

Eysenck carried out the study and they were looking for evidence to back up his own theory so could be researcher bias and he could have chosen prisoners that he thought would fit the theory

Farrington et al (1982) conducted meta-analysis on Eysenck’s studies and relevant studies and found that offenders scored highly on P but not E and N which undermines the root of the theory

Bartol (1979) studied African American and Hispanic offenders and found that they were less extraverted than a control group, undermining Eysenck’s theory and showing there are cultural differences

Issues with personality in general as the qs may be ambiguous, making them hard to answer and may be affected by mood
Issues with the study as the differences in personality that were found may be due to the effects of the prison