Chapter 4 - The Early Schools of Criminology Flashcards

1
Q

What was crime seem as before the classical school?

A

Sin

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2
Q

What were punishments for crime before the classical school?

A

-trial by ordeal
-exorcism
-heavy use of executions
-public punishment

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3
Q

What is the social contract?

A
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4
Q

Who is the father of the Classical School of Criminology

A

Cesare Beccaria

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5
Q

What is Beccaria’s purpose of punishment? What are the different types?

A

Deterrence;
-Specific deterrence: if you punish a specific person, they’ll never want to commit crime again
-General deterrence: the existence of punishment would discourage others from committing crime

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6
Q

What are the 3 characteristics of punishment? Which is viewed as the most important?

A

-Certainty - If you commit a crime, you will be caught and punished (most important)
-Celerity (swiftness) - The crime should come soon after the crime was committed
-Severity - The punishment should just be enough pain to deter the criminal from committing a crime again

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7
Q

What are 6 of Beccaria’s principles?

A

-The only thing that should determine punishment is the crime that was committed, not the characteristics of the offender or any circumstances
-Judges should not interpret the law; they should apply the punishment outlined by the legislature
-Torture should not be used and the death penalty should be abolished
-Laws and their punishments should be known to the public (Takes away certainty if it’s not known)
-Juries, not judge, should determine the facts of the case
-All people should be treated equally

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8
Q

What is Jeremy’s Bentham’s hedonistic calculus?

A

People seek to max pleasure and minimize pain and will make decisions accordingly

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9
Q

What did Bentham believe reform should center around?

A

The principle of utilitarianism

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10
Q

What are three-strike laws?

A

Life in prison without parole if you commit a certain crime 3 times

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11
Q

What are truth in sentencing policies?

A

Serve a certain amount of time in prison and serve the rest as parole/probations

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12
Q

What are scared straight programs?

A

Taking children into the prison to deter them from going to jail

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13
Q

What is the key assumption in the Positivist School?

A

Individuals don’t have free will to control their behavior; biological, psychological, and sociological factors determine behavior

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14
Q

What was Charles Darwin’s main proposition?

A

Humans evolved from more primitive beings in a process where certain adaptations were favored by natural selection

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15
Q

Who was the first criminologist?

A

Cesare Lombroso

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16
Q

What does Cesare Lombroso shift criminology from philosophizing to?

A

Documenting observations and testing proposition

17
Q

Lombroso’s biological theory

A

Certain individuals or groups of people are atavistic (when a person/feature of a person is a throwback to an earlier stage of evolutionary development

18
Q

What was the typology of offenders?

A

-Born criminals (more worrisome)
-Insane criminals
-Criminaloids (less dangerous criminals)

19
Q

What did atavistic stigmata include?

A

-Twisted noses
-Abnormally small/large ears
-Protruding jaws
-Long arms relative to the rest of the body
-Sloped shoulders
-Asymmetrical faces
-Abnormal foreheads
For criminal women, women have more masculine features

20
Q

What is craniometry?

A

the size of the brain or skull reflected superiority or inferiority

21
Q

What is phrenology?

A

Bumps on the skull revealed human dispositions

22
Q

What is physiognomy?

A

the study of facial and bodily aspects to identify developmental problems

23
Q

What is William Sheldon’s somatotype theory

A

Based on physical features:
-Endomorph - rounder; tend to be jolly and lazy
-Mesomorph - muscular; tend to be risk-taking and aggressive; most likely to commit crime
-Ectomorph - skinner; tend to be introverted

24
Q

What are eugenics?

A

the controlled breeding of controlled groups; removing them from society or stop them from breeding

25
Q

What was the result of Buck v. Bell?

A

the court argued that imbecility, epilepsy, and feeblemindedness are hereditary, and that inmates should be prevented from passing these defects to the next generation; and IQ test is a legal practice

26
Q

What are cartographic criminologists?

A

Criminologists who employ maps and other geographic info in their research to study where and when crime is more prevalent

27
Q

What were Quetelet and Guerry’s contributions to early positivism?

A

They discounted the idea that crime is caused by poverty per se, noting that the wealthiest regions of France had the greatest level of property crime

28
Q

What is social defense?

A

A theory of punishment asserting that its purpose is to defend society against criminals

29
Q

What did Garofalo believe about punishment?

A

The punishment should fit the criminal

30
Q

What is the contrast effect?

A

The punishment on future behavior depends on how much the punishment and usual life experience of the person being punished differ or contrast

31
Q

What is CompStat?

A

(COMParative STATistics) A police management and accountability process that has been implemented across the nation