Products
Flashcards
Quiz Maker
Training Maker
See All
ProProfs.com
Products
Flashcards
Quiz Maker
Training Maker
See All
ProProfs.com
Related Flashcards
Take Flashcards
Popular
Recent
Language
Animal
Art
Assessment
Book
Business
Career
Celebrity
Computer
Country
Education
English
Exam
Food
Fun
Game
Geography
Health
History
Literature
Music
Math
Medical
Personality
Profession
Science
Society
Sports
Subject
Television
Create Flashcards
?
Take a Quiz
All Products
Brain Games
ProProfs.com
Home
›
Create
›
Flashcards
›
Society
›
Law
›
Criminal
›
Crime
›
Criminology
›
Chapter 8: Social Conflict And Critical Criminology
›
Download View
Download (Chapter 8: Social Conflict And Critical Criminology) Flashcard
Choose a format below:
TEXT Format (.txt)
MS-Excel Format (.xls)
Select delimiter »
Comma
Semicolon
Tab
New Line
Custom
Preview »
Side A ------ Side B Critical criminology ------ the branch of criminology that holds that the cause of crime can be linked to economic, social, and politcal disparity. ome groups in society, particularly the wokring class and ethnic minorities, are seen as the most likely to suffer oppressive social relations based on class conflict and racism and hence to be more prone to criminal behavior power ------ the ability to persons and groups to control the behaior of others, to shape public opinion, and to define deviance supranational criminology ------ the study of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and the supranational penal system state (organized) crime ------ acts commited by state or government officals while holding their positions as government representatives death squads ------ covert military or paramilitary groups that carry out political assassinations surplus value ------ the difference between what workers produce and what they are paid, which goes to business owners as profits marginalization ------ displacement of workers, pushing them outside the economic and social mainstream gloablization ------ the process of creaing a global economy through tansnational markets and political and legal systems instrumental theory ------ the theory that criminal law and the criminal jsutice system are capitalist instruments for controlling the lower class demystify ------ to unmask the true purpose of law, justice, or other social institutions structural theory ------ the theory that criminal law and the criminal justice stystem are menas of defending and preserving the capitalist system left realism ------ approach that sees crime as a function of relative deprivation under capitalism and favors pragmatic, community based crime prevention and control preemptive deterrence ------ efforts to prevent crime through community organization and youth involvment critical feminism ------ approach that explains both victimization and criminality among women in terms of gender inequality, patriarchy, and the explotation od women under capitalism patriarchal ------ male dominated paternalistic families ------ families in whcih the father in the breadwinner and rule maker, and the mother has a mental job or is a homemaker only. Sons are granted greater greedom than daughters role exit behaviors ------ strategies such as running away or contemplating suicide, that are used by young girls unhappy with their status in the family egalitarian families ------ families in which the husband and wife share similar positions of power at home and in the workplace. Sons and daughters have equal freedom. power-control theory ------ the view that gender differences in crime are a function of economic power (class position, one-versus two- earner families) and paentla control (parentalistic versus egalitarian families) peacemaking ------ approach that considers puntitice crime conrtol strategies to be counterproducitve and favors the use of humanistic conflict recolution to prevent and control crime sentencing circle ------ a peacemaking technique in which offenders, victims, and other community members work together to formulate a santino that addresses the needs of all
Side A ------ Side B Critical criminology ------ the branch of criminology that holds that the cause of crime can be linked to economic, social, and politcal disparity. ome groups in society, particularly the wokring class and ethnic minorities, are seen as the most likely to suffer oppressive social relations based on class conflict and racism and hence to be more prone to criminal behavior power ------ the ability to persons and groups to control the behaior of others, to shape public opinion, and to define deviance supranational criminology ------ the study of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and the supranational penal system state (organized) crime ------ acts commited by state or government officals while holding their positions as government representatives death squads ------ covert military or paramilitary groups that carry out political assassinations surplus value ------ the difference between what workers produce and what they are paid, which goes to business owners as profits marginalization ------ displacement of workers, pushing them outside the economic and social mainstream gloablization ------ the process of creaing a global economy through tansnational markets and political and legal systems instrumental theory ------ the theory that criminal law and the criminal jsutice system are capitalist instruments for controlling the lower class demystify ------ to unmask the true purpose of law, justice, or other social institutions structural theory ------ the theory that criminal law and the criminal justice stystem are menas of defending and preserving the capitalist system left realism ------ approach that sees crime as a function of relative deprivation under capitalism and favors pragmatic, community based crime prevention and control preemptive deterrence ------ efforts to prevent crime through community organization and youth involvment critical feminism ------ approach that explains both victimization and criminality among women in terms of gender inequality, patriarchy, and the explotation od women under capitalism patriarchal ------ male dominated paternalistic families ------ families in whcih the father in the breadwinner and rule maker, and the mother has a mental job or is a homemaker only. Sons are granted greater greedom than daughters role exit behaviors ------ strategies such as running away or contemplating suicide, that are used by young girls unhappy with their status in the family egalitarian families ------ families in which the husband and wife share similar positions of power at home and in the workplace. Sons and daughters have equal freedom. power-control theory ------ the view that gender differences in crime are a function of economic power (class position, one-versus two- earner families) and paentla control (parentalistic versus egalitarian families) peacemaking ------ approach that considers puntitice crime conrtol strategies to be counterproducitve and favors the use of humanistic conflict recolution to prevent and control crime sentencing circle ------ a peacemaking technique in which offenders, victims, and other community members work together to formulate a santino that addresses the needs of all
Everything is ready!
Let’s click on download button to download score report in Microsoft Excel format (.xls file).