This theory views crime as the product of socialization and sees it as being acquired by criminals according to the same principles that guide the learning of Law-abiding behavior in conformists.
A. Differential association
B. Concentric zone
C. Containment
D. Neutralization
Who are the theorist for techniques of neutralization?
A. Sykes and Matza
B. Gottfredson and Hirschi
C. Wolfgang and Ferracuti
D. Burgess and Akers
Edward Sutherland formulated what theory?
A. Anomie
B. Cultural conflict
C. Social learning
D. Differential association
According to anomie theory, this individual agrees with the goals but disagrees with the means and may be involved in white-collar crimes or property crimes:
A. Retreatism
B. Rebel
C. Ritualist
D. Innovator
This term id defined as the attempt to derive a composite picture of an offender’s social and psychological characteristics from the crime he/she committed and from and manner in which it was committed:
A. Consitutive criminology
B. Deviance detection
C. Psychological profiling
D. Crime scene separation
These individuals are characterized by disordered or disjointed thinking in which the types of logical associations they make are atypical of other people.
A. Schizophrenics
B. Innovators
C. Ritualists
D. Fatalists
This is a psychological principle that holds that the frequency of any behavior, including criminal or deviant behavior, can be increased or
A. Anomie
B. Conflict
C. Conditioning
D. None of the above
These theories highlight the role of human DNA, environmental contaminates, nutrition, hormones, physical trauma, and body chemistry in human cognition, feeling, and behavior:
A. Classical school
B. Social process
C. Conflict
D. Psychobiology