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Criminology Review

  • Street crimes: considered those that are relatively common and serious; they involve a victim and an offender who come together in space and time

    • street crimes include homicide, rape, sexual assault, robbery and physical assault

  • Criminology: the academic discipline that investigates the nature, extent, and causes of criminal offending and criminal victimization

  • Mala in se: refers to behavior that is sinful and inherently wrong by nature

  • Mala prohibita: describes behavior that is prohibited by law; this is dynamic and changes over time

  • Classical theory: crime occurs when the benefits outweigh the cost; crime is a free-willed choice

  • Positivist theory: Crime is caused or determined

  • Individual trait theory: Criminals differ from noncriminals on a number of biological and psychological traits

  • Social disorganization theory: Crime occurs in the city zone that has high levels of poverty, heterogeneity, and residential mobility

  • Differential association or social learning/subcultural theory: Crime is learned through associations with criminal definitions that approve of criminal conductor neutralizations that justify criminal conduct

  • Anomie/institutional anomie theory: the gap between the American dream’s goal of economic success and the opportunity to obtain this goal creates structural strain

  • Strain/general strain theory: When individuals cannot obtain success goals such as money or status they experience strain; People under strain adapt accordingly by either accepting or rejecting the goals and means to obtain what society values

  • Control theory :The key factor in crime causation is the presence or absence of social control that emphasizes relationships

  • Rational choice/deterrence theory: Crime is seen as a choice that is influenced by its costs and benefits; crime is a rational choice

  • Routine activity theory: People’s daily routine activities affect the likelihood they will be attractive targets who encounter offenders in situations in which no effective guardianship is present

  • Labeling/ shaming theory: People become stabilized in criminal roles when they are labeled as criminals, develop criminal identities, are sent to prison, and are excluded from conventional roles

  • Critical/Marxist theory: Inequality in power and material well-being create conditions that lead to street crime and corporate crime; the ruling class exploits the working class through labor and laws

  • Peacemaking theory: Crime is caused by suffering that is linked to injustice rooted in inequality and daily personal acts of harm.

  • Feminist theory: Crime cannot be understood without considering gender; crime is shaped by the different social experiences of and power exercised by men and women.

  • Developmental/life course theory: Crime causation is a developmental process that starts before birth and continues through the life course.

  • Integrated theory: Crime is caused by components described in a variety of theories.

  • Uniform Crime Reports: a compilation of crime reports submitted by various law enforcement agencies that is designed to provide unified, reliable, and systematic information on a set of frequently committed serious crimes.

    • The UCR does not represent all the crimes that occur. A lot less crime is reported that what happens; a victimization survey is more reliable on how many crimes occur total.

  • Code of Hammurabi: the oldest known legal code; established approx. 300 provisions for family, trade, real property, personal property, and labor

  • misdemeanor: a less serious crime punishable by fine, forfeiture, or short-term confinement

  • felony: a criminal offense that is more serious and generally results in more severe punishment than a misdemeanor

  • Slave patrol: originated in 1704 and continued on into the 1850s

  • probable cause: in criminal law, the existence of more than a suspicion that a person has committed an illegal act

  • due process: established rules and principles designed to protect private rights found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments that prevent the government from unfairly or arbitrarily depriving anyone of life, liberty, or property

  • use of force: only permitted in certain circumstances

  • 6 exceptions to warrantless searches:

    • Consent: when police officers ask for permission to search and you voluntarily say yes, they can proceed without a warrant

    • Plain view doctrine: the rule that permits officers to seize evidence without a warrant if it is easily seen

    • Exigent circumstances: emergency situation that are present to prevent (a) escape, (b) harm to the officer or others, and (c) destruction of evidence

    • Incident to a lawful arrest: allows law enforcement to search any person without a warrant once that person is lawfully arrested

    • Automobile exception: should police have probable cause to believe that a vehicle contains contraband, fruits of a crime, evidence, and/or instrumentalities of crime, the vehicle can be searched

    • Suspicionless search: an acceptable search based on place and reasonable potential of wrongdoing

    • Emergency doctrine: allows warrantless searches if evidence may be destroyed or in cases of imminent danger

  • interview: the police have not determined the person’s role in a crime; generally not adversarial or accusatory; usually done with a witness or victim to gather information

  • interrogation: suspect or arrested person is sat down in an adversarial environment; a person is exposed to the knowledge of their rights; if rights are not given, evidence obtained is not admissible

  • Miranda v. Constitution: court case that established the Miranda Rights; a person in custody must be read their rights or else the evidence gathered is deemed inadmissible

  • Grass eaters: passive participants when others were engaging in bribery and corruption

  • Meat eaters: persons who actively engaged in corrupt activities

  • Broken Windows theory: introduced to describe the social disorder that occurs in run-down and neglected neighborhoods, which leads to higher crime rates

  • example of plain view doctrine: if a police officer enters a house and sees illegal contraband on the table, they would not need to contact a judge for a search warrant.

  • example of stop and frisk: In Adams v. Williams, the court ruled that reasonable cause for a stop and frisk may be based on information supplied by another person (a police informant)

  • example of fruits of the poisonous tree: if the police conducted an illegal search of a suspected marijuana growing operation and discovered evidence that methamphetamine was being cooked at the site, that evidence would be inadmissible.

MP

Criminology Review

  • Street crimes: considered those that are relatively common and serious; they involve a victim and an offender who come together in space and time

    • street crimes include homicide, rape, sexual assault, robbery and physical assault

  • Criminology: the academic discipline that investigates the nature, extent, and causes of criminal offending and criminal victimization

  • Mala in se: refers to behavior that is sinful and inherently wrong by nature

  • Mala prohibita: describes behavior that is prohibited by law; this is dynamic and changes over time

  • Classical theory: crime occurs when the benefits outweigh the cost; crime is a free-willed choice

  • Positivist theory: Crime is caused or determined

  • Individual trait theory: Criminals differ from noncriminals on a number of biological and psychological traits

  • Social disorganization theory: Crime occurs in the city zone that has high levels of poverty, heterogeneity, and residential mobility

  • Differential association or social learning/subcultural theory: Crime is learned through associations with criminal definitions that approve of criminal conductor neutralizations that justify criminal conduct

  • Anomie/institutional anomie theory: the gap between the American dream’s goal of economic success and the opportunity to obtain this goal creates structural strain

  • Strain/general strain theory: When individuals cannot obtain success goals such as money or status they experience strain; People under strain adapt accordingly by either accepting or rejecting the goals and means to obtain what society values

  • Control theory :The key factor in crime causation is the presence or absence of social control that emphasizes relationships

  • Rational choice/deterrence theory: Crime is seen as a choice that is influenced by its costs and benefits; crime is a rational choice

  • Routine activity theory: People’s daily routine activities affect the likelihood they will be attractive targets who encounter offenders in situations in which no effective guardianship is present

  • Labeling/ shaming theory: People become stabilized in criminal roles when they are labeled as criminals, develop criminal identities, are sent to prison, and are excluded from conventional roles

  • Critical/Marxist theory: Inequality in power and material well-being create conditions that lead to street crime and corporate crime; the ruling class exploits the working class through labor and laws

  • Peacemaking theory: Crime is caused by suffering that is linked to injustice rooted in inequality and daily personal acts of harm.

  • Feminist theory: Crime cannot be understood without considering gender; crime is shaped by the different social experiences of and power exercised by men and women.

  • Developmental/life course theory: Crime causation is a developmental process that starts before birth and continues through the life course.

  • Integrated theory: Crime is caused by components described in a variety of theories.

  • Uniform Crime Reports: a compilation of crime reports submitted by various law enforcement agencies that is designed to provide unified, reliable, and systematic information on a set of frequently committed serious crimes.

    • The UCR does not represent all the crimes that occur. A lot less crime is reported that what happens; a victimization survey is more reliable on how many crimes occur total.

  • Code of Hammurabi: the oldest known legal code; established approx. 300 provisions for family, trade, real property, personal property, and labor

  • misdemeanor: a less serious crime punishable by fine, forfeiture, or short-term confinement

  • felony: a criminal offense that is more serious and generally results in more severe punishment than a misdemeanor

  • Slave patrol: originated in 1704 and continued on into the 1850s

  • probable cause: in criminal law, the existence of more than a suspicion that a person has committed an illegal act

  • due process: established rules and principles designed to protect private rights found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments that prevent the government from unfairly or arbitrarily depriving anyone of life, liberty, or property

  • use of force: only permitted in certain circumstances

  • 6 exceptions to warrantless searches:

    • Consent: when police officers ask for permission to search and you voluntarily say yes, they can proceed without a warrant

    • Plain view doctrine: the rule that permits officers to seize evidence without a warrant if it is easily seen

    • Exigent circumstances: emergency situation that are present to prevent (a) escape, (b) harm to the officer or others, and (c) destruction of evidence

    • Incident to a lawful arrest: allows law enforcement to search any person without a warrant once that person is lawfully arrested

    • Automobile exception: should police have probable cause to believe that a vehicle contains contraband, fruits of a crime, evidence, and/or instrumentalities of crime, the vehicle can be searched

    • Suspicionless search: an acceptable search based on place and reasonable potential of wrongdoing

    • Emergency doctrine: allows warrantless searches if evidence may be destroyed or in cases of imminent danger

  • interview: the police have not determined the person’s role in a crime; generally not adversarial or accusatory; usually done with a witness or victim to gather information

  • interrogation: suspect or arrested person is sat down in an adversarial environment; a person is exposed to the knowledge of their rights; if rights are not given, evidence obtained is not admissible

  • Miranda v. Constitution: court case that established the Miranda Rights; a person in custody must be read their rights or else the evidence gathered is deemed inadmissible

  • Grass eaters: passive participants when others were engaging in bribery and corruption

  • Meat eaters: persons who actively engaged in corrupt activities

  • Broken Windows theory: introduced to describe the social disorder that occurs in run-down and neglected neighborhoods, which leads to higher crime rates

  • example of plain view doctrine: if a police officer enters a house and sees illegal contraband on the table, they would not need to contact a judge for a search warrant.

  • example of stop and frisk: In Adams v. Williams, the court ruled that reasonable cause for a stop and frisk may be based on information supplied by another person (a police informant)

  • example of fruits of the poisonous tree: if the police conducted an illegal search of a suspected marijuana growing operation and discovered evidence that methamphetamine was being cooked at the site, that evidence would be inadmissible.