ICRIM
  • 1. A person who committed a crime and has been convicted by a court of the violation of a
    criminal law.
A) acute criminal
B) legal definition
C) social definition
D) normal criminal
E) chronic criminal
  • 2. He commits crime acted in Consonance of deliberate thinking. He plans the
    crime ahead of time. They are the targeted offenders.
A) PSYCHOLOGICAL DEFINITION
B) Acute Criminal
C) Chronic Criminal
D) Normal Criminals
  • 3. is one who, at the time of his trial for one crime, shall have been
    previously convicted by final judgment of another crime embraced in the
    same title of the Revised Penal Code.
A) Habitual Delinquent
B) Quasi-recidivist
C) CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR
D) Recidivist
  • 4. Are those who commit crimes due to aggressiveness.
A) Accidental Criminals
B) Active Criminals
C) Professional Criminal
D) Habitual Criminals
  • 5. are those who continue to commit crime because of deficiency of intelligence
    and lack of self - control.
A) Professional Criminal
B) Habitual Delinquent
C) Active Criminals
D) Habitual Criminals
  • 6. Is considered the lowest form of criminal in a criminal career. He doesn't stick
    to crime as a profession but rather pushed to commit crimes due to great
    opportunity.
A) Ordinary Criminal
B) Organized Criminal
C) Professional Criminal
D) Chronic Criminal
  • 7. He commits crime acted in Consonance of deliberate thinking. He plans the
    crime ahead of time. They are the targeted offenders.
A) Chronic Criminal
B) Acute Criminal
C) Ordinary Criminal
D) Normal Criminals
  • 8. person’s whose psychic organizations resembles that of normal individuals
    except that he identified himself w/ criminal prototype.
A) Acute Criminal
B) Organized Criminal
C) Normal Criminals
D) Acute Criminal
E) Chronic Criminal
  • 9. He associates himself with other criminals to earn a high degree of organization
    to enable them to commit crimes easily without being detected by authorities.
    They commit organized crimes.
A) Accidental Criminals
B) Organized Criminal
C) Ordinary Criminal
D) Acute Criminal
  • 10. A person who violated rules of conduct due to behavioural maladjustment.
A) SOCIAL DEFINITION
B) PSYCHOLOGICAL DEFINITION
C) LEGAL DEFINITION
  • 11. A person who violated a social norm or one who did an anti-social act.
A) PSYCHOLOGICAL DEFINITION
B) SOCIAL DEFINITION
C) LEGAL DEFINITION
  • 12. person’s whose action arise from intra-psychic conflict between the social
    and anti-social components of his personality.
A) Neurotic Criminal
B) Organized Criminal
C) Normal Criminals
D) Accidental Criminals
  • 13. Are those who commit crimes because they are pushed to it by reward or
    promise.
A) Active Criminals
B) Socialized Delinquents
C) Passive Inadequate Criminals
D) Neurotic Criminal
  • 14. is one who commits another crime after having been
    convicted by final judgment of the crime falling under either the Revised Penal
    Code or Special Law, before beginning to serve such sentence or while
    serving the same.
A) Quasi-recidivist
B) Active Criminals
C) Neurotic Criminal
D) Recidivist
  • 15. It deals mainly on the biological explanations of crimes focused on
    the form of abnormalities that exists in the individual criminal before,
    during and after the commission of crime.
A) Socialized Delinquents
B) Active Criminals
C) Subjective Approaches
D) Recidivist
  • 16. the study on the physical characteristics of an individual offender with
    non-offender in the attempt to discover differences covering criminal
    behavior.
A) Medical Approach
B) Biological Approach
C) Physiological Approach
D) Anthropological Approach
  • 17. the application of medical examinations on the individual criminal
    explain the mental and physical condition of the individual prior and
    after the commission of crime.
A) Medical Approach
B) Biological Approach
C) Physiological Approach
D) anthropological approach
  • 18. the evaluation of genetic influences to criminal behavior. It is noted
    that heredity is one forces pushing the criminal to commit crime.
A) Biological Approach
B) Anthropological Approach
C) Medical Approach
D) Physiological Approach
  • 19. it explains that the deprivation of the physical body on the basic needs
    is an important determiner of the commission of crime.
A) Anthropological Approach
B) Medical Approach
C) Physiological Approach
D) Biological Approach
  • 20. it concerned about deprivation of the psychological needs of man
    which constitute the development of
A) Medical Approach
B) Physiological Approach
C) Psychological Approach
D) Biological Approach
  • 21. the explanations of crime through the diagnosis of mental diseases as
    a cause of criminal behavior.
A) Physiological Approach
B) Psychiatric Approach
C) Psychological Approach
D) Biological Approach
  • 22. the explanation of crimes based on the Freudian theory, which traces
    behavior as the deviation of the repression on the basic drives.
A) Psychiatric Approach
B) Psychological Approach
C) Psychoanalytical Approach
D) Biological Approach
  • 23. Are those who commit crimes when the ant situation is conducive to its
    commission.
A) Socialized Delinquents
B) Objective Approaches
C) Professional Criminals
D) Accidental Criminals
  • 24. Are criminals who are normal in behavior but defective in their socialization
    process or development.
A) Accidental Criminals
B) Economic Approach
C) Socialized Delinquents
D) Professional Criminals
  • 25. Crime is produced only by one factor or variable be they are social, biological or
    mental this theory is no longer use at present.
A) ECELECTIC THEORY
B) MUTIPLE FACTOR THEORY
C) SINGLE OR UNITARY CAUSE
  • 26. Crime is not a product of a single cause or factor but a combination of several
    factors.
A) ECELECTIC THEORY
B) SINGLE OR UNITARY CAUSE
C) MUTIPLE FACTOR THEORY
  • 27. Crime is one instance maybe caused by one or more factors while instance it is
    caused by another.
A) ECELECTIC THEORY
B) MUTIPLE FACTOR THEORY
C) SINGLE OR UNITARY CAUSE
  • 28. this approach considers topography, natural resources,
    geographical location and climate lead on individual to commit
    crime.
A) Economic Approach
B) Socio-Cultural Approach
C) Geographic Approach
D) Ecological Approach
  • 29. it concerned with the biotic grouping of men resulting to
    migration, competition, social discrimination, division of labor
    and social conflict as factors to crime.
A) Ecological Approach
B) Geographic Approach
C) Economic Approach
D) Socio-Cultural Approach
  • 30. t deals with the explanations of crime concerning financial
    security in adequacy and other necessities to criminality.
A) Ecological Approach
B) Economic Approach
C) Socio-Cultural Approach
D) Geographic Approach
  • 31. those that focus on the institutions economic, financial,
    education, political and religious influences to crime.
A) Economic Approach
B) Ecological Approach
C) Socio-Cultural Approach
D) Geographic Approach
  • 32. this approach is focused on the psychoanalytical, psychiatric and
    sociological explanations of crime in an integrated theory an
    explanatory perspective that merges concepts drawn from different
    sources.
A) Economic Approach
B) Geographic Approach
C) Ecological Approach
D) Contemporary Approaches
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