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Merged Test
Contributed by: ladrillo
  • 1. This theory is combination of strain and disorganization principles into a portrayal of a gang sustaining criminal subculture, the main concept of this theory states that people in all strata of society share the same success goals but those in the lower class have limited means of achieving them.
A) Cultural deviance theory
B) Containment theory
C) Drift theory
D) Differential opportunity theory
E) Delinquent subculture theory
  • 2. This type of strain occurs when a youth aspires to wealth and gain, but lacking financial and educational resources, would assume that such goals are impossible to achieve.
A) Removal of positively valued stimuli
B) Strain caused by disfunction of expectations and achievements
C) Presentation of negative stimuli
D) Strain caused by the failure to achieve positively valued goals
  • 3. This theory combines the effects of social disorganization and strain to explain how people living in deteriorated neighborhoods react to social isolation and economic deprivation .
A) Containment theory
B) Delinquent subculture theory
C) Differential opportunity theory
D) Drift theory
E) Cultural deviance theory
  • 4. The loss of positively stimuli may lead to delinquency as the adolescent tries to prevent the loss, retrieve what has been lost, obtain substitutes, or seek revenge against those responsible for the loss.
A) Removal of positively valued stimuli
B) Presentation of negative stimuli
C) Strain caused by the failure to achieve positively valued goals
D) Strain caused by disfunction of expectations and achievements
  • 5. This theory clearly emphasizes that a sharp division between the rich and poor creates an atmosphere of envy and mistrust. Criminal motivation is fueled both by perceived humiliation and the perceived right to humilliate a victim in return.
A) Anomie theory
B) Relative deprivation theory
C) Social disorganization theory
D) Concentric zone theory
E) Strain theory
  • 6. This theory also called as social control theory, links the onset of criminality to the weakening of the ties that bind people to society, and that all individuals are potential to law violators, but they are keep under control because they fear that illegal behavior will damage their relationships with friends, parents, etc.
A) Social bond Theory
B) Labeling theory
C) Primary and secondary deviance theory
D) Containment theory
E) Cultural deviance theory
  • 7. The areas with heaviest concentration of crime appeared to be the transitional inner- city zone, where large numbers of foreign- born citizens had settled, the zone farthest from the city's center had lower crime rates.
A) Strain theory
B) Social disorganization theory
C) Concentric zone theory
D) Anomie theory
E) Relative deprivation theory
  • 8. This gang are double failures because they are unable to gain success through legitimate means and unwilling to do so through illegal ones..
A) Conflict theory
B) Criminal gang
C) Delinquent gang
D) Retreatist gang
  • 9. This theory was one in which rules of rapid social change and social crisis such as war of famine, and most likely Occors in societies that are moving froward from mechanical solidarity to organic solidarity.
A) Concentric zone theory
B) Strain theory
C) Anomie theory
D) Relative deprivation theory
E) Social disorganization theory
  • 10. This theory viewed that the process of becoming a criminal as a learning experience in which potential delinquents and criminal master techniques that enable them to counter balance or neutralize conventional values and drift back and forth between illegitimate and conventional behavior.
A) Drift theory
B) Differentail opportunity theory
C) Containment theory
D) Cultural deviance theory
E) Delinquent subculture theory
  • 11. This theory involves norm violations or crimes that have very little influence in the actor and can be quickly forgotten and occurs when a deviant event comes to the attention of significant other or social control agents who apply a negative label.
A) Primary and secondary deviance theory
B) Cultural deviance theory
C) Social bond Theory
D) Containment theory
E) Labeling theory
  • 12. This aspect happens when people compare themselves to peers who seem to be doing a lot better financially or socially.
A) Presentation of negative stimuli
B) Strain caused by the failure to achieve positively valued goals
C) Strain caused by disfunction of expectations and achievements
D) Removal of positively valued stimuli
  • 13. Thrive in highly disorganized ares marked by temporary residents and physical deterioration, they are willing to fight to protect their own and their gang's intergrity and honor.
A) Retreatist gang
B) Criminal gang
C) conflict gang
D) Delinquent gang
  • 14. It refers to the process by which a person who has been negatively labeled accepts the label as a person role or identity.
A) Dramatization of evil
B) Self-labeling
C) Stigmatization
D) Self- fulfilling prophecy
  • 15. Deviant behavior patterns that are in response to an ealier labeling experience, a person act out these social even if they were falsely bestowed.
A) Stigmatization
B) Dramatization of evil
C) Self-labeling
D) Self- fulfilling prophecy
  • 16. Involves the time, energy, and effort expended in conventional lines of action, such as getting an education and saving money for the future.
A) Dreams
B) Attachment
C) Belief
D) Commitment
E) Involvement
  • 17. Refers to a person's sensitivity to and interest in others.
A) Goals
B) Belief
C) Involvement
D) Commitment
E) Attachment
  • 18. This theory explains that society creates deviance through a system of social control agencies that designate certain individuals as delinquent thereby stigmatizing a person and encouraging them to accept this negative personal identity.
A) Cultural deviance theory
B) Social bond Theory
C) Labeling theory
D) Containment theory
E) Primary and secondary deviance theory
  • 19. This theory argues about the status frustration refers to the state where youths are incapable of achieving their ultimate goals in life because of the social conditions that they are into, such as having poor parents and living in slums areas.
A) Containment theory
B) Delinquent subculture theory
C) Drift theory
D) Differential opportunity theory
E) Cultural deviance theory
  • 20. Thus theory suggests that criminality is the direct result of negative affective states- like anger, frustration, depression, disappointment, and other adverse emotions that derive from strain.
A) General strain theory
B) Drift theory
C) Differential opportunity theory
D) Relative deprivation theory
E) Strain theory
  • 21. This theory holds that crime is a function of the conflict between the goals people have and the means they can use to legally obtain that goals, consequently, those who failed to attain their goals because of inadequate means would feel anger, frustration, And resentment.
A) Strain theory
B) Anomie theory
C) General strain theory
D) Relative deprivation theory
E) Concentric zone theory
  • 22. Exist in stable lower - class areas in which close connections among adolescent, young adult, and adult offenders create an environment for successful criminal enterprise such as joining gang.
A) Criminal gang
B) Retreatist gang
C) Delinquent gang
D) Conflict gang
  • 23. Strain may also be caused by the presence of negative stimuli.
A) Presentation of negative stimuli
B) Strain caused by the failure to achieve positively valued goals
C) Removal of positively valued stimuli
D) Strain caused by disfunction of expectations and achievements
  • 24. This theory views crime ridden neighborhoods as those in which residents are trying to leave at the earliest opportunity. Residents during this time are not interested anymore when it comes to community matters, that is why the common source of control such as the family , business community and social service agencies become weak and disorganized.
A) Anomie theory
B) Concentric zone theory
C) Social disorganization theory
D) Relative deprivation theory
E) Strain theory
  • 25. This theory assumes that for every individual, there exists a containing external structure and a protective internal structure, both of which provide defense, protection, or insulation against delinquency.
A) Differential opportunity theory
B) Cultural deviance theory
C) Containment theory
D) Delinquent subculture theory
E) Drift theory
  • 26. He is famous for his Marxist socialist concepts of crime causation , he believed that crime is of social and not biological origin, but exception of few special cases, crime lies within the boundaries of normal human behavior.
A) Friedrich engels
B) Isaac ray
C) Karl marx
D) Willem bonger
  • 27. Embraced a conflict model of crime who integrated his beliefs about power, social, and criminality into a theory referred to as;
A) Social reality of crime
B) Crime of reduction
C) Conflict theory
D) Crime of repression
  • 28. Views crime as the outcome of class struggle, the classes that are struggling here are the upper, middle and lower class.
A) Postmodern theory
B) eft realism
C) Conflict theory
D) Social reality of crime
  • 29. A woman does not have to suffer from baby blues or stress first, in act, a woman can go through a normal childbirth and recover completely when this stress strikes like a bolt and lightning.
A) Premenstrual syndrome
B) Postpartum depression
C) Battered woman syndrome
D) Postpartum stress syndrome
  • 30. Views crime as a function of the capitalistic mode of production , within this system economic competitiveness is the essence of social life and controls the form and function of social institutions.
A) Friedrich engels theory
B) Karl marx's theory
C) Marxist criminology
D) Conflict theory
  • 31. In this stage the violence may be short lived or last for a few days, often it is at this stage that police are notified or legal proceedings begun.
A) Passion of crime
B) Tension building stage
C) Loving contrition stage
D) Violent incident stage
  • 32. During this stage, relatively minor incidents increase the tension in the relationship and culminate in the eruption of violence.
A) Tension building stage
B) Loving contrition stage
C) Crime of repression
D) Violent incident stage
  • 33. This theory argues about the standard model of decision making where individuals choose between criminal activity and legal activity on the basis of the expected utility from those acts.
A) Economic model of crime
B) Biopsychosocial theoy
C) Karl marx's theory
D) Friedrich engels theory
  • 34. Assumes that the ideal society is one in which there is equality of opportunity and a general consensus to accept differences, in rewards as the outcome of fair competition.
A) Liberalism
B) Left realism
C) Marxist criminology
D) Conservative ideologies
  • 35. Component of the biopsychosocial model examines social factors that might influence the health of an individual,things like interactions with others, our culture, or our economic status.
A) Social
B) Psycho
C) Bio
D) Gene
  • 36. The woman wants to become a perfect mother and wife, but at the same time she feels exhausted and overwhelmed.
A) Premenstrual syndrome
B) Postpartum depression
C) Postpartum stress syndrome
D) Battered woman syndrome
  • 37. Occurs when the offended party experiences a loss of some quality relative to his or her present standing.
A) Passion of crime
B) Crime of reduction
C) Crime of repression
D) Moral insanity
  • 38. Refers to onset of the menstrual cycle that triggers excessive amounts of the female sex hormones, which affect antisocial, aggressive behavior.
A) Battered woman syndrome
B) Premenstrual syndrome
C) Postpartum depression
D) Postpartum stress syndrome
  • 39. Is a psychological term used to describe woman who are stuck within or have recently left a violent relationship characterized by the cycle of violence.
A) Postpartum depression
B) Battered woman syndrome
C) Postpartum stress syndrome
D) Premenstrual syndrome
  • 40. A medical diagnosis based on evidence that the child has been subjected to pattern of serious and unexplained abuse.
A) Youth delinquency
B) Delinquent child
C) Juvenile syndrome
D) Battered child syndrome
  • 41. This theory talks about the more realistic approach, saying that Street criminals prey on the poor, thus Making the poor douply abused, first by the capitalist system and then by the members of their own class.
A) Social reality of crime
B) Left realism
C) Postmodern theory
D) Conflict theory
  • 42. Focuses on the critical analysis of communication and language in legal code. It believes that language is value laden and can promote the same sort of inequities that are present in the rest of the social structure.
A) eft realism
B) Conflict theory
C) Postmodern theory
D) Conservative ideologies
  • 43. In his work, he portrayed crime as a function of social democratization- a collapse of people's humanity reflecting a decline in society.
A) Marxist criminology
B) Biopsychosocial theory
C) Friedrich engels theory
D) Karl marx's theory
  • 44. Assume that the ideal society is one in which authority is unquestioned, the hierarchy of wisdom and virtue is accepted by all as based on recognizing natural inequalities.
A) Liberalism
B) Left realism
C) Marxist criminology
D) Conservative ideologies
  • 45. Occurs when members of a group are prevented from achieving their fullest potential because of racism, sexsim, or some other status bias.
A) Crime of repression
B) Passion of crime
C) Moral insanity
D) Crime of reduction
  • 46. Was a term used to describe person who were normal in all respects except that something was wrong with the part of the brain that regulates affective response.
A) Crime of repression
B) Moral insanity
C) Crime of reduction
D) Passion of crime
  • 47. This theory viewed crime as the product of law enforcement policies and to a labeling process theory, it has a connection between criminality and the inequalities found in capitalist system.
A) Karl marx's theory
B) Marxist criminology
C) Biopsychosocial theory
D) Friedrich engels theory
  • 48. During this stage, the abuser is often very loving and remorseful. Promise are made by the batterer that he will not violently abuse the woman again.
A) Violent incident stage
B) Crime of reduction
C) Loving contrition stage
D) Tension building stage
  • 49. Defines crime as the application of harm to others, people who are Defined as committing criminal acts are at the same time being made unequal or disrespected, they are rendered powerless to maintain or express their humanity.
A) Institutive - constitutive theory
B) Conflict theory
C) Conservative ideologies
D) Postmodern theory
  • 50. The psycho component of the theory examines psychological component, things like thoughts, emotions, or behaviors.
A) Friedrich engels theory
B) Biopsychosocial theory
C) Economic model of crime
D) Karl marx's theory
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