Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;
Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;
H to show hint;
A reads text to speech;
11 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Who is the author of On Crimes and Punishment (1864) and credited as the leading organizer of classical thinking on criminology and deterrence theory?
|
Cesare Beccaria
|
|
Who is Jeremy Bentham?
|
English philosopher and reformer who contributed much to classical thinking on criminology and deterrence theory
|
|
Who came up with the routine activities theory, a theory of victimization, with Marcus Felson to explain rising crime rates in the 1970's?
|
Lawrence Cohen
|
|
Who is Marcus Felson?
|
Came up with the routine activities theory, a theory of victimization with Lawrence Cohen to explain rising crime rates in the 1970s
|
|
Who is the researcher who works in the 1970s contributed to emergence of the "anti-rehabilitation" movement and popularized the phrase regarding correction treatment that "nothing works"
|
Robert Martinson
|
|
who is Raymond Paternoster?
|
a criminologist who has made significant contributions to to the perceptual deterrence literature
|
|
Sir Robert Peel
|
the Home Security of England responsible for passage of the London Metropolitan Police Act in 1829; this introduced the first policing system and was based on the principles of deterrence
|
|
Alex Piquero
|
with Raymond Paternoster, found that perceived certainty of arrest was associated with reporting of less drinking and driving
|
|
Greg Pogarsky
|
developed a tripartite conceptual schema of deterrability; at one end of the continuum are the incorrigble and at the other end are the acurate conformists
|
|
Sir Samuel Romilly
|
a member of the English House of Commons in the early nineteenth century who was a staunch advocate of classical humanitarian reforms
|
|
Charles Tittle
|
criminologist whose research contributed to empirical and conceptual clarity in the early phases of contemporary deterrence research; conducted extensive research and testing of the differential association model proposed by Edwin Sutherland; his research has focused on the deficiencies in the causal framework set out by Sutherland; a chief opponent of labeling theory; Tittle claims that propositions of the labeling perspective are not clearly identified so as to allow for empirical research and believes the theory to be too vague
|