Chapter 4 Crime and Violence
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Transcript Chapter 4 Crime and Violence
Chapter 4
Crime and Violence
Key Terms
transnational crime
Offenses whose inception,
prevention, and/or direct or
indirect effects involve more than
one country.
crime
A violation of a federal, state, or
local criminal law.
crime rate
Number of crimes per 100,000
population.
clearance rates
Measure the percentage of cases
in which an arrest and official
charge have been made and
turned over to the courts.
strain theory
When legitimate means of
acquiring culturally defined goals
are limited by the structure of
society, the resulting strain may
lead to crime.
subcultural theory
Certain groups or subcultures in
society have values and attitudes
that are conducive to crime and
violence.
control theory
Bond between individuals and
society constrains some individuals
from violating social norms.
labeling theory
Being labeled as deviant often
leads to further deviant behavior.
differential association
Through interaction with others,
individuals learn the values and
attitudes associated with crime as
well as the techniques and
motivations for criminal behavior.
index offenses
The most serious crimes in the
U.S.
acquaintance rape
Rape committed by someone the
victim knows.
classic rape
Rapist was a stranger who used a
weapon and the attack resulted in
serious bodily injury.
victimless crime
Illegal activities that have no
complaining party.
organized crime
Criminal activity conducted by
members of a hierarchically
arranged structure devoted
primarily to making money
through illegal means.
white-collar crime
Crimes committed in course of
employment or by corporations in
the interest of maximizing profit.
corporate violence
The production of unsafe products
and failure of corporations to
provide safe working environment
for employees.
computer crime
Any law violation in which a
computer is the target or means of
criminal activity.
racial profiling
Targeting suspects based on race
status.
deterrence
The use of harm or threat of harm
to prevent unwanted behaviors.
rehabilitation
Helping offenders rehabilitate
using education and job training,
individual and group therapy,
substance abuse counseling, and
behavior modification.
incapacitation
Putting offender in prison.
Brady Bill
Passed in 1993, requires 5-day
waiting period on handgun
purchases so sellers can do a
background check on the buyer.
restorative justice
A philosophy primarily concerned
with repairing the victim-offendercommunity relation, a direct
response to the concerns of an
adversarial criminal justice system
that encourages offenders to deny,
justify, or otherwise avoid taking
responsibility for their actions.