1. Recidivism means a _____ commits further crimes.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Ex offender
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
2. Rationality is the state of having good sense and sound judgment on the basis of the _____ before us.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Evidence
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
3. Punishment is the act of imposing some unwanted burden, such as imprisonment or_____, on convicted persons in response to their crimes.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Any of these
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
4. Principle of Utility is the supposition that human action should be judged moral or immoral by its effects on the happiness of the community and that the proper function of the legislature is to make laws aimed at _____
Answer
Correct Answer:
Both a and b
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
5. Those who believe that human actions have causes and that these causes are to be found in the thoughts and experiences that typically precede those actions refer to _____
Answer
Correct Answer:
Positivists
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
6. Penology is the study of the processes and institutions involved in the _____
Answer
Correct Answer:
Both a and b
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
7. A philosophy of punishment that refers to the inability of criminals to victimize people outside prison walls while they are locked up is known as _____
Answer
Correct Answer:
Incapacitation
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
8. The capacity of humans to make choices and their responsibility to make moral ones regardless of internal or external constraints on their ability to do so is known as_____
Answer
Correct Answer:
Human Agency
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
9. Hedonistic Calculus is a method by which individuals are assumed to logically weigh the anticipated benefits of a given course of action against its possible costs.
Answer
Correct Answer:
True
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
10. Hedonism is a doctrine maintaining that all goals in life are means to the end of _____
Answer
Correct Answer:
Both a and b
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
11. The presumed preventive effect of the _____ of punishment on the general population is known as General Deterrence.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Threat
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
12. Enlightenment is a period in history when a major shift in the way people began to view the world and their place in it occurred, moving from a supernaturalistic worldview to a _____ worldview.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Both a and b
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
13. A model of law that stresses the accused’s rights more than the rights of the community is known as _____ Model.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Due process
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
14. Deterrence is a philosophy of punishment aimed at the prevention of crime by the threat of_____.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Punishment
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
15. Crime Control Model is a model of law that emphasizes community protection from criminals and stresses that civil liberties can have real meaning in a _____ society.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Both a and b
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
16. Corrections are functions carried out by government and private agencies having to do with the _____ and management of individuals who have been accused or convicted of criminal offenses.
Answer
Correct Answer:
All of these
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
17. Contrast Effect is the effect of punishment on future behavior depending on how much the _____ of the person being punished differ or contrast.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Both
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
18. Classical School is a School of penology/criminology that was a nonempirical mode of inquiry similar to the philosophy practiced by the classical Greek philosophers—that is, “_____ philosophy.”
Answer
Correct Answer:
Armchair
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
19. Which early thinker was incarcerated in England for defending his religion?
Answer
Correct Answer:
William Penn
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
20. Which early thinker was a former prisoner of war?
Answer
Correct Answer:
John Howard
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
21. In which type of punishment were prisoners removed from the home country?
Answer
Correct Answer:
Transportation
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
22. Such thinkers as John Howard and William Penn were influenced by ______.
Answer
Correct Answer:
The Enlightenment
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
23. In which type of punishment were prisoners sentenced to be rowers?
Answer
Correct Answer:
Galley slavery
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
24. Who was the author of The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962)?
Answer
Correct Answer:
Thomas Kuhn
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
25. The greatest advantage for a citizen who was punished in ancient societies was his or her ______.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Wealth
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
26. What did Beaumont and Tocqueville come to America to study in 1831?
Answer
Correct Answer:
Prisons
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
27. Certain social critics, such as Foucault (1979) and Welch (2005), maintain that prisons and other social institutions serve as ______ mechanisms, removing punishment from public view.
Answer
Correct Answer:
Social control
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
28. According to the text, “some themes have been almost eerily consistent, vis-à-vis corrections, over decades and even centuries,” including ______.
Answer
Correct Answer:
The influence of money over correctional policy decisions
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
29. William Penn's influence was secular.
Answer
Correct Answer:
False
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
30. Newgate prison was originally a copper mine.
Answer
Correct Answer:
True
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
31. Galley slavery continued well after the invention of sails.
Answer
Correct Answer:
False
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
32. The Catholic Church held its greatest influence over crime and punishment during the Middle Ages.
Answer
Correct Answer:
True
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one
33. Politics is a constant theme throughout the history of corrections.
Answer
Correct Answer:
True
Note: This Question is unanswered, help us to find answer for this one