A. the concept of ‘deviance’ is much broader than ‘crime’
B. deviance and crime very often overlap
C. the concept of deviance can be applied to individuals and groups
D. deviance is normally sanctioned by law
Crime and Deviance
Crime and Deviance
A. restitution
B. legalization
C. radical non-intervention
D. decriminalization
E. retribution
A. 1950s
B. 1980s
C. 1940s
D. 1960s
E. 1970s
A. conformity
B. corporate crime
C. Psychologically-based crime
D. lower-class crime
E. white-collar crime
A. Social Control theory
B. Anomie theory
C. Lower Class Focal Value theory
D. Social Process theory
E. Strain theory
A. ritualists
B. ret realists
C. rebels
D. innovators
E. conformists
A. pre-natal nutrition
B. hormones
C. genetic abnormalities
D. early childhood
E. adolescence
A. Substantial reduction of economic inequality
B. Subordination of the agents of social control
C. redefinition of acts that are currently defined as criminal
D. amelioration of social welfare activities
E. repression of lower-class gang activities
A. Differential Association
B. Conflict
C. Positivism
D. Social Control
E. Functionalism
A. age-specific support
B. informal social control
C. internalization of norms
D. formal social control
E. positivism