Theoriesand
of Crime
Answers
Study
Latest
Notes
2026_2027
Questions
Theories
Version.pdf
and Answers
of CrimeLatest
Study 2026_2027
Notes Questions
Version.pdf
and Answers Latest 2026_2027 Version
Theories of Crime
Study Notes
Questions and
Answers Latest
2026/2027 Version
Theories of Crime Study Notes Questions
Theoriesand
of Crime
Answers
Study
Latest
Notes
2026_2027
Questions
Theories
Version.pdf
and
of Crime
Answers
Study
Latest
Notes
2026_2027
Questions
Version.pdf
and Answers Latest 2026_2027 Version.pdf
,Theories of crime study notes.pdf Theories of crime study notes.pdf Theories of crime study notes
*Criminology* The scientific study of the nature, causes, and consequences of crime and
criminal behavior
*Criminal justice* The system of institutions, practices, and organizations that respond to crime,
including law enforcement, courts, and corrections
*Theory* A systematic explanation for observed facts and laws that describes and
predicts, emerging from patterns that are tested and retested to suggest
results are not random
*Intersubjective agreement* A norm of science where researchers studying the same problem arrive at the
same conclusion; used instead of "objective" to describe scientific consensus
*Hypothesis* A specified expectation about empirical reality, derived from propositions; a
testable prediction
*Micro-level theory* A theory that explains individual-level behavior — why a specific person
commits crime
*Macro-level theory* A theory that explains patterns of crime across places, societies, or groups —
why crime rates differ across neighborhoods or populations
*Spiritualism* An early explanation for criminal behavior that emphasized a struggle
between absolute good and absolute evil; crime was believed to result from
evil or demonic possession
Theories of crime study notes.pdf Theories of crime study notes.pdf Theories of crime study notes.pdf
, Theories of crime study notes.pdf Theories of crime study notes.pdf Theories of crime study notes
*Trial by battle* An early form of justice in which accused and accuser (or their
representatives) would physically fight to determine guilt or innocence
*Trial by ordeal* An early form of justice in which an accused person was subjected to a
painful or dangerous test, with survival interpreted as proof of innocence
*Compurgation* An early form of justice in which the accused could be declared innocent if
enough witnesses (oath-helpers) swore to their innocence
*Classical school* School of thought emerging in the 18th century that views crime as a
calculated decision made by a rational, free-willed individual weighing costs
and benefits; founded by Cesare Beccaria
*Cesare Beccaria* Italian philosopher (1738-1794) and founder of the classical school; authored
On Crimes and Punishments (1764)
*On Crimes and Punishments* Beccaria's major work (1764) arguing that punishment should be proportional,
certain, and swift in order to deter crime
*Deterrence* The prevention of crime through the threat of punishment; driven by swiftness,
certainty, and severity of punishment
*Swiftness, certainty, and severity* Beccaria's three elements of effective deterrence — punishment must be
delivered quickly, consistently, and at the right level to prevent crime
Theories of crime study notes.pdf Theories of crime study notes.pdf Theories of crime study notes.pdf