A. Can impair and undermine organized social life
B. Increases our willingness to play our roles
C. Increases our willingness to contribute to the larger social enterprise
D. Enhances our trust of one another
A. Poor education
B. Poor diet
C. Poor sanitation
D. Poor housing
A. Labelling theory
B. Control theory
C. Functionalist theory
ConFlict theory
A. White-collar crime
B. Corporate crime
C. Victimless crime
D. Organized crime
A. The roman empire
B. Revolutionary france
C. Nazi germany
D. The english civil war
A. Reform
B. Revenge
C. Affirmation of moral standards
D. None of these
A. Criminals were socialized underworld of crime
B. No act is intrinsically deviant
C. Biological failings drove some people into crime
D. Women were less likely to be arrested than men
A. The punishment or stigmatization of deviant acts
B. The labelling of an act as deviant through social reactions to it
C. The ways in which taking on a deviant role affects future action
D. All of the above
A. The rates of violent crime were similar for men and women
B. Women’s sexual delinquency was more likely to be normalized than men’s
C. Women’s criminal behavior tended to reflect traditional gender roles
D. All of the above
A. It has increased and is no longer confined to a hedonistic youth subculture
B. The most commonly used recreational drug is ecstasy
C. Teenage girls are more likely to experiment with hard drugs than teenage boys
D. Despite a series of moral panics, the use of illegal drugs is very rare