Exam 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Gender

A

the personal traits, social positions, and values and beliefs that members of society attach to being male or female

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2
Q

Gender Role

A

a societal definition of what constitutes either masculine or feminine behavior

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3
Q

Sex-role Socialization

A

the process by which boys and girls internalize their culture’s norms, sanctions, and expectations for members of their gender

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4
Q

Masculinity Hypothesis

A

the idea that as girls become more boylike and acquire more masculine traits, they become more delinquent

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5
Q

Feminist Theory of Delinquency

A

theory that adolescent females’ victimization at home causes them to become delinquent and that this fact has been systematically ignored

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6
Q

Chivalry Theory

A

idea that the justice system tends to treat adolescent females and women more leniently because of their gender

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7
Q

Socialization

A

the process by which individuals come to internalize their culture; through this process an individual learns the norms, sanctions, and expectations of being a member of a particular society

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8
Q

Family Related Risk Factors of Delinquency

A
broken homes
birth order
family size
delinquent siblings and criminal parents
quality of home life
family rejection
discipline in the home
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9
Q

Broken Home

A

a family in which parents are divorced or are no longer living together

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10
Q

Birth Order

A

the sequence of births in a family and a child’s position in it: firstborn, middle, or youngest
middle child most likely to be delinquent

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11
Q

Family Size

A

the number of children in a family

the larger the family, the more likely of the children being delinquent

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12
Q

Neglect

A

a disregard for the physical, emotional, or moral needs of children. Child neglect involves the failure of the parent or caregiver to provide nutritious food, adequate clothing and sleeping arrangements, essential medical care, sufficient supervision, access to education, and normal experiences that produce feeling of being loved, wanted, secure, and worthy

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13
Q

Child Abuse

A

the mistreatment of children by parents or caregivers; maybe be physical abuse, emotional abuse, or sexual abuse

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14
Q

Physical Abuse

A

the intentional behavior directed toward a child by the parent of caregiver to cause pain, injury, or death

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15
Q

Emotional Abuse

A

a disregard for the psychological needs of a child, including the lack of expressed love, withholding of contact or approval, verbal abuse, unrealistic demands, threats, and psychological cruelty

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16
Q

Sexual Abuse

A

the intentional and wrongful physical contact with a person, with or without his or her consent, that entails a sexual purpose or component

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17
Q

Incest

A

any intrafamily sexual abuse that is perpetrated on a child by a member of that child’s family group that includes not only sexual intercourse but also any act designed to stimulate a child sexually or to use a child for sexual stimulation, either of the perpetrator or of another person

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18
Q

Running Away

A

the act of leaving the custody and home of parents or guardians without permission and failing to return within a reasonable length of time; a status offense

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19
Q

Vandalism

A

the act of destroying or damaging, or attempting to destroy or damage, the property of another without the owner’s consent or destroying or damaging public property (except arsen)

20
Q

Violence

A

a forceful physical assault with or without weapons. Includes many kinds of fighting, rape, other attacks, gang warfare, and so on.

21
Q

Bullying

A

the hurtful, frightening, or menacing actions undertaken by one person to intimidate another (generally weaker) person to gain that person’s unwilling compliance, and/or to put him or her in fear

22
Q

Academic Performance

A

achievement in schoolwork as rated by grades and other assessment measures;
poor performance is a factor in delinquency

23
Q

In Loco Parentis

A

principle according to which a guardian or an agency is given the rights, duties, and responsibilities of a parent in relation to a particular child or children

24
Q

Parens Patriae

A

a medieval English doctrine that sanctions the right of the Crown to intervene in natural family relations whenever a child’s welfare was threatened; philosophy of which the juvenile court is based on

25
Q

Blocked Opportunity Theory

A

those most likely to commit delinquent acts are those why do poorly in school or who believe they have little change of graduation

26
Q

Strain Theory

A

the school is viewed as a middle-class institution in which lower-class children are frequently unable to perform successfully, and they turn to delinquency to compensate for feelings of status frustration, failure, and low self-esteem

27
Q

Cultural Deviance Theory

A

because schools tend to reflect the characteristics of the community of which they are a part, attending a school in high-crime areas increases the likelihood of association with delinquent peers

28
Q

Social Control Theory (for school)

A

the school is seen as one of the major socializing institutions, providing students with structure, incentives, expectations, and opportunities for social bonding; delinquency is likely to result when a strong bond to school does not develop

29
Q

Labeling Theory

A

once students are defined as deviant, they adopt a deviant role in response to their lowered status

30
Q

Radical Criminology

A

view the school as a means by which the privilege classes maintain power over the lower classes

31
Q

General Theory of Crime

A

students with self-control are able to abstain from activities in school that would attract them to delinquent behavior and that would gain the negative attention of teachers and the juvenile justice system

32
Q

Interactional Theory

A

delinquency behavior reduces the strength of the bonds to family and school, thereby establishing a behavioral trajectory toward increased delinquency

33
Q

Theoretical Perspectives on School and Delinquency

A
Blocked Opportunity Theory
Strain Theory
Cultural Deviance Theory
Social Control Theory
Labeling Theory
Radical Criminology
General Theory of Crime
Interactional Theory
34
Q

Drug Addiction

A

a craving for a particular drug,
accompanied by physical dependence, which
motivates continuing usage, resulting in tolerance to
the drug’s effects and a complex of identifiable
symptoms appearing when it is suddenly withdrawn

35
Q

Drug Abuse

A

when the user becomes dysfunctional

36
Q

3 Major Groups of Substance Users

A

(1) Youth who experiment once or twice then discontinue use
(2) Youth who use drugs into young adulthood but do not do not
let drug use interfere with their lives in any major way
(3) Those who become addicted or dependent on drugs and
revolve their lives around the substance

37
Q

Licit Drugs

A

substances that are legal

38
Q

Illicit Drugs

A

substances that are forbidden by law

39
Q

Risk Factors of Drug Use

A

(1) Perinatal difficulties, minor physical abnormalities, and brain damage
(2) Family environment, including a family history of alcoholism, poor family management practices, and family conflict
(3) Early antisocial behavior and academic failure.
(4) Living in economically deprived areas and disorganized neighborhoods

40
Q

Theories of Drug Use

A
Cognitive-Affective Theories
Addictive-Personality Theory
Stress Relief Theory
Social Learning Theory
Social Control Theories
Social Disorganization Theory
Integrated Theories
41
Q

Cognitive-Affective Theories

A

theories relate to how the perceptions about the costs and benefits of drug use contribute to adolescents’ decision to experiment with substances

42
Q

Addictive-Personality Theory

A

the typical addict has an addiction-prone personality and suffers from some deep-rooted personality disorder or emotional problems

43
Q

Stress Relief Theory

A

the desire to get high- as a means to relieve stress, depression, or boredom of everyday life-is common is adolescent culture

44
Q

Social Learning Theory

A

the theory that postulates that an adolescent’s involvement in substance abuse begins with observation and imitation of substance specific behaviors, continues with social reinforcement, and cultivates a juvenile’s expectation of positive social and psychological consequences from continued drug use

45
Q

Social Control Theories (drugs)

A

emotional attachment to peers who use substances is a primary cause of substance abuse

46
Q

Social Disorganization Theory

A

the bleak economic environment has resulted in those situated in these settings to experience doubt, hopelessness, and uncertainty, and, as a result, they seek relief in drugs

47
Q

Integrated Theories

A

use of strain, social control, and social learning theories to form a perspective that accounts for delinquent behavior and drug use