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Criminal Justice
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Criminological Theories
Quiz 6: Social Bonding and Control Theories
Path 4
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Question 1
True/False
In social bonding theory, delinquency is controlled by beliefs that specific delinquent acts are wrong rather than by general law-abiding beliefs held by adolescents.
Question 2
True/False
In Hirschi's social bonding theory, the concept of "commitment" refers to the stakes in conformity that could be lost by engaging in delinquency.
Question 3
True/False
According to social bonding theory, strong attachment reduces the probability of delinquency regardless of whether the peers or parents to whom the adolescent is attached are themselves conforming or deviant.
Question 4
True/False
According to Gottfredson and Hirschi, the major cause of low self-control is ineffective child-rearing in the family.
Question 5
True/False
Gottfredson and Hirschi's self-control theory posits that differences in self-control account for the stable differences between individuals in their propensity to commit most major crimes, but not less serious petty offenses, across all circumstances.
Question 6
True/False
A major weakness in Gottfredson and Hirschi's general theory of crime is that it may be tautological because they do not clearly define self-control as distinct from the propensity to commit crime.
Question 7
True/False
Self-control theory proposes that differences in individuals' propensity to commit crime operate only during the adolescent and young adult years rather than in all periods of life.
Question 8
True/False
The only part of Reckless's containment theory that has been systematically tested is that part that hypothesizes that delinquency will result when inner pushes toward delinquency are not counteracted by strong external containment.
Question 9
True/False
Matza's "drift theory" proposes that only neutralizations are needed for adolescents to drift toward delinquency and that positive causes are not needed for adolescents to choose delinquent rather than lawful behavior.
Question 10
True/False
Hirschi's theory suggests that people become criminal because they develop close ties to other people who condone or encourage the commission of crime.
Question 11
True/False
In contrast to other theories, control theories emphasize restraints on crime over motivations or inducements to crime.
Question 12
True/False
Nye's control theory includes both barriers to delinquency and positive inducements to delinquency.
Question 13
True/False
According to Hirschi's social bonding theory, the stronger a youth's attachment to others-even if those others are delinquent-the less likely it is that she or he will engage in delinquency.
Question 14
True/False
Hirschi's research showed that attachment to delinquent peers makes delinquency more likely.
Question 15
True/False
Research indicates that, compared with relationships of law-abiding youths, relationships of delinquent youths with others tend to be distant, cold, and unstable.
Question 16
True/False
Tests of social bonding theory provide weak to moderate support for the theory.
Question 17
True/False
The earlier control theories, such as Reckless's containment theory, included both internal and external controls.
Question 18
True/False
Hirschi's most recent revision of the concept of self-control now defines it as the same as social bonds and characterizes it as the ability to take into account all the long-term and short-term consequences of behavior.