Explain the differences between reintegrative and stigmatizing shaming
What will be an ideal response?
Stigmatization is an ongoing process of degradation in which the offender is branded as an evil person and cast out of society. Stigma is not effective as a specific deterrent because people who suffer humiliation at the hands of the justice system "reject their rejecters" by joining a deviant subculture of similar people who collectively resist social control. In reintegrative shaming, however, the offender is shamed and then allowed back into society. This type of shaming can be effective in allowing people to acknowledge their wrongdoings and shame themselves.
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In the United Kingdom, probation officers are called ______.
a. offender managers b. community wardens c. constables d. watchmen
An approved mental disabilities/suicide-screening instrument shall be completed on all inmates admitted. This intake requirement will be accomplished
a) immediately b) during booking c) after booking d) after classification
The view that victimization results from the interaction of three everyday factors—the availability of suitable targets, the absence of capable guardians, and the presences of motivated offenders—is called _____ theory
a. victim precipitation b. routine activities c. lifestyle d. deviant place
Latinos comprise the ________________ largest racial and ethnic group in the United States
A. 2nd B. 3rd C. 1st D. None of the above