Evaluate biological explanations for crime and violence.
What will be an ideal response?
The ideal answer should include:
1. In the late nineteenth century, Lombroso was convinced that there was a "criminal man," a type of human being who is physically distinct from ordinary human beings. He believed, in short, that there was such a thing as a "born criminal."
2. In the twentieth century, Lombroso's theory and other biologically based explanations of crime were discredited and supplanted by sociological theories.
3. However, some theorists (e.g., Wilson and Herrnstein, 1985) defend the identification of biological characteristics that appear to be predisposing factors in criminal behavior rather than full explanations of it (e.g., extra Y chromosome).
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a. 6 b. 10 c. 35 d. 140
Which of the following affects a social movement’s chances for success?
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It would be correct to say that Durkheim thought of society as:
What will be an ideal response?