Deviant Behavior 10th Edition By Goode Emeritus - Test Bank

Deviant Behavior 10th Edition By Goode Emeritus - Test Bank   Instant Download - Complete Test Bank With Answers     Sample Questions Are Posted Below   CHAPTER THREE    CONSTRUCTING DEVIANCE     True-False Questions   1) Positivist theories see deviance as a type of action; constructionist theories see deviance as a type of infraction. …

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Deviant Behavior 10th Edition By Goode Emeritus – Test Bank

 

Instant Download – Complete Test Bank With Answers

 

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

CHAPTER THREE    CONSTRUCTING DEVIANCE

 

 

True-False Questions

 

1) Positivist theories see deviance as a type of action; constructionist theories see deviance as a type of infraction.

(True, pp. 50-51)

 

2) The labeling theory of deviance grew out of the general approach known as symbolic interactionism.

(True, pp. 55)

 

3) Functionalism adopts a consensus paradigm. (True, p. 61)

 

4) Labeling or interactionist theory has focused mainly or exclusively on why certain types of people engage in deviant behavior.

(False, pp. 55-59)

 

5) To labeling theorists, there is only one relevant audience–the general society. (False, pp. 55-59)

 

6) Labeling involves attaching a stigmatizing definition to an activity, belief, condition, or person.

(True, pp. 55-59)

 

7) Labeling or interactionist theorists have tended to emphasize the “stickiness” of negative labels.

(True, pp. 55-59)

 

8) In the field of deviance studies, after the 1970s, labeling theory declined sharply in intellectual influence.

(True, p. 60)

 

9) Conflict theory is a variety of consensus theory. (False, p. 61)

 

10) Marxism is a variety of conflict theory. (True, p. 62)

 

11) The central concept in conflict theory is disparities in power between and among social categories in the population.

(True, pp. 61-63)

 

12) The feminist theory of deviance and crime argues that altogether too much attention has been paid in the past to the deviance and crime of women.

(False, pp. 63-64)

 

 

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13) Feminists deny that they experience subordination as a result of their sex. (False, pp. 63-64)

 

14) Feminists charge sociologists of deviance with viewing women’s participation in deviance in stereotypical ways, devoting their attention to a narrow range of deviant activities and ignoring the full range of female deviance.

(True, p. 64)

 

15) “Controlology” or the “new sociology of social control” emphasizes that social control is inevitable, benign, and serves to maximize freedom in modern society.

(False, pp. 66-67)

 

16) In addition to studying the passage and enforcement of criminal laws, conflict theorists have also examined the causes of criminal behavior.

(True, p. 63)

 

17) One topic that constructionist perspectives toward deviance can investigate is the role of

false accusations. (True, p. 65)

 

18) These two intellectual enterprises, the study of causes of deviance and the social construction of deviance, are contradictory rather than complementary.

(False, p. 51)

 

19) Most of the time that social control is exercised, it is formal social control. (False, p. 54)

 

20) The “major” mode of labeling theory examines the causal or etiological role of labeling as a cause of deviance.

(False, p. 60)

 

 

 

Chapter 3  Constructing Deviance

 

 

 

 

Multiple Choice Questions

 

1) Theories that focus on deviance mainly from the point of view of the social construction of condemnation and punishment typically look at deviance as a type of:

(a) action

(b) behavior

(c) condition or trait

*(d) infraction

(e) none of the above

(p. 50)

 

2) The spiritual father of the school of thought known as controlology or the “new” sociology of social control is:

(a) Frank Tannenbaum

(b) Edwin Lemert

(c) Karl Marx

*(d) Michel Foucault

(e) none of the above

(p. 55)

 

3) Feminist theorists of deviance have charged that the field, as a general rule and until very recently, has regarded:

(a) the deviance of women as deviance in general, while the deviance of men has been seen as specialized deviance.

*(b) the deviance of men as deviance in general, while the deviance of women has been seen as specialized deviance.

(c) both the deviance of women and the deviance of men have been seen as deviance in general.

(d) both the deviance of men and the deviance of women have been seen as specialized deviance.

(e) none of the above

(p. 65)

 

4) In the past two decades or so, in the study of deviance, the influence of Marxist theory has: (a) increased

*(b) decreased

(c) remained at about the same level

(d) fluctuated erratically and randomly from year to year

(e) remained unknown

(p. 62)

 

5) Conflict theory is most likely to focus on what factor as the main cause of high rates of crime:

*(a) sharp inequalities in power and income

(b) social disorganization

(c) anomie

(d) culture transmission

(e) inadequate parental socialization

(p. 63)

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6) The causal or explanatory component of feminism argues that a major cause of crime against women is:

(a) anomie

*(b) patriarchy

(c) social disorganization (d) inadequate parenting (e) none of the above

(p. 63-64)

 

7) The theory or perspective that contradicts or contrasts most sharply with conflict theory is: (a) labeling theory

(b) feminism

(c) Marxism

*(d) consensus theory

(e) symbolic interactionism

(p. 61)

 

8) One of the arguments feminists make about pre-feminist theories of deviance is that these theories ignored the deviance of women and, when they occasionally discussed it, they also tended to focus on a very narrow range of types of deviance. Two of these stereotypical female types of deviance were prostitution and shoplifting. A third was:

*(a) mental illness

(b) illegal drug use

(c) political radicalism

(d) murder

(e) none of the above

(p. 65)

 

9) A central argument of labeling theory as spelled out by Howard Becker, the most well-known of its proponents:

(a) Persons who have broken a rule constitute a homogeneous category.

(b) The process of labeling is infallible; everyone who is labeled as deviant has in fact broken a rule.

(c) The degree to which people respond to a given act is dependent only on one factor–whether that act is a violation of a rule.

(d) Being caught and branded as a deviant has no important consequences for further social participation and self-image; what counts is, did the person engage in the act?

*(e) none of the above

(p. 56)

 

10) Feminists argue that when women do appear in deviance research, they are often relegated to the periphery of attention, with men given center stage. What is the most appropriate term for the phenomenon of a male-centered bias?

(a) sexism

(b) patriarchy

*(c) androcentrism

(d) male bias

(e) feminism

(p. 63)

Chapter 3  Constructing Deviance

 

11) Which of the following questions would a labeling or interactionist theorist be most likely to ask?

(a) Why are rates of deviance higher in some societies than in others?

(b) Why do some people engage in deviant behavior while others don’t? (c) Why don’t some people engage in deviant behavior?

(d) What is the social class distribution of deviant behavior?

*(e) What happens when after someone is condemned or stigmatized as a deviant? (pp. 55-56)

 

12) Feminists aim to eliminate: (a) female deviance

(b) all punishment of women by the criminal justice system

(c) all informal social control

*(d) patriarchy

(e) sex with men

(p. 69)

 

13) Which of the following statements would a conflict theorist be most likely to agree with? (a) Societies possess a kind of collective conscience or shared sense of morality.

(b) Societies tend to have a shared community of interests.

(c) Societies display a kind of unconscious wisdom in prohibiting harmful behavior.

*(d) Most social institutions and practices benefit the members of more powerful groups and categories at the expense of less powerful ones.

(e) none of the above

(pp. 61-63)

 

14) Conflict theorists argue that the criminal law:

(a) is enforced against members of all categories and classes fairly and equally. (b) is enacted mainly to protect the society from harm.

(c) is supported, endorsed, and regarded as fair and legitimate by the majority of all classes and categories of the society in more or less equal proportion.

*(d) tends to represent the beliefs, lifestyle, and/or economic interests of the most powerful segments of the society.

(e) none of the above

(pp. 61-63)

 

 

15) Feminists argue that, prior to the emergence of feminism as a major perspective, sociologists of deviance typically:

(a) over-emphasized women’s deviant behavior. (b) saw women’s deviance as deviance in general.

(c) over-emphasized the role and importance of women as victims of crime.

*(d) had a skewed view of women’s deviance, looking almost exclusively at particular, female-stereotyped types of behavior.

(e) none of the above

(p. 64)

 

 

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16) Controlology, or the “new sociology of social control,” was influenced most by the French philosopher Michel Foucault, who argues that in the modern era, social control is:

(a) necessary and positive in its impact.

(b) equitable, fostering equality in modern society.

(c) less powerful, less coercive, and less tyrannical than in past centuries. (d) comprised almost entirely of informal and interpersonal social control.

*(e) none of the above

(pp. 66-67)

 

17) The central, guiding, foundational concept in all constructionist perspectives toward deviance is:

(a) causality

*(b) social control

(c) pathology (d) objectivism (e) etiology

(p. 66)

 

18) Controlologists tend to focus on: (a) informal social control

(b) the etiology of deviant behavior

(c) the deviance of women

(d) the harmful consequences of criminal behavior

*(e) none of the above

(pp. 66-68)

 

19) Which of the following approaches contrasts most sharply with conflict theory? (a) labeling theory

(b) Marxism

(c) feminism

(d) controlology, or the “new” sociology of social control

*(e) functionalism

(p. 69)

 

20) The central question/s among social constructionists is: (a) Why do they do it?

(b) What is the cause of deviant behavior?

(c) Why don’t people engage in deviant behavior?

(d) In what ways does deviance harm the society in which it takes place?

*(e) Why are rules created and enforced, and with what consequences? (p. 50)

 

 

 

Chapter 3  Constructing Deviance

 

 

Essay Questions

 

1) Why did feminists criticize all other prior perspectives toward deviance and crime? According to feminism, what were the deficiencies and flaws of these perspectives? In their estimation,

what would an adequate and valid theory of deviance and crime look like?

 

2) Why have the labeling or interactionist theorists focused mainly on “soft” forms of deviance? What would a labeling perspective of “hard” or serious crime and deviance look like?

 

3) Marxists and other radicals have criticized the field of the sociology of deviance for concentrating overly much on the examination of “nuts, sluts, and deviated preverts”–that is, the seamy, sensationalistic forms of deviance committed by marginal, powerless street people. Instead, they argue, very different forms of behavior should be regarded and studied as deviance. What are these other forms of behavior and why, from a Marxist or radical perspective, should they be regarded as deviant? Why has the field of deviance ignored the Marxist or radical “nuts and sluts” criticisms?

 

4) How does conflict theory as a form of constructionism–that is, that examines inequality in the construction of the criminal laws–dovetail with conflict theory as an explanation of deviant and criminal behavior?

 

5) The labeling or interactionist theory of deviance has been criticized for ignoring the role of power in the social construction of norms and laws. Is this a justified criticism? Why or why not?

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