Relacionar Columnas Match authors midtermVersión en línea Match authors with concepts/terms/findings por Carlos Ponce 1 George Rigakos 2 Cesare Beccaria 3 Stanley Cohen 4 Cesare Lombroso 5 Erich Goode and Nachman Ben-Yehuda 6 Travis Hirschi and Michael Hindelang 7 Jeremy Bentham 8 Ray Jeffery 9 Raffaele Garofalo 10 Sigmund Freud 11 Enrico Ferri 12 Eysenck 13 Terrie Moffit Argued against secret accusations and use of torture, insisting accused individuals should have right to know their accusers and right to a fair trial Argued that criminal thinking was inherited. Favoured eugenics. The first to talk about “the born criminal” Argued that humans are rational, free-willed actors and that their behaviour is governed by hedonistic (pleasure–pain) calculus. He maintained that punishment should be restricted only to amount required to achieve deterrence. Argues that we need examine two distinct types of offender to properly explain the age–crime curve: life-course persistent (LCP) offenders and adolescent-limited (AL) offenders Proposed three models (grassroots, elite-engineered and interest group) and 5 five features to explain the emergence and development of moral panics. Founder of psychoanalysis, also referred to as the “psychodynamic approach” Low intelligence has an indirect effect over delinquency through poor school performance and the negative consequences associated with it later in life. Identified 3 key personality traits: Extraversion (E), Neuroticism (N) and Psychoticism (P). Policing in Canada, private and public, has historically supported the accumulation and retention of capital, controlled potential threats to capitalism (putting down labour strikes, public protests). Studied skulls and body types of prisoners and inmates confined to insane asylums, concluding that criminals were “atavistic” — they were degenerate, evolutionary throwbacks — and exhibited distinguishing features, like apes or Neanderthals — retreating foreheads, large ears, large jaws, long arms. Explored the relationship between media and moral panic in 1972 book, Folk Devils and Moral Panics: The Creation of the Mods and Rockers. His work popularized the term moral panics. He identified the media as a crucial factor in stirring up moral panic. Used a combination of B.F. Skinner’s operant conditioning and Edwin Sutherland’s differential association theory, to argue that if the reward for crime is high and the likelihood of punishment is low, the chances of criminal behaviour increase