WJEC Criminology Unit 2 Exam Questions With 100% Correct Answers 2024
social definition - Correct Answer-what society believes is wrong within a community. for
example, moat people in the UK would think it is wrong to have sex with a 14-year old, but in other cultures in different countries it might not be seen as a problem because society doesn't label it as one.
legal definition - Correct Answer-in our society, it is the legal system which defines crime. for example behaviour that breaks the law and for which you are punished by the
legal system.
actus reus - Correct Answer-latin for guilty act. essentially means committing a crime.
mens rea - Correct Answer-latin for guilt mind. essentially means having a motive to commit the crime.
cautions - Correct Answer-administered by the police for minor crimes such as writing graffiti on a bus shelter. you have to admit an offence and agree to be cautioned; otherwise you could be arrested for the offence. a caution is not a criminal conviction.
conditional cautions - Correct Answer-given by the police but you have to agree to certain rules and restrictions, such as receiving treatment for drug abuse or repairing damage to a property.
penalty notices - Correct Answer-given for offences such as shoplifting, possessing cannabis, or being drunk and disorderly in public. you can only get a penalty notice of you are ages 18 or over.
custodial sentences - Correct Answer-where you are immediately sent to prison. there are mandatory and discretionary life sentences and fixed term and indeterminate prison sentences.
community services - Correct Answer-a combination order (sentence of the court that combines a probation order and a community service order) including unpaid work, probation, curfew and orders such as having drug testing and treatment.
fines - Correct Answer-financial penalties; the amount depends on the seriousness of the offence and the financial circumstances of the offender. discharge - Correct Answer-either conditional, when if the defendant re-offends during a
set time period the court can give an alternative sentence, or absolute, when no penalty is imposed as the defendant is technically guilty but morally blameless.
fatal offences against the person - Correct Answer-murder, manslaughter.
non-fatal offences against the person - Correct Answer-assault, battery, actual and grievous bodily harm.
offences against property - Correct Answer-theft, robbery, burglary.
sexual offences - Correct Answer-rape, indecent assault.
public order offences - Correct Answer-riot, affray, violent disorder.
drug offences - Correct Answer-possession of a controlled drug or possession with the intent to supply.
deviance - Correct Answer-behaviour that goes against the dominant social norms of a specific group or society, which causes some kind of critical reaction or disapproval.
norms - Correct Answer-social expectations that guide behaviour and explain why people act in the way that they do. norms keep in check deviant behaviour. while it is expected behaviour, it could vary form one culture to another. for instance, in the UK we
wear dark sombre colours for a funeral but in China the colour of mourning is white.
moral codes - Correct Answer-morals or good ways of behaving. breaking a moral code would generally be considered serious in society, an example would be murder.
values - Correct Answer-rules shared by most people in a given culture. it is what people feel should happen. they are more general guidelines than norms. so, for example, most people feel we should respect the elderly.
informal sanctions against deviance - Correct Answer--frowning upon behaviour
-name calling
-ignoring behaviour
-labelling behaviour
-parents grounding a child
formal sanctions against deviance - Correct Answer-fines or even imprisonment may be
appropriate for some deviant acts.
admired behaviour - Correct Answer-deviant but considered good or admiral, e.g. saving a life while putting own at risk, as most people would not do so.
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