Start Discovering Solved Questions and Your Course Assignments
TextBooks Included
Active Tutors
Asked Questions
Answered Questions
Based on our discussions about Miranda what issues of Miranda are illustrated. What right does it violate? I.e., right to silence, no self-incrimination.
Compare and contrast victim-offender relationships in motor vehicle theft. Do these relationships make the crime difficult to prosecute?
What are some of the key ways that research shows that girls and boys differ with regard to development and behavior?
Discuss the demographics of the jail inmates. How does what you saw in the documentary compare to the information in your text?
What are some ways of resisting conformity when it comes to peer pressure and adhering to normative social influence with underage drinking and drug use?
Also mention one example to show what some Europeans were willing to do in order to reject the fact that human beings originated in Africa.
What is the relationship between economic status and rates of delinquency in terms of social disorganization and neighborhood ecological characteristics.
Why do you think officers might prefer a search warrant for narcotics? What do you think about the execution of this search warrant?
What are your plans for your future professional practice? Include if you have a preferred name and any hobbies you would like to share
You have been assigned to assist your department's Special Investigations Bureau who are investigating. How would you explain this to your supervisor?
Construct a urea standard curve and derive linear regression line with equation. Question 2: Determine the urea nitrogen level found in blood plasma sample
Why are confessions important in criminal investigations? What are some of the dangers in relying on confessions to obtain criminal convictions?
Provide details of the crime and how the neutralization was utilized to explain the crime away.
Should the staff member have a right to know this to protect their safety or not? Explain your position and reasoning on this.
What does the Andrea Yates case tell us about why it is important that the biosocial perspective incorporates social factors that influence behavior?
Do you feel it is acceptable for schools to drug test student-athletes? Do you think drug testing involve any student involve in any extracurricular activities?
What does Anderson mean by code of the street? Is Anderson's characterization of life in the inner-city accurate? Does it apply to other cities? To Phoenix?
How does the sociological perspective on this topic or concept differ from common ways of thinking about it in everyday social life?
Discuss the impact this particular crime may have on victim. Apply one or more of victimization theories you have learn about in this course to better support.
Explain the elements of theory as it attempts to explain delinquency. What are the policy implications of this theory for juvenile delinquency?
How do colonists, specifically, Thomas Paine and Thomas Jefferson, express their discontent with Great Britain? What SPECIFIC issues do they both talk about
Which strategy (or strategies) do you feel are the most effective and what would be the role of a crime analyst for that strategy?
Critics of juvenile courts have called for their abolition. Which side of this debate do you think makes more sense? Why?
Conduct research on your own in the media and find an example of juvenile delinquency where the juvenile's defense was a neutralization.
How would this experience differ from being incarcerated in the United States? How would it be similar?