The choices and theories of crime and how these are determine by society. The reasoning each person has to determine right from wrong and how this is determined by age, offence, and severity of the crime. |
According to "Martin Luther King Jr Quotes" (1963), Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed.
Choice theories are the choices to commend or abstain from wrong had an implement of free will based on the offender’s hard work to reduce pain and exploit pleasure. In this paper, I will look at choice theories and how they relate to crime and a little about common models in how society determines which acts are considered to be criminal, and how these are impacted by choice theories of crime.
A choice theory is the evaluation on offenses caused by a criminal due to the consequences of conscious choices. It is also known as the rational choice theory. According to this theory, criminals want to disobey the laws when he or she believes that the price of doing so does not overshadow the profit. In fact choice theory has an inner behavior to our life and that it is hereditarily motivated by five desires: freedom, ability, love, survival, and responsibility. The choice theory also has 10 Axioms that are based on a therapy method that is all about serving customers taught to formulate excellent choices. Some of the axioms are: behaviors that he or she choose but mainly those he or she act on, one that he or she can control, relationships long term and short term, behavior is made up of four mechanism- physiology, feeling, acting and thinking, and all behaviors are divided into verbs.
Everyone as a choice in life whether if he or she decides to eat at the mall or go carjacking it is up to him or her to decide whatever they want to do. When a person decides on two or more things that is considered a choice. The choices a person
References: Martin Luther King Jr quotes. (1963). Retrieved from http://history1900s.about.com/od/martinlutherkingjr/a/mlkquotes.htm Statistics: reporting systems and methods - official crime statistics. (2011). Retrieved from http://law.jrank.org/pages/2164/Statistics-Reporting-Systems-Methods-Official-crime-statistics.html