The Potential of Emotions in Feminist Epistemology: Developing Jaggar’s Account By Tina Strasbourg University of Calgary Abstract In this paper I analyze the potential of Allison Jaggar’s suggestion that emotions in general‚ and outlaw emotions in particular‚ be incorporated into feminist epistemology. Jaggar advocates a standpoint theory of emotions‚ and suggests that the emotions of the oppressed in particular are helpful rather than inimical to acquiring knowledge
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Critical Criminology’ It is mesmerizing listening to the accounts that transpire when a murderer is reciting the events that led to the death of another human being. It is difficult to process all the information coming from a mild mannered well-spoken individual. Was it the background of his or her childhood that drew you in just enough to feel sorry for them? Was it the passive aggressive behavior of one or more of the parent’s relentless beating down the psyche of an otherwise smart‚ articulate
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MCJ-202 Foundation of Criminology 1. Are there injurious acts in the society that are not considered and punished as crimes? Give at least 5 and explain. Answer: There are some injurious acts in the society that are not considered as crime‚ because our law is a Reactive and not Proactive mean: the we considered what is the result of what you have done and not the motive or reason of what you have done. Examples of these are: • Drunk Driving Traffic fatalities caused by drivers
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Also in the past half century‚ there has been a rise in social movements such as civil rights‚ women’s movements‚ and concerns of poverty that have sociological influences in criminology. Therefore encouraging sociologist to develop several explanations for crime. For one an individual’s position within the structure of society can lead to criminal behavior. It begins with their social and economic environment of poverty‚ weak social
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The authors state in the book Criminology 7th edition by Adler F‚ Muller G.‚ & William Laufer (2010). “Criminology is the body of knowledge regarding crime as a social phenomenon. This includes within its scope the process of making laws of braking laws and of reacting toward the breaking of laws.”(p.10) One method a criminologist may use is conducting a field study of the total number of people whom continually J walks. J walking is considered as a person or a group who makes the decision to cross
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Environmental Criminology for the Design Professions of Architectures‚ and Planning.”‚ environmental criminology is developing. Environmental criminology focuses on how environment impact the possibility of crime. By learning the effect of environment on crime‚ people may figure out methods for decreasing criminal opportunities. Although unintentionally hinder or enable‚ the environments designers create still can impact crime rate. An excellent architect needs to master environmental criminology and design
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Classical School of Criminology Abstract Theories about crime and criminals tend to be complex theories and are based on what we know from research on crime and criminals. The criminal theories vary from scientific theories as scientific theories can be proven as factual and criminal theories are never proven; but a part of every day life (Williams 2004). The author of this paper discusses the Classical School of Criminology beliefs and its founders. The author of the paper also briefly discusses
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statistical based approach‚ under which societal factors are assessed to determine which characteristics are more likely to cause crime. At once‚ one can see the fundamentally different bases upon which each theory is propped Whats classical criminology Classical criminology is an approach to the legal system that arose during the Enlightenment in the 1700s. Philosophers like Cesare Beccaria‚ John Locke‚ and Jeremy Bentham expanded upon social contract theory to explain why people commit crime and how societies
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1. Why has the conflict theory not had any serious policy implications on the issue of criminology? How can the conflict theory be used to develop policies for structural transformation while still acknowledging the existing views on criminology? From Turk’s perspective‚ the reason why the conflict theory has not had serious policy implications on the issue of criminology is because of the traditional view of crime as the problem and the assumption by radicals that criminalization is the problem
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‘Describe and Evaluate two psychological explanation of crime. ‘ In this essay I’m going to describe and evaluate two psychological explanation of crime. The crime is an act that constitutes an offense that may be prosecuted by state and is punishable by law. (FreeDictionary‚ 2013) Bandura’s Social Learning Theory says that people learn from one another by observation‚ imitation and modelling. Social Learning Theory‚ is when people observe it first so if goes by Attention. Then they
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