"Outline and evaluate marxist explanations of crime" Essays and Research Papers

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    A Critique of Marxist Criminology Author(s): Richard F. Sparks Source: Crime and Justice‚ Vol. 2 (1980)‚ pp. 159-210 Published by: The University of Chicago Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1147414 . Accessed: 23/04/2013 06:31 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use‚ available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars‚ researchers‚ and students discover

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    at the expense of others; it is a social continuous struggle. How do institutionalized organizations enable this to happen? How does conflict theory allows us to understand the issues of crime derived from these organizations? Richard Quinney a respectable criminologist was known for his Marxist approach to crime. This perspective explains that deviance is defined in way that those in power are protected; this is why

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    In 1991 Field found that the time spent in full-time day care was positively correlated to the number of friends children had when they went to school. Yet this might be due to more outgoing children attend day-care and therefore are more sociable‚ compared to shy‚ unsociable children who inherited their temperament from their shy mothers who would prefer to keep care for their kids at home. Clark Stewart et al studied a hundred and fifty children in 1994. They found children who went to day-car

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    In 1974 the researchers Baddeley and Hitch argued that the picture of short-term memory (STM) provided by the Multi-Store Model was far too simple. Following the Multi-Store Model‚ it is believed that STM holds limited amounts of information for short periods of time with relatively little processing‚ it is believed to be a unitary store. This means that due to its single store it has no subsystems‚ unlike the Working Memory Model which has many subsystems. This proves that the Working Memory is

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    Asch carried out an experiment in 1951 to investigate the extent to which social pressure from a majority group could affect a person to conform. Asch used a lab experiment‚ where 50 male students from a college in the USA participated in a ‘vision test’. Using a line judgement test‚ one of the more naïve participants was put in a room with 7 confederates. The confederates had agreed in advance what their responses would be involving the line task. The real participant didn’t know this‚ and was led

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    In this essay I will be evaluating the claim that Person-Centred therapy offers the therapist all that they will need to treat clients. I will examine both sides of the theory‚ to include looking at the weaknesses and criticisms of person-centred therapy by other writers and weigh these up‚ along with the strengths of using person-centre therapy and when it will be most suited to treat certain disorders. I will also look at Carl Rogers in more depth with his views‚ responses and

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    In 1973‚ Zimbardo carried out an experiment to investigate how readily people would conform to new roles by observing how quickly people would adopt the roles of a guard or prisoner in a simulated prison. Zimbardo took healthy male volunteers and pain them $15 per day to take part in the two-week simulation study of prison life. Volunteers were randomly chosen to be either guards or prisoners. Local police helped “arrest” 9 prisoners at their homes without warning; they were then taken and blindfolded

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    Attachment is a deep and enduring bond that emotionally connects one person to another‚ however this attachment does not necessarily have to be shared as one person may have an attachment with an individual which is not reciprocated. Such attachments are characterized by specific behaviours in children such as seeking to be in the attachment figure’s company when upset or distressed. The evolutionary theory of attachment originates with the work of John Bowlby whom was inspired by the work of renowned

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    Baddeley and Hitch (1974) developed an alternative model of short-term memory which they called the working memory model. The working memory model consists of four components. The central executive which controls and co-ordinates the operation of two subsystems‚ the phonological loop and the visuo-spatial sketchpad. The central executive controls attention and coordinates the actions of the other components‚ it can briefly store information‚ but has a limited capacity. The phonological loop consists

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    set of actors—including executives‚ doctors‚ politicians‚ and computer hackers. The authors have attempted to infuse each chapter with a historical perspective by describing some selected cases from the past in order to illustrate that white-collar crime is not solely a contemporary social problem but has a long and vivid history. I. The History of a Concept a) Ponzi’s - Whereby investors’ returns are paid for directly by later investors’ investments‚ giving the false impression that the investment

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