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    Theories of Victimization

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    Theories of Victimization (3) Melissa Marciano CRJ330-01 Dr. Dian Williams The greatest predictor of becoming a victim in the future is if a person was a victim in the past. For example‚ if a person was sexually molested as a child‚ it’s likely that person will become a victim of rape as an adult. David Finkelhor and Nancy Asigian suggest three types of characteristics increase a person’s potential for victimization: Target Vulnerability‚ Target Gratifiability‚ and Target Antagonism. Target

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    Rebekah Friel English 102 Dr. Robert Kellerman March 26‚ 2013 Their World in Ruins: “Abandoned Farmhouse” by Ted Kooser The objects people keep in their homes can tell a story about who they are or were. Each item possessed by the residents of a house is evidence of how these people may have lived. Ted Kooser’s poem “Abandoned Farmhouse” takes the reader on a walkthrough of the remains of a farmhouse where a poor family once lived. In “Abandoned Farmhouse‚” Kooser selects seemingly insignificant

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    The first Ted Talk was about ben dunlap and his many Hungarian mentors. He mostly focused on Mr. Sandor Teszler and is the current president of Wofford College. His uncle Henry was living under a death threat from the Ku Klux Klan. His uncle did a very Hungarian act by moving his family to Massachusetts so that he could face the Ku Klan Klan alone in South Carolina. Thinking about it‚ I pretty sure I would do the same thing being in his situation. Hungarians have their own equivalent of the Ku Klux

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    In the Ted Talks that I watched for this class‚ Shultz spoke on why we are stuck in the feeling of being right. Shultz says that we find ourselves stuck in a feeling of being right because of how we feel emotionally when we are wrong. Being wrong feels the same as being right until you realize that you are wrong‚ and then it can be devastating‚ embarrassing‚ and even funny at times. She called this “error blindness”. Shultz notes‚ that the second reason we are stuck in being right is cultural

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    In the TED Talk‚ “The Neuroscience of Restorative Justice‚” the main idea that Daniel Reisel is trying to convey is that there may be a cure for psychopathic people. To begin‚ people act psychopathic because they become unconnected with others. Furthermore‚ keeping them in jail away from others just adds to this negativity. Reisel compares this to the behavior of a mouse when it is kept separate from other mice. According to the TED Talk‚ “So if you rear a mouse in a standard cage‚ a shoebox‚ essentially

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    Kelly McGonigal begins this Ted Talk with a confession: she’s been giving people the wrong ideas about stress. Kelly has been telling people for years that stress will kill them and that it is totally and completely bad for them. Based on a study‚ though‚ this information that stress is bad for you is largely incorrect. The study in question shows that high levels of stress doesn’t kill people; rather‚ their perception of stress is what kills them. The study revealed that people with high stress

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    Criminal Law

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    .................... Theories of punishment ....................................................................................................................... Study hints ............................................................................................................................................. History of South African criminal law .............................................................................................. The sources of our criminal law .................

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    Ted Talk Notes

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    #1 Daniel Pink:    The Candle Problem­ experimenter gives subjects candle‚ thumbtacks‚ matches. Put candle  on the wall. Put tack box on wall to hold candle. Add timing into the experiment: offer rewards  (money). How much faster? 3.5 minutes longer. Incentive didn’t work. Never has worked.  Findings are largely ignored. MISMATCH BETWEEN SCIENCE AND BUSINESS.  In the 21st century‚ reward/punishment doesn’t work. Take the tacks out of the box: make it  way easier. Incentivized group worked better in simplified experiment

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    Ted Hughes the Jaguar

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    Bio Notes Booklet 3: Molecules for life Cells are the smallest units of all living things. Inside cells are molecules (water‚ glucose‚ protein). Any molecule is made of atoms. Cells carry out metabolic reactions in order to stay alive. Anabolic reactions- large molecules are built when small molecules join together. Catabolic reactions- large molecules break down to form smaller molecules. Organelles- basic components of cells The different biological molecules in cells can be grouped into

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    When asked‚ many people would describe that criminals become criminals in a gangs by making choice. The general public believes that when it comes down to it‚ each criminal weighed the options and chose crime. It’s simple for them; it’s a yes or no answer. This is classical theory‚ “that people choose to act badly‚ to hurt others or themselves. Solving crime means first changing what is inside people’s heads.” This states that people have free will to do whatever it is they please; illegally and/or

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