Issues in Corrections MCQs

Issues in Corrections MCQs

Try to answer these 30+ Issues in Corrections MCQs and check your understanding of the Issues in Corrections subject.
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1: In 1972, inmates at ______ rioted over poor prison conditions and took over part of the prison.

A.   The Penitentiary of New Mexico

B.   The California Institution for Men

C.   San Quentin Prison

D.   Attica Prison

2: Generally, research shows all of the following statements are true concerning female correctional officers except ______.

A.   They are more likely to experience work-family conflict

B.   They are better able to diffuse violent situations

C.   They demonstrate more concern about victimization by inmates

D.   They are less likely to get into confrontations with inmates

A.   True

B.   False

4: ______ outlawed the death penalty on grounds that the penalty was arbitrary and capricious.

A.   Furman v. Georgia

B.   Gregg v. Georgia

C.   Newman v. Alabama

D.   Estelle v. Gamble

5: The Marshall hypothesis suggests that the more informed individuals are about the death penalty, the less likely they will be to support the death penalty. This hypothesis was named after a ______.

A.   State senator

B.   Supreme court justice

C.   Attorney

D.   Criminologist

6: ______ stipulate places sex offenders cannot go to, such as playgrounds, day care centers, libraries, and school zones.

A.   Exclusion zone policies

B.   Registry laws

C.   Polygraph policies

D.   Civil commitment laws

7: When housed with adults, juveniles are separated from the adult inmates in order to protect them.

A.   True

B.   False

8: ______ factors refer to the condition of the prison and ways that the prison or jail itself may lead to stress for corrections officers.

A.   Situational

B.   Environmental

C.   Biological

D.   Work/home

9: ______ are facilities that house juveniles while awaiting juvenile dispositions.

A.   Juvenile group homes

B.   Adult jails

C.   Juvenile detention centers

D.   Adult prisons

10: The ______ required inmates to exhaust all administrative remedies before filing a suit and pay a filing fee.

A.   Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003

B.   Prison Litigation Reform Act

C.   Community Health Act

D.   Civil Rights Act of 1871

11: ______ stated imprisonment should not result in the loss of constitutional rights as described under the Fourteenth Amendment and the “equal protection under the law” clause.

A.   Gregg v. Georgia

B.   Ruffin v. the Commonwealth

C.   Cooper v. Pate

D.   Trop v. Dulles

12: Sexual assaults occurring in prison frequently are conducted out of ______.

A.   A desire for companionship

B.   A desire for sexual intimacy

C.   A desire for power and control

D.   Boredom

13: The type of “turner” called ______ engage in the relationship in order to gain access to goods and services or privileges they otherwise would not be able to access.

A.   Hell-raisers

B.   Exploiters

C.   Home-wreckers

D.   Heart-breakers

14: Factors contributing to prison violence include all of the following EXCEPT ______.

A.   Violent histories

B.   Diet

C.   Superficial factors

D.   Situational factors

15: Inmates have a right to practice their religion, and this right must not be restricted in any manner.

A.   True

B.   False

16: _____ is laws that allow officials to use drugs to control sex offenders’ impulses.

A.   Chemical Castration Laws

B.   Sensorimotor

C.   Concrete operational

D.   None of these

17: _____ is defined as laws used to commit sex offenders in institutions after their incarceration dates.

A.   All of these

B.   Civil Commitment Laws

C.   Neither state laws nor federal laws

D.   State laws

18: _____ is known as an act aimed at deinstitutionalizing mentally ill individuals and treating the majority of them in the community rather than in state hospitals

A.   None of these

B.   Shiftwork and working weekends and holidays

C.   Community Mental Health Act

D.   Inmates seem to be gaining power while officers are losing power.

19: Is correctional Misconduct illegal acts committed by corrections professionals?

A.   True

B.   False

20: _____ is punishments that are “incompatible with the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society . . . or which involve the unnecessary infliction of pain.”

A.   Preventing crime

B.   None of these

C.   Cruel and Unusual Punishment

D.   Assisting community members

21: _____ is defined as a sanction that calls for the end of the offender’s life.

A.   Caseload

B.   Halfway house

C.   All of these

D.   Death Penalty

22: _____ is known as policies that stipulate places sex offenders cannot go.

A.   None of these

B.   Exclusion Zone Policies

C.   Internet crimes

D.   Unauthorized access

23: Is incarcerated Thinkers refers to offenders who are believed to be highly intelligent?

A.   True

B.   False

24: _____ is argument suggesting that knowledge about the death penalty will change attitudes about the topic.

A.   Infraction

B.   All of these

C.   Felony

D.   Marshall Hypothesis

25: _____ is defined as a report that found, essentially, that efforts to rehabilitate offenders had no significant effect on recidivism rates.

A.   All of these

B.   Performing welfare tasks

C.   Incarceration

D.   Martinson’s Report

26: _____ is known as a law requiring inmates to exhaust all administrative remedies and pay a filing fee before filing suit claiming that their rights have been abused.

A.   Prison Litigation Reform Act

B.   Law

C.   Appeals by Right

D.   All of these

27: Is prison Voyeurism efforts to understand prison without fully engaging in prisons?

A.   True

B.   False

28: _____ is the relationships that female inmates develop with each other; the majority are more family type in nature than they are intimate.

A.   Socialization

B.   Contemplation

C.   None of these

D.   Pseudo Family Groups

29: _____ is defined as laws that require sex offenders to register with the state police; information about registered sex offenders is typically available online.

A.   Registry Laws

B.   CCTV

C.   All of these

D.   HALO Camera

30: _____ is known as a philosophy of crime prevention that focuses on restoring the victim and the offender in a way that best serves the greater community and the victim.

A.   Restorative Justice

B.   Legislative

C.   Child Sexual Abuse

D.   All of these

31: Is turner a term used to describe an inmate who befriends corrections employees in order to manipulate them into breaking the rules?

A.   False

B.   True