Social Disorganization and Subcultures MCQs

Social Disorganization and Subcultures MCQs

Try to answer these Social Disorganization and Subcultures MCQs and check your understanding of the Social Disorganization and Subcultures subject.
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1: The Chicago School represents one of the earliest examples of balancing theorizing with scientific analysis.

A.   True

B.   False

2: There are three focal concerns in Miller’s theory, which asserts that all members of the lower class focus on these concepts they deem important.

A.   True

B.   False

3: Which theorist proposed the theory of lower-class focal concerns?

A.   Burgess

B.   Shaw

C.   Anderson

D.   Miller

4: Park proposed that much of human behavior, especially the way cities grow, follows the basic principles of ecology that had been documented and applied to wildlife for many years.

A.   True

B.   False

5: ______ theory is a perspective on criminal offending that assumes that many offenders believe in a normative system distinctly different from and often at odds with the norms accepted by conventional society.

A.   Anomie

B.   Cultural/subcultural

C.   Psychological

D.   Ecological

6: Virtually all the research has supported Shaw and McKay’s version of social disorganization and the resulting high crime rates in neighborhoods that exhibit such deprived conditions.

A.   True

B.   False

7: According to Burgess, this zone consisted of relatively higher-priced family dwellings and more expensive apartments.

A.   Zone III

B.   Zone V

C.   Zone II

D.   Zone IV

8: According to Burgess, the factory zone was the area just outside the business district and was perhaps the most significant in terms of causing crime.

A.   True

B.   False

9: Shaw and McKay argued that high crime neighborhoods have at least three common problems: physical dilapidation, poverty, and heterogeneity.

A.   True

B.   False

10: According to Burgess, this zone was the zone in transition.

A.   Zone I

B.   Zone II

C.   Zone III

D.   Zone V

11: Which theorist proposed the concept of natural areas?

A.   Park

B.   Miller

C.   Anderson

D.   Wolfgang

12: Burgess proposed a theory of city growth in which cities were seen as growing not simply on the edges, but from the inside outward.

A.   True

B.   False

13: The Chicago School of Criminology is often referred to as the Ecological School.

A.   True

B.   False

14: Many studies find that in a notable number of communities, neighborhood watch groups actually increase the fear of crime, perhaps due to the heightened awareness of crime issues in such areas.

A.   True

B.   False

15: _________ school of criminology is A theoretical framework of criminal behavior that emphasizes the environmental impact of living in a high-crime neighborhood

A.   Chinese

B.   Chicago

C.   Tokyo

D.   Bermingham

16: Concentric Circles is a Model proposed by Chicago School theorists that assumes that all cities grow in a natural way with the same ____ zones

A.   Five

B.   Six

C.   Seven

D.   Eight

17: Cultural / Subcultural theory is A perspective on criminal offending that assumes that many offenders believe in a normative system distinctly different from and often at odds with conventional norms

A.   True

B.   False

18: Natural Areas Refer to the Chicago School’s idea that all cities contain _____ clusters

A.   Identifiable

B.   Unidentifiable

C.   Same

D.   None of the above

19: In the Chicago School, Zone in transition refers to a zone (Zone II) that was once residential but is becoming more industrial; tends to have the highest crime rates

A.   True

B.   False