Solution Manual for Criminology (Justice Series), 5th Edition
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CHAPTER 2
Classical and Neoclassical Criminology: Choice and
Consequences
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
This chapter introduces the Classical School of Criminology, which grew out of concepts and
ideas developed by Enlightenment thinkers in the eighteenth century. The Enlightenment was
a social movement that emphasized reason and rational thought. It conceptualized humans as
rational beings possessing freedom of choice and led to the development of the Classical
School of criminological thought, viewing crime and deviance as products of the exercise of
free will.
Cesare Beccaria, a key Enlightenment philosopher, published his Essay on Crimes and
Punishments in 1764, setting forth his philosophy of punishment. Beccaria emphasized
punishment based on the degree injury caused, felt that the purpose of punishment should be
deterrence (rather than retribution), and saw punishment as a tool to an end (crime
prevention), rather than an end in itself. He emphasized the need for the trial and punishment
to be swift and for punishment, once decreed, to be certain. He also felt that punishment
should only be severe enough to outweigh the personal benefits to be derived from crime. He
opposed the use of torture and accepted the death penalty only for serious crimes against the
state.
Jeremy Bentham, another founder of the Classical School, developed an approach known
as utilitarianism or hedonistic calculus. Bentham believed that humans are rational and weigh
the consequences of their behavior, considering pleasure versus pain. Therefore, he
emphasized that to prevent crime, the pain of punishment must outweigh the pleasure derived
from the crime. Like Beccaria, Bentham considered punishment to be a deterrent for those
considering criminal activity.
By the start of the 20th century, classical criminology was being replaced by positivism,
which rejected the notion of free will and emphasized the concept of hard determinism: the
belief that crime results from forces beyond the individualโs control. However, by the 1970s,
studies suggesting the failure of rehabilitation, combined with an increasing fear of crime, led
to a resurgence of classical ideals known as neoclassical criminology.
Rational choice theory was developed out of the neoclassical school of criminology and is
based on the belief that criminals make a conscious, rational, and at least partially informed
choice to commit crime after weighing the costs and benefits of available alternatives. The
two main varieties of choice theory are routine activities theory and situational choice theory.
Routine activities theory suggests that crime is likely to occur when a motivated offender and
suitable target come together in the absence of a capable guardian and focuses on how
lifestyle can contribute to potential victimization. Situational choice theory revolves around
the need for criminal opportunity and emphasizes the use of situational crime prevention
strategies such as defensible space, improved lighting, controlling alcohol sales at sporting
events, etc. These theories have been criticized for overemphasizing individual choice,
disregarding the role of social factors (poverty, poor home environment, inadequate
socialization, etc.) on crime causation, and assuming that everyone is equally capable of
making rational decisions. Their emphasis on situational crime prevention strategies may also
result in displacement rather than true prevention.
Both classical and neoclassical thought emphasize punishment. However, the Classical
School sees deterrence as the purpose of punishment while the neoclassical view also
incorporates retribution: if an individual chooses to violate the law, s/he deserves punishment
and must be punished. Just deserts is the sentencing model that refers to the notion that the
offender deserves the punishment s/he receives at the hands of the law. Neoclassical thinkers
distinguish between specific and general deterrence. For punishment to be an effective
deterrent, it must be swift, certain, and severe enough to outweigh the rewards of the crime.
However, these requirements are rarely met by the modern criminal justice system, which
may explain the extremely high rates of recidivism in the United States.
The death penalty is probably the most controversial punishment. Research suggests it
may not be an effective general deterrent and that it is applied inequitably. Many capital cases
appear to be seriously flawed, resulting in the conviction of innocent individuals. There is
also much concern over the disproportionate imposition of the death penalty on ethnic
populations. There are a large number of arguments both for and against the use of capital
punishment in the United States.
There are a number of policy implications to come out of the Classical School, including
the concepts of determinate sentencing, truth-in-sentencing laws, and incapacitation. Overall,
the classical and neoclassical schools are more a philosophy of justice than a theory of crime
causation. They do not explain how a choice for or against criminal activity is made nor do
they take into account personal motivations. There is no scientific basis for the claims made
by the Classical School and many neoclassical thinkers also emphasize philosophical ideals
over scientific research.
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES
1. Outline the principles of classical and neoclassical criminology.
2. Outline the history of classical thought.
3. Outline the development of neoclassical criminology.
4. Describe how neoclassicism views punishment as a deterrent of crime.
5. Outline the arguments for and against the death penalty.
6. Explain how the Classical School affects policy.
7. Summarize the evaluations of the classical and neoclassical thoughts.
CHAPTER OUTLINE
I.
Principles of Classical and Neoclassical Criminology
โข
Teaching Note: Discuss how, during the Enlightenment, religion gave way to science
as the dominant way of understanding social life. Give students examples that show
why rationality is a superior way to approach social life.
โข
โข
โข
โข
II.
Teaching Note: Point out that a number of social scientific disciplines, including
sociology, trace much of their early development to the Enlightenment thinkers.
Teaching Note: Use Figure 3-1 to discuss the major principles of classical and
neoclassical criminology. Explain how assumptions associated with the Classical
School of criminology are still a major part of criminological thought today.
Teaching Note: Point out that classical thinkers said that most crime is the result of
rational decision-making. Some criminals, however, appear to act without much
thought. Ask students to consider what distinguishes between crimes that involve
thought and crimes that do not โ is it the type of offender who commits them, or is it
the type of crime being committed?
Teaching Note: Identify each assumption underlying classical theories that is stated in
this chapter. Ask students to write down whether they agree or disagree with each
assumption, and ask them to tell why in one or two sentences. Return the studentsโ
responses at various points throughout the semester, and ask them whether they want
to revise any of their original statements.
The Roots of Classical Criminology
A.
โข
โข
โข
Teaching Note: Ask students to identify what elements Cesare Beccaria considers to
be most important for effective punishment.
Teaching Note: Have students examine the U.S. Constitution and identify specific
places where they see the influence of Beccariaโs ideas.
Teaching Note: Explain that although classical thinkers in the field of criminology
claimed that rational decision-making plays a big role in crime causation, rationality
is different than motivation. Ask students to discuss what classical thinkers likely saw
as motivating factors behind criminal behavior.
B.
โข
โข
III.
Cesare Beccaria (1738-1794): Punishment as Deterrence
Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832): The Pain versus Pleasure Balance
Teaching Note: Break students into groups, and have them discuss Benthamโs
different types of punishment. Which of these types continue to operate in our current
justice system? Why have some of the others become obsolete?
Teaching Note: Link structures like the Panopticon to evolving ideas about social
control. For example, the Panopticon was characterized by enhanced visibility for
those in control and by centralized managementโall of which were facilitated
through the use of technology and architectural design rather than intensive human
labor.
Neoclassical Criminology
โข
โข
โข
โข
Teaching Note: Compare positivism and classical criminology. Explain that
positivism can be reconciled with notions of free will if one accepts soft determinism.
Teaching Note: Discuss the factors that led to the decline of positivism in the 1970s.
Teaching Note: Explain why Robert Martinsonโs research had such an impact on
criminal justice policy.
Teaching Note: Explain that classical and neoclassical criminology appear to assume
that human actors have free will โ they can make choices and impose those choices
though their behavior on the world around them. Have students discuss the role that
free will plays in crime commission and ask them whether some crimes might result
from something other than the exercise of free will.
A.
โข
โข
โข
โข
โข
Teaching Note: Review Figure 2-3 and explain how the different steps lead an
individual to choose property crime or conventional behavior. Discuss how this model
would change if applied to drug offenders.
Teaching Note: Use a hypothetical situation to illustrate the five objectives of
situational crime prevention that this chapter discusses.
Teaching Note: Have students explore the campus or their home community and
identify locations where situational crime prevention techniques might be employed
to increase crime prevention efforts.
Teaching Note: Explain how rational choice theory moved the focus on what
determines criminal behavior from the pleasure/pain balance to a focus on cognition
and rationality.
Teaching Note: Have students identify ways in which situational crime-control
techniques could be applied to reduce specific types of crimes (such as shoplifting).
B.
โข
โข
โข
The Excitement of Crime
Teaching Note: Criminologists other than Jack Katz have examined the extent to
which breaking the rules becomes a source of thrills. Describe other research that
describes the extent to which delinquency is fun.
Teaching Note: Ask students how crime may be rewarding for those who commit it?
Have them discuss ways in which rewards might be reduced.
C.
โข
Rational Choice Theory
Situational Crime-Control Policy
Teaching Note: Discuss the benefits of focusing crime-prevention efforts on places
rather than on people.
Teaching Note: Break students into groups, and ask them to come up with several
examples of how crime prevention has become a routine part of everyday life.
โข
โข
IV.
Teaching Note: Give examples of access control and target hardening by focusing on
the increased popularity of devices that individuals in our society use to protect their
homes and themselves.
Teaching Note: Ask students what might be some situational factors that precipitate
criminal incidents. Suggest they use the websites provided in this chapter for help
answering this question.
Punishment and Neoclassical Thought
โข
Teaching Note: Ask students to compare and contrast the general perspectives on
punishment held by the classical and neoclassical thinkers and identify similarities
and differences between them.
A.
โข
โข
Teaching Note: Explain that the just deserts model is concerned with punishment that
is proportional to the offense committed. Ask students how consensus on
proportionality is achieved in society.
Teaching Note: Explore with students why the just deserts approach appears to be
such a popular approach to punishment.
B.
โข
โข
โข
โข
V.
Just Deserts
Deterrence
Teaching Note: Distinguish between specific and general deterrence by focusing on
which one has the greater potential to reduce crime.
Teaching Note: Explain that recidivism can be defined simply as a return to crime, but
precise measures of this concept vary across research studies.
Teaching Note: Use the crime funnel to illustrate the due process safeguards of our
criminal justice system and the priority attached to democratic principles.
Teaching Note: Given that early release may negatively affect deterrence, ask students
what effect eliminating the possibility of early release (e.g., parole) might have on
corrections.
The Death Penalty
โข
โข
โข
Teaching Note: Have students explain and then discuss their perspectives on capital
punishment.
Teaching Note: Discuss with students the due process implications of speeding up the
process of carrying out death sentences.
Teaching Note: Note the fallibility of the criminal justice system by pointing out how
a significant number of wrongful convictions have been shown to occur in capital
punishment cases. Ask students why they think our society continues to support
capital punishment in the wake of these errors.
A.
โข
โข
โข
Teaching Note: Review research findings regarding the just application of capital
punishment.
Teaching Note: Divide the class into groups and lead a debate regarding whether there
are elements of racism in the imposition of capital punishment today.
Teaching Note: Explain that the relevance of the McCleskey v. Kemp case was that it
was based on claims of a systemic effort of racism in the imposition of the death
sentence.
B.
VI.
Capital Punishment and Ethnicity
A Flawed System?
Policy Implications of the Classical School
โข
โข
โข
โข
VII.
Teaching Note: Ask students how the social problems and individual responsibility
perspectives would view determinate sentencing and truth-in-sentencing practices.
Teaching Note: Point out that the work of Marvin Wolfgang involving chronic
offenders has had enormous implications for the direction of criminal justice research
and policy.
Teaching Note: Explain how Wolfgangโs research demonstrated the benefits of
longitudinal research and supported the claim that the propensity for offending is not
spread equally across the population of offenders.
Teaching Note: Discuss the pros and cons of selective vs collective incapacitation.
Ask students to consider the financial implications of each strategy.
A Critique of Classical and Neoclassical Theories
A.
โข
Teaching Note: Point out that U.S. prison populations have grown considerably over
the past 20 years and many prisons in America are overcrowded. At the same time,
crime rates are down significantly. Ask students why they think Americaโs prisons so
full and whether it might have anything to do with the influence of neoclassical
thinking. Ask students if full prisons equate to lower crime rates.
B.
โข
โข
A Critique of Neoclassical Thought
A Critique of Rational Choice Theory
Teaching Note: Ask students to identify situations in which they might be unable to
make a rational decision.
Teaching Note: Explain how situational crime prevention strategies like target
hardening can lead to displacement of crime and ask students what the implications of
displacement might be for crime-control policy.
LIST OF CHANGES/TRANSITION GUIDE
โข A new figure diagrams the steps that are likely to be involved in making a choice
to commit a property crime.
โข The 2017 rash of Swedish car burnings is discussed within the context of the
excitement of crime.
โข The crime-prevention strategy now being employed in some jurisdictionsโpaying
known criminals not to commit further crimesโis discussed within the section on the
policy implications of the Classical School.
ADDITIONAL ASSIGNMENTS AND CLASS ACTIVITIES
Go Beyond the Text
Topic #1
Consider discussing the issue of shaming as a form of deterrence, including both stigmatic
and reintegrative shaming. Topics to discuss could include:
โข
The use of stigmatic shaming or degradation throughout U.S. history (e.g.,
branding, stocks, public punishments)
The recent revival of stigmatic shaming (e.g., publishing the names of offenders in
newspapers, posting them on billboards, televising criminal trials)
John Braithwaiteโs concept of reintegrative shaming
โข
โข
Topic #2
Another option is to discuss various ways in which the Classical School has affected the
criminal justice system. Topics for discussion include:
โข
โข
โข
The reform of criminal codes to eliminate torture, develop more consistent and certain
punishments, and reduce the use of capital and corporal punishment
The increased use of incarceration as a punishment as well as for short-term detention
of those awaiting trial, execution, or corporal punishment
The reform of law enforcement, including the development of the modern full-time
police force with the goal of deterring and preventing crime
Classroom and Out-of-Class Exercises
Activity #1
Place students into groups and assign each group to a public venue (a library, a grocery store,
a video store, an office building, etc.). Have each group inspect their assigned location and
answer the following questions:
โข
โข
What situational crime prevention techniques are in use in this location? What types
of crime do they attempt to prevent? (For example, metal detectors help prevent the
theft of library books.)
What additional techniques might be employed to reduce crime in this location?
Activity #2
Place students into groups. Have each group read the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights
and prepare a short report on how this document was influenced by the principles of the
Classical School, including specific examples.
Activity #3
After identifying and discussing the assumptions underlying classical theories that are stated
in this chapter, ask students to write down whether they agree or disagree with the
assumptions identified, and to explain why in one or two sentences. Return the studentsโ
responses at various points throughout the semester, and ask them whether they want to
revise any of their original statements.
Activity #4
Break students into groups and ask them to come up with several examples of how crime
prevention has become a routine part of everyday life.
Activity #5
Have students relate and then discuss their perspectives on capital punishment
SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER ASSIGNMENTS
Learning Outcome 1
1.
The Classical School is a criminological perspective developed in the late 1700s and
early 1800s. It had its roots in the Enlightenment and held that men and women are
rational beings and that crime is the result of the exercise of free will and personal
choices based on calculations of perceived costs and benefits.
Learning Outcome 2
1.
Benthamโs approach has been termed hedonistic calculus or utilitarianism because of
its emphasis on the worth any action holds for an individual undertaking it. As
Bentham stated, โBy the principle of utility is meant that principle which approves or
disapproves of every action whatsoever, according to the tendency which it appears to
have to augment or diminish the happiness of the party whose interest is in question;
or, what is the same thing . . . to promote or to oppose that happiness.โ In other words,
Bentham believed that individuals could weigh, at least intuitively, the consequences
of their behavior before acting, thus maximizing pleasure and minimizing pain. The
value of any pleasure (or the tendency to avoid pain), according to Bentham, could be
calculated by its intensity, duration, certainty, and immediacy (or remoteness in time).
Bentham claimed that the principles surrounding his pleasureโpain perspective were
not new.
Bentham advocated neither extreme nor cruel punishmentโonly punishment
sufficiently distasteful to the offender so that the discomfort experienced would
outweigh the benefits gained from committing crimes. Generally, Bentham argued,
the more serious the offense, the more reward it holds for its perpetrator, and therefore
the more weighty the resulting punishment. โPain and pleasure,โ said Bentham, โare
the instruments the legislator has to work withโ in controlling antisocial and criminal
behavior.
2.
Beccaria said that the purpose of punishment should be deterrence rather than
retribution because he believed that punishment should be imposed to prevent
offenders from committing additional crimes. Beccaria saw punishment as a tool to an
end, not an end in itself, and crime prevention was more important to him than
revenge. Beccaria felt that punishment should be only severe enough to outweigh the
personal benefits derived from committing crimes. Any additional punishment, he
argued, would be superfluous.
Learning Outcome 3
1.
The Classical School emphasized rationality and held that crime was the result of the
exercise of free will and personal choices based on calculations of perceived costs and
benefits. Neoclassical criminology focused on the importance of character, as a kind
of middle ground between total free will and hard determinism, as well as the
dynamics of character development and the rational choices that people make as they
are faced with opportunities for crime.
2.
Situational crime prevention focuses on the context in which crime occurs, rather than
on the people who commit crime. The approach attempts to develop a greater
understanding of crime and more effective strategies of crime prevention by focusing
on the physical, organizational, and social environments that make crime possible.
Offenders are seen as one part of a broader crime-prevention equation centered on the
context of crime. The approach to crime prevention is shifted from one concerned
primarily with why people commit crime to one that asks why crime occurs in
specific settings. It moves the context of crime into central focus and sees the offender
as one of several factors that affect it. Essentially, it sees crime as not only a matter of
motivation but also opportunity and emphasizes a crime prevention approach that
reduces opportunities for crime in specifically identified situations. The five main
objectives of situational crime prevention are:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Increase the effort involved in committing a crime
Increase the risks associated with crime commission
Reduce the rewards of crime
Reduce the provocations that lead to criminal activity
Remove the excuses that facilitate crime commission
Strategies can include target hardening or access control. Some strategies suggested
include โcheque guarantee cards, the control of alcohol sales at football matches,
supervision of childrenโs play on public housing estates, vandal resistant materials and
designs, โdefensible spaceโ architecture, improved lighting, closed-circuit television
surveillance.โ
Learning Outcome 4
1.
The old adages โHe got what was coming to himโ and โShe got her dueโ summarize
the thinking behind the just deserts model of criminal sentencing. Just deserts, a
concept inherent in the justice model, means that criminal offenders deserve the
punishment they receive at the hands of the law, and that any punishment imposed
should be appropriate to the type and severity of crime committed.
2.
Specific deterrence is a goal of criminal sentencing that seeks to prevent a particular
offender from repeating criminality. General deterrence, in contrast, works by way of
example and seeks to prevent others from committing crimes similar to the one for
which a particular offender is being sentenced. The Classical School is more
concerned with general deterrence. If you can deter someone in society from
committing a crime, there is no need for punishment.
Learning Outcome 5
1.
Advocates of capital punishment claim that death is deserved by those who commit
especially heinous acts. Some argue that people deserve to die as retribution for their
crime. These arguments have evolved from a natural law perspective, are sometimes
supported on religious grounds, and are often based on the notion of just deserts.
2.
Opponents of capital punishment make the following claims:
โข Capital punishment does not deter crime.
โข The death penalty has, at times, been imposed on innocent people, with no
workable system currently in place to prevent the accidental execution of
innocents.
โข
โข
โข
โข
โข
โข
โข
โข
Human life is sacred, even the life of a murderer.
State-imposed death lowers society to the same moral (or amoral) level as the
murderer.
The death penalty has been haphazardly imposed in seemingly random
fashion.
The death penalty is imposed disproportionately on minority offenders.
Capital punishment goes against most fundamental precepts of organized
religion.
The death penalty is more expensive than imprisonment.
Internationally, capital punishment is widely viewed as inhumane and
barbaric.
A viable alternative exists in life imprisonment without the possibility of
parole.
Learning Outcome 6
1.
Determinate sentencing is a strategy that mandates a specified and fixed amount of
time to be served for every offense category. Under determinate sentencing schemes,
judges may be required to impose seven-year sentences on armed robbers, but only
one-year sentences on strong-armed robbers (who use no weapon). Determinate
sentencing schemes build upon the twin notions of classical thought that (1) the
pleasure of a given crime can be somewhat accurately assessed and (2) a fixed amount
of punishment necessary for deterrence can be calculated and specified.
2.
Truth in sentencing requires judges to assess and publish the actual time an offender
will serve once sentenced to prison. Many recently enacted truth-in-sentencing laws
require that offenders serve a large portion of their sentence (often 80%) before their
release.
Truth-in-sentencing may serve as a deterrent as society sees that offenders must serve
a large portion of their sentence before being released.
Learning Outcome 7
1.
Critics charge that classical thought doesnโt fully explain criminal motivation. Other
than claims that crime is the result of free will, the personal attractions of crime, and
individual choice, the perspective has little to say about crime causation. Why, for
example, do some people choose to commit crime, while others in similar situations
decide against crime commission? Critics point out that classical theory is largely
missing meaningful explanations as to how a choice for or against criminal activity is
made. Similarly, classical theory lacks any appreciation for the deeper sources of
personal motivation. This includes those motivating factors represented by aspects of
human biology, psychology, and the social environment.
A criticism of neoclassical perspectives on crime can be offered: Although
neoclassical writers are sometimes credited for advancing the scientific approach to
crime prevention through studies that appear to have identified effective forms of
deterrence, many such thinkers defend their perspective by referring to purely
philosophical ideals such as just deserts. In this respect, they have made little progress
beyond the armchair theorizing and philosophical banter of classical perspectives.
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