Test Bank For American Corrections: Concepts and Controversies, 2st Edition
Preview Extract
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Chapter 2: A Historical Perspective on Punishment and
Social Structure
Test Bank
Multiple Choice
1. The history of American corrections ______.
A. is a manifestation of social context and culture
B. has been a consistent journey of progress
C. swings between extremes like a pendulum
D. has been relatively constant and devoid of changes
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Difficulty Level: Medium
2. Which of the following became the dominant method of punishment in the early
Middle Ages?
A. probation and parole
B. incarceration and slavery
C. corporal and capital punishment
D. fines and penance
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Difficulty Level: Medium
3. Which of the following works on penology chronicled how the forms and
jurisprudence of criminal punishment related to the transformation of slavery?
A. On Crimes and Punishments (1963)
B. Pioneering in Penology (1944)
C. Slavery and the Penal System (1976)
D. Punishment and Social Structure (1939)
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Difficulty Level: Easy
4. European houses of corrections reached their peak during an era of ______.
A. mercantilism
B. capitalism
C. communism
D. industrialism
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Difficulty Level: Easy
5. During the later Middle Ages, punishment for crimes ______.
A. consisted primarily of imprisonment
B. became increasingly violent and brutal
C. excluded methods that caused physical pain
D. took the form of economic compensation
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Difficulty Level: Medium
6. Which of the following punishments did the urban bourgeoisie lobby for in the later
Middle Ages?
A. execution
B. fines
C. probation
D. rehabilitation
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Social Change in the Later Middle Ages
Difficulty Level: Easy
7. It is estimated that ______ thieves were executed during the reign of King Henry VIII.
A. 250
B. 1,000
C. 72,000
D. 210,000
Ans: C
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Social Change in the Later Middle Ages
Difficulty Level: Easy
8. Queen Elizabeth ordered vagabonds to be hung in rows as many as ______ at a
time.
A. 10โ20
B. 100
C. 300โ400
D. 1,000
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Social Change in the Later Middle Ages
Difficulty Level: Easy
9. Which of the following is an example of what lower-class offenders would face during
banishment?
A. new business ventures
B. temporary escape from death
C. diplomatic service
D. economic opportunity
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Social Change in the Later Middle Ages
Difficulty Level: Medium
10. In the 17th century, the army was seen as a ______ due to the use of criminals in
military service.
A. penal sanction
B. death sentence
C. debtorโs prison
D. police force
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Discovery of Imprisonment
Difficulty Level: Medium
11. Which of the following was true of galley slavery?
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
A. Inmates served in this role for periods of 1 year at a time.
B. It was replaced by the death penalty for economic reasons.
C. Inmates requested it because conditions were better than in prisons.
D. It was a source of labor for a dangerous and undesirable job.
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-3: To grasp some of the penal inventions that have supported
economic developments, such as colonization of the New World.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Galley Slavery, Transportation, and the Emergence of Imprisonment
Difficulty Level: Medium
12. The practice of โtransportationโ ______.
A. prevented convicts from leaving their home regions
B. created labor shortages in colonies
C. became the primary penalty for property crimes
D. led to serious prison overpopulation
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-3: To grasp some of the penal inventions that have supported
economic developments, such as colonization of the New World.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Galley Slavery, Transportation, and the Emergence of Imprisonment
Difficulty Level: Medium
13. Which of the following places received prisoners as part of the transportation
system?
A. Australia
B. Belgium
C. China
D. Russia
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-3: To grasp some of the penal inventions that have supported
economic developments, such as colonization of the New World.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Galley Slavery, Transportation, and the Emergence of Imprisonment
Difficulty Level: Easy
14. Which of the following is an example of a proposal made by Enlightenment
thinkers?
A. elimination of public jury trials
B. government appointment of lawyers
C. increase in use of torture against convicts
D. protection against false imprisonment
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-3: To grasp some of the penal inventions that have supported
economic developments, such as colonization of the New World.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Answer Location: Galley Slavery, Transportation, and the Emergence of Imprisonment
Difficulty Level: Medium
15. How did the Industrial Revolution affect the penal system?
A. the need for inmate labor decreased
B. prison populations increased
C. prison conditions improved
D. the profitability of prison labor increased
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-4: To be able to discuss how prison labor has supported
economic enterprises at various times in Western history.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Industrial Revolution and Corrections
Difficulty Level: Medium
16. The Federal Bureau of Investigation was created in which year?
A. 1776
B. 1860
C. 1929
D. 1964
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-4: To be able to discuss how prison labor has supported
economic enterprises at various times in Western history.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: After the Progressive Era (1920โ1960)
Difficulty Level: Easy
17. How did the Civil War influence prison work enterprises?
A. The need for goods from prisons dropped because nobody could afford them.
B. There was an increased need for prisoners to produce goods for soldiers.
C. Manufacturing was stopped so prisoners could fight in the war.
D. Prisoners refused to work because most of them sympathized with the South.
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-4: To be able to discuss how prison labor has supported
economic enterprises at various times in Western history.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Medium
18. During much of the 1900s, prisoners in agricultural states were ______.
A. used to protect union members from ruthless farmers
B. employed by farmers to keep minorities from working on their farms
C. given membership in unions to make unions stronger
D. used to pick crops to defeat farm unions during strikes
Ans: D
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Learning Objective: 2-4: To be able to discuss how prison labor has supported
economic enterprises at various times in Western history.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Industrial Revolution and Corrections
Difficulty Level: Medium
19. Which of the following scenarios best depicts the Auburn System?
A. Jack is a prisoner who must pick cotton and green beans when the migrant workers
strike.
B. Jennifer is a prisoner who may volunteer to make clothing for the elderly as part of
her rehabilitation program.
C. Cy is a prisoner who must work at a machine manufacturing goods, but he can earn
time off his sentence that way.
D. Billy is a prisoner who does laundry and janitorial work with a crew and he receives a
small wage for his labor.
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-4: To be able to discuss how prison labor has supported
economic enterprises at various times in Western history.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Hard
20. The practice of solitary confinement was ______.
A. attributed to the Mormons
B. originally justified on religious grounds
C. unaffected by economic forces
D. known as the Auburn System
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-5: To understand the philosophic basis of the Quaker approach to
early institutions of confinement in the United States.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Medium
21. In the Auburn System, inmates ______.
A. spent the day in solitary confinement
B. were not allowed to speak to each other
C. had to wear name tags identifying them
D. had to work all night long
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-5: To understand the philosophic basis of the Quaker approach to
early institutions of confinement in the United States.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Easy
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
22. Under Quaker leadership, prisoners ______.
A. were kept alone in their cells
B. worked in the farm fields
C. did everything in large support groups
D. had to build churches and meeting houses
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-5: To understand the philosophic basis of the Quaker approach to
early institutions of confinement in the United States.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Easy
23. Quakers believed prisoners would find moral redemption through ______.
A. hard work
B. religious contemplation
C. physical torture
D. group cooperation
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-5: To understand the philosophic basis of the Quaker approach to
early institutions of confinement in the United States.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Medium
24. Quaker leaders believed prisoners ______.
A. did not deserve to read the Bible
B. needed social stimulation to be reformed
C. must have a job to be pure
D. should be protected from each otherโs influence
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-5: To understand the philosophic basis of the Quaker approach to
early institutions of confinement in the United States.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Medium
25. Which of the following statements about the Elmira Reformatory is true?
A. Inmate workers at Elmira failed to generate a profit.
B. Prison discipline at Elmira did not include physical punishment.
C. Elmira had a system that allowed prisoners to earn merits and demerits.
D. Elmira was famous for allowing inmates to leave the prison.
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-6: To be able to describe the thinking behind the Auburn System
and the ideas of Zebulon Brockway and explain why they represented a departure from
the thinking that preceded them.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Answer Location: Zebulon Brockway and the Rise of the Adult Reformatory
Difficulty Level: Easy
26. Zebulon Brockway felt that prisons should be ______.
A. taxpayer funded
B. self-sustaining
C. free from physical punishment
D. operated by clergy members
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-6: To be able to describe the thinking behind the Auburn System
and the ideas of Zebulon Brockway and explain why they represented a departure from
the thinking that preceded them.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Zebulon Brockway and the Rise of the Adult Reformatory
Difficulty Level: Easy
27. Zebulon Brockway felt that criminals ______.
A. should be classified into various categories
B. needed concrete sentence terms
C. should all be treated the same way
D. were harmed by physical punishments
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-6: To be able to describe the thinking behind the Auburn System
and the ideas of Zebulon Brockway and explain why they represented a departure from
the thinking that preceded them.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Zebulon Brockway and the Rise of the Adult Reformatory
Difficulty Level: Easy
28. Zebulon Brockway blamed the actions of criminals on ______.
A. excessive religious pressure
B. carefully calculated choices
C. systemic racism and unfair laws
D. genetic inferiority and poor parenting
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-6: To be able to describe the thinking behind the Auburn System
and the ideas of Zebulon Brockway and explain why they represented a departure from
the thinking that preceded them.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Zebulon Brockway and the Rise of the Adult Reformatory
Difficulty Level: Medium
29. Zebulon Brockwayโs programs required inmates to ______ before they could be
released from prison.
A. demonstrate conformity
B. become members of the Quaker religion
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
C. enlist in the military
D. commit to working as guards for 2 years
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-6: To be able to describe the thinking behind the Auburn System
and the ideas of Zebulon Brockway and explain why they represented a departure from
the thinking that preceded them.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Zebulon Brockway and the Rise of the Adult Reformatory
Difficulty Level: Medium
30. The 1960s were the beginning of attempts to ______.
A. use inmates to earn a profit
B. eliminate the rights of inmates
C. give constitutional protections to inmates
D. classify inmates by their personality types
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-7: To grasp how the civil rights movement of the 1960s affected
the criminal justice system.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Era of Civil Rights and Community Corrections (1960โ1970)
Difficulty Level: Easy
31. The Presidentโs Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice
(1967) attempted to ______.
A. increase mandatory sentences for most criminal offenses
B. replace incarceration with community-based sanctions
C. limit funding for nonpunitive approaches to corrections
D. model the federal penal system after prisons in the South
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-7: To grasp how the civil rights movement of the 1960s affected
the criminal justice system.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Era of Civil Rights and Community Corrections (1960โ1970)
Difficulty Level: Medium
32. How did the attitudes surrounding prison reform affect state mental hospitals in the
1960s?
A. They were downsized.
B. More of them were built.
C. They were moved into the prisons.
D. Their funding was increased.
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-7: To grasp how the civil rights movement of the 1960s affected
the criminal justice system.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Era of Civil Rights and Community Corrections (1960โ1970)
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Difficulty Level: Medium
33. During the 1960s, the state of Massachusetts ______.
A. moved juvenile offenders to adult prisons
B. expanded its prisons to house the mentally ill
C. shut down all its prisons and jails
D. closed all juvenile detention facilities
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-7: To grasp how the civil rights movement of the 1960s affected
the criminal justice system.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Era of Civil Rights and Community Corrections (1960โ1970)
Difficulty Level: Easy
34. During the civil rights movement, a belief developed that prisoners were best served
______.
A. by large prisons
B. in the community
C. on work farms
D. by tough sentencing
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-7: To grasp how the civil rights movement of the 1960s affected
the criminal justice system.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Era of Civil Rights and Community Corrections (1960โ1970)
Difficulty Level: Medium
35. The Mexican Mafia and Blackstone Rangers are two examples of ______.
A. amateur sports teams that were formed to represent prisons
B. gangs that held substantial influence within prisons
C. community groups that promoted nonviolent protest
D. special police units that worked to end gang violence
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-8: To explain the main influences on the demise of the
rehabilitative ideal during the 1970s and 1980s.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Prisons Explode (1970โ1980)
Difficulty Level: Easy
36. The 1995 Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) argued that ______.
A. prisons were too harsh on their inmates
B. inmates would be best served by community sanctions
C. lawsuits initiated by inmates were out of control
D. inmates needed more forums to express grievances
Ans: C
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Learning Objective: 2-8: To explain the main influences on the demise of the
rehabilitative ideal during the 1970s and 1980s.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Easy
37. Which of the following scenarios represents the ideas of the Get-Tough Era in
corrections?
A. Alexis avoids jail time because she cooperates with police.
B. Darren works with a support group so he can reduce his sentence.
C. Annabelle lobbies to increase taxes for prison rehabilitation programs.
D. Chase gets a long sentence because this is his third arrest for theft.
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 2-8: To explain the main influences on the demise of the
rehabilitative ideal during the 1970s and 1980s.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Hard
38. From the 1970s to the 1990s, popular opinion felt that ______.
A. prisons should focus more on therapy for prisoners
B. community sanctions would work better than incarceration
C. rehabilitation efforts for inmates were failing
D. sentences should be reduced for good behavior
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-8: To explain the main influences on the demise of the
rehabilitative ideal during the 1970s and 1980s.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Medium
39. Bob is a legislator who promised to carry out the ideals of President Obama in
prison reform. Which of the following actions could Bob take to do that?
A. introduce a bill to reduce penalties for most minor drug offenses
B. plead with the governor of his state to limit the number of pardons he gives
C. introduce a bill to require harsh sentences for three-time offenders
D. scour prison budgets and remove amenities, such as television, for prisoners
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-9: To review significant changes in corrections policy in the past
two decades.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Hard
40. President Obama felt that private prison companies ______.
A. should be phased out
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
B. were too soft on repeat offenders
C. needed more funding
D. did better than government-run prisons
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 2-9: To review significant changes in corrections policy in the past
two decades.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Medium
41. During his administration, President Obama ______.
A. ramped up enforcement of drug possession laws
B. urged the passage of a โthree-strikesโ law
C. issued more pardons than his predecessors
D. attempted to privatize most prisons
Ans: C
Learning Objective: 2-9: To review significant changes in corrections policy in the past
two decades.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Easy
42. Conservative leaders created the โRight on Crimeโ movement, which asserted that
______.
A. community corrections efforts should be scaled back
B. punishments for crime had become too harsh
C. it was too easy for criminals to get parole
D. it was time to stop coddling inmates
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 2-9: To review significant changes in corrections policy in the past
two decades.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Medium
43. Which of the following explains President Obamaโs attitude toward pardons?
A. He felt he had no right to judge, or therefore pardon, criminals who were already
convicted.
B. He wanted to pardon every inmate in the United States because he didnโt believe in
incarcerating human beings.
C. Criminals who had already served as long as the current sentencing guidelines
dictated should be released.
D. He would not issue pardons because previous presidents had abused them for
political purposes.
Ans: C
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Learning Objective: 2-9: To review significant changes in corrections policy in the past
two decades.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Multiple Response
1. SELECT ALL THAT APPLY. Sellinโs Slavery and the Penal System (1976) analyzed
systems in ______.
A. Europe
B. United States
C. Africa
D. Australia
Ans: A, B, C
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Difficulty Level: Easy
2. SELECT ALL THAT APPLY. Punishments that were used during the Middle Ages
included ______.
A. fines
B. house arrest
C. stockade
D. community service
Ans: A, C
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Difficulty Level: Easy
3. SELECT ALL THAT APPLY. The modern era of penology utilizes ______.
A. penal colonies
B. incarceration
C. fines
D. supervised release
Ans: B, C, D
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Difficulty Level: Medium
4. SELECT ALL THAT APPLY. As poverty increased in various European cities during
the late Middle Ages, so did ______.
A. crime
B. class cooperation
C. warfare
D. welfare programs
Ans: A, C
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Social Change in the Later Middle Ages
Difficulty Level: Medium
5. SELECT ALL THAT APPLY. In the later Middle Ages, exile for well-off individuals
could mean ______.
A. certain death
B. diplomatic service
C. business ventures
D. loss of property
Ans: B, C
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Social Change in the Later Middle Ages
Difficulty Level: Medium
6. SELECT ALL THAT APPLY. ______ were persecuted due to religious practices and
superstitions during the later Middle Ages.
A. Jews
B. Priests
C. Foreigners
D. Gypsies
Ans: A, C, D
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Social Change in the Later Middle Ages
Difficulty Level: Easy
7. SELECT ALL THAT APPLY. Components of the Get-Tough Era included ______.
A. eliminating plea bargaining
B. decreasing prison population
C. stiffening sentencing penalties
D. making parole harder to achieve
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Ans: A, C, D
Learning Objective: 2-8: To explain the main influences on the demise of the
rehabilitative ideal during the 1970s and 1980s.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Medium
True/False
1. Angola Prison is known for its punitive and racist environment.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Difficulty Level: Easy
2. Scholars Sellin, Rusche, and Kirchheimer believed that the prime purpose of prison is
to turn criminals into independent, productive individuals.
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Difficulty Level: Medium
3. During the later Middle Ages, the increase in migration to towns led to higher wages
for all.
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Social Change in the Later Middle Ages
Difficulty Level: Easy
4. Many American prisons in the 19th century made profits.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-3: To grasp some of the penal inventions that have supported
economic developments, such as colonization of the New World.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Easy
5. The need for goods made by prisoners decreased during the Civil War.
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-4: To be able to discuss how prison labor has supported
economic enterprises at various times in Western history.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Easy
6. Quaker leaders felt prisoners should be part of the community.
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-5: To understand the philosophic basis of the Quaker approach to
early institutions of confinement in the United States.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Medium
7. Zebulon Brockway wrote and helped pass the indeterminate sentencing law in 1877.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-6: To be able to describe the thinking behind the Auburn System
and the ideas of Zebulon Brockway and explain why they represented a departure from
the thinking that preceded them.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Zebulon Brockway and the Rise of the Adult Reformatory
Difficulty Level: Easy
8. During the 1960s, California paid communities to keep people who were on
probation.
Ans: T
Learning Objective: 2-7: To grasp how the civil rights movement of the 1960s affected
the criminal justice system.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Era of Civil Rights and Community Corrections (1960โ1970)
Difficulty Level: Easy
9. During the Get-Tough Era, conservative scholars advocated softer sentencing and
less imprisonment.
Ans: F
Learning Objective: 2-8: To explain the main influences on the demise of the
rehabilitative ideal during the 1970s and1980s.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Easy
10. Right-on-Crime advocates argued that expanding community corrections was
warranted.
Ans: T
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Learning Objective: 2-9: To review significant changes in corrections policy in the past
two decades.
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Easy
Short Answer
1. Identify the two myths that underlie the conventional treatment of the history of
American corrections.
Ans: The first myth is that there is a steady march of human society toward progress
and more enlightened social policy. The second myth posits that corrections history is
like a pendulum (swings back and forth) that has a self-balancing logic.
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Discerning Historical Constructs
Difficulty Level: Medium
2. Discuss the purpose of the Poor Laws that were enacted in European cities.
Ans: The Poor Laws were enacted to control and regulate the movement of new
immigrants. These laws barred immigrants from becoming citizens and from joining the
unions that were in place for skilled workers.
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Social Change in the Later Middle Ages
Difficulty Level: Medium
3. Discuss the purpose of galley slavery.
Ans: Galley slavery was a response to the need for rowers for sailing vessels in the
Mediterranean Sea. As European wars drained off the free population, prisoners were
drafted into galley slavery. The work was arduous and very dangerous.
Learning Objective: 2-3: To grasp some of the penal inventions that have supported
economic developments, such as colonization of the New World.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Galley Slavery, Transportation, and the Emergence of Imprisonment
Difficulty Level: Medium
4. Discuss how the use of prison labor related to labor unions.
Ans: In agricultural states, prisoners were often used to defeat farm workersโ unions by
picking produce during strikes. In the South, prison chain gangs played a major role in
building and repairing roads. The use of prisoners to crush unions was a persistent
theme through the 1960s.
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
Learning Objective: 2-4: To be able to discuss how prison labor has supported
economic enterprises at various times in Western history.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: After the Progressive Era (1920โ1960)
Difficulty Level: Medium
5. Briefly explain the classification system used at Elmira Reformatory.
Ans: The classification system was used to classify criminals into categories: arrested
development, the truly dangerous, those whose moral compass failed during stress, and
those who lacked mental sense.
Learning Objective: 2-6: To be able to describe the thinking behind the Auburn System
and the ideas of Zebulon Brockway and explain why they represented a departure from
the thinking that preceded them.
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Zebulon Brockway and the Rise of the Adult Reformatory
Difficulty Level:
Essay
1. Explain the focus of the legal systems in the early Middle Ages, how they were used
to settle and prevent disputes, and how they affected different classes differently.
Ans: The early Middle Ages in Europe did not have complex systems of stateadministered punishments. Existing legal systems were primarily focused on regulating
the relationships and interactions among persons who were equal in status and wealth.
The legal system was constructed within a society that had sufficient land to support a
growing population and maintain a certain standard of living. Criminal law was about the
maintenance of public order among persons of comparable social status. This legal
system was essentially a private arbitration system that relied almost exclusively on
fines as compensation for an offense. An affront to decency, morality, or religion was
generally resolved by a body of free men (almost always landowners) who would meet
and impose a fine (โwergildโ) as penance to the victimized party. The goal of the body of
free men was to prevent individual disputes from escalating into family blood feuds or
open warfare. In this social order, criminal acts were viewed as acts of war. In the
absence of strong centralized states, public peace was very fragile. Even the smallest
quarrel could erupt into violence.
Learning Objective: 2-1: To understand some of the early forms of punishment and see
how current forms stem from them.
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Penance and Fines
Difficulty Level: Hard
2. Explain how responses to crime changed and were used to control the underclass in
the later Middle Ages.
Ans: Because of increasing social turmoil, a brutal criminal law directed against the
lower classes emerged. The more privileged wanted to make the system of criminal
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
laws more effective in slowing the rise in crime. Fines and corporal punishment
remained in force, but class distinctions in the administration of laws became more
obvious. Upper-class offenders were generally treated more leniently and lower-class
โvillainsโ came to be viewed by the legal system as morally inferior. The urban
bourgeoisie lobbied for tougher crime control measures. This period witnessed the rise
of laws against vagrancy. Punishments became harsher and more brutal, especially
physical punishments such as execution, whipping, and mutilation. These alterations
emerged gradually over time. During this period, capital punishment became
commonplace. Judges used the death penalty for offenders whom they declared to be
โthreats to society.โ Courts paid little attention to the actual guilt or innocence of the
accused. Torture was the norm to coerce confessions and to identify possible
accomplices.
Learning Objective: 2-2: To understand how crime control has been rooted in social
class and control of the underclasses.
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Social Change in the Later Middle Ages
Difficulty Level: Hard
3. Explain how the practice of โtransportationโ was used to enrich the leaders of
European countries.
Ans: The practice of โtransportationโ–shipping convicts to distant colonies–had
economic motives. The exploitation of material riches from the colonies posed very
challenging labor requirements, so prisoners became an obvious workforce. The need
for a prisoner workforce grew as native populations, whom colonists tried to enslave,
died out from warfare, diseases, and brutal working conditions. At first, wayward
children and the poor were kidnapped and sold into slavery in the colonies, but this
practice reduced the domestic workforce. Sending convicts overseas was a temporary
solution to the severe labor shortage and the great potential to extract wealth from
conquered lands. Prisoners facing death sentences had their penalties commuted to
transportation based on the physical condition of the convicts.
Learning Objective: 2-3: To grasp some of the penal inventions that have supported
economic developments, such as colonization of the New World.
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Galley Slavery, Transportation, and the Emergence of Imprisonment
Difficulty Level: Hard
4. Explain what the Quakers believed about crime and punishment and how they
implemented their beliefs in their practices.
Ans: Solitary confinement is generally attributed to the work of Quakers in Pennsylvania
in the 19th century. Although solitary confinement was justified on religious grounds, its
evolution was also tied to economic and fiscal forces of the time. Prison conditions in
the United States were declining and fiscal considerations loomed large. The Quakers
based their penology on the core idea that religion would lead to the moral redemption
of offenders. Prisoners were locked in single cells, which they never left until their terms
expired, they died, or they declined into mental illness. Convicts were not even allowed
to work; they were to spend all their time contemplating God. Bibles were the only
Krisberg, American Corrections 2e
SAGE Publications Inc., 2019
reading material permitted. The extreme isolation of prisoners was thought to prevent
some inmates from negatively influencing others. It was viewed as the only true mode of
punishment, but it was (and still is) a penal method that allows a small staff to manage a
large number of mostly idle prisoners.
Learning Objective: 2-5: To understand the philosophic basis of the Quaker approach to
early institutions of confinement in the United States.
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Solitary Confinement
Difficulty Level: Hard
5. Suppose that President Obama reviewed the following cases in 2012. In which
cases, do you think he would grant pardon and why?
Arny had served 20 years of a 30-year sentence for theft. In 2012, such a conviction
would have a maximum sentence of 20 years.
Roz is serving time because her state had just implemented new tough-on-crime drug
laws before her arrest for possession of marijuana.
Frank is in the second year of a life term for murdering a family while robbing them. This
is his fifth conviction for a felony.
Ans: President Obama firmly expressed his opinion that minors should not be housed in
federal prisons and that harsh sentencing laws should be reduced. He criticized the
overuse of incarceration for minor drug offenders. President Obama freely used his
power of pardon to rectify the sentences of federal prisoners who had already served
more time than they would receive under present U.S. sentencing guidelines.
President Obama would probably pardon or transfer Arny and Roz, but not Frank. Arny
had already served time equal to what he would serve if convicted in 2012. Roz
committed a small drug offense that was nonviolent. Frank was a violent repeat
offender, so President Obama would be unlikely to intervene in Frankโs case.
Learning Objective: 2-9: To review significant changes in corrections policy in the past
two decades.
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: The Demise of Rehabilitation and the Get-Tough Era (1970โPresent)
Difficulty Level: Hard
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