corrections exam answers 1-3
(2m) over __________ dollars in fines is collected annually in the united states
1 billion
(3m) men between which ages are more prone to violence?
16-24
(1m) the medical model of corrections began to be implemented during the
1930s
(1m) counting jails and prisons, approximately how many citizens are incarcerated?
2.3 million
(2m) who was the first person to provide supervised release for defendants under the authority of the Boston Police Court in 1841?
John Augustus
(1m) _______________ has been credited with creating the mark system of graduated confinement in england, which called for an inmate to obtain marks toward early release
alexander maconochie
(1m) the invention of the penitentiary occurred due in large part because of:
all of these: the influence of the enlightenment, a response to negative social conditions, the growth of the surplus labor due to industrial revolution
(2m) in classifying offenders, correctional administrators put them into groups based on:
all of these: their need for treatment, risk, security issues they pose to the prison
(3m) most inmate rule violations are handled by
an institutional disciplinary committee
(2m) __________ is a drug that inhibits drinking
antabuse
(2m) a convicted sex offender would commonly fall under which of the following subclasses?
any of these: rapist, prostitute, child molester
(3m) racist _______ have become part of the inmate code and are sometimes forced upon inmates merely by association
attitudes
(1m) the "congregate" system of prison discipline was first instituted at the
auburn penitentiary
(2m) which of the following correctional changes can be attributed to the prisoners' rights movement
both of these: improvement of institutional living conditions and administrative practices, review by correctional officials of many of their procedures and organizational structures
(2m) the concept of community corrections is best understood as a goal to:
both save money and reduce reliance on prisons
(3m) the prison design most often used for female and juvenile inmates is:
campus style
(3m) almost 60% of america's jails _______________ prisoners for at least some of the medical care they receive
charge
(2m) money or other compensation is awarded to a plaintiff in a civil action when the person sued has:
civil liability
(3m) a form of power that stresses the application or threat of physical force is known as
coercive power
(3m) the way someone behaves in accordance with an order or directive given by another person is
compliance
(2m) which case allowed inmate to sue state officials for brutality, inadequate medical care and nutrition, theft of personal property, and the denial of basic rights?
cooper v. pate
(2m) in instances when parole supervision is being revoked, offenders possess various ______ rights
due process
(3m) the cost of maintaining a(n) _____ inmate is much higher than costs associated with other incarcerated populations
elderly
(1m) during the colonial period most americans lived under laws and practices transferred from ___________ and adapted to local conditions
england
(3m) the relationship between staff and prisoners which focuses on material goods and written correspondence is one of
exchange
(1) all punishments inflicted upon offenders are visible
false
(1) banishment can best be described as punishment inflicted on the offender's body with whips and other devices that cause physical pain and scarring
false
(1) convict labor for profit became an essential part of the pennsylvania penitentiary system throughout the early 1800s
false
(1) corrections has one clear primary goal: rehabilitation
false
(1) in england in the year 1200, a system of wergild, or payment of money as compensation, had developed as a way for the king to collect additional resources from the citizens
false
(1) retribution is a goal of punishment designed to repair the damage done to the victim and community by an offender's criminal act
false
(1) the concept of parole originated in the united states
false
(1) the rate of incarceration in the U.S. is one of the lowest in the world
false
(1) the united states employs a national standard approach to sentencing
false
(2tf) PSIs disallow victim impact statements describing their emotional and financial losses due to the offender's actions
false
(2tf) a person who has been convicted of three or more offenses is now considered to be a situational offender
false
(2tf) a small percentage of offenders receive a community sentences such as a fine or probation
false
(2tf) all inmate lawsuits are considered frivolous and not allowed in appeals court
false
(2tf) constitutions are written in more specific terms than statutes
false
(2tf) generally, mentally ill persons represent a greater risk of committing violent crimes than the population as a whole
false
(2tf) in this country, probation begam with the innovative work of Jeremy Bentham, an english boot-maker, who was the first to provide bail for defendants under the authority of the London Police Court in 1841.
false
(2tf) individual states do not have their own constitutions
false
(3tf) all state prisons test new inmates for HIV
false
(3tf) at present, most u.s. jails are in good financial and physical shape; in fact, many offer better treatment and programs that most u.s. prisons
false
(3tf) most jails in the u.s. have viable rehabilitative programs, and many have professionally trained personnel to deal with the mental health needs of offenders
false
(3tf) since prisons are highly secure institutions, rarely does any type of violence take place
false
(3tf) the federal bureau of prisons is housed within the department of homeland security
false
(3tf) the largest percentage of state-level confinement facilities are located in the northeast region of the united states
false
(3tf) the civil rights movement had no effect on prisoners
falsee
(2m) which amendment addresses prisoner rights as they pertain to religious practices
first
(3m) because inmates are not allowed to carry any currency, the primary method of exchange in prison is
food
(3m) a structure established for the purpose of influencing behavior in order to achieve particular ends is known as a(n)
formal organization
(3m) according to the authors, a majority of corrections officers are
from rural settings
(3m) in 2003 the prison rape elimination act was created in order to
gather national statistics on prison rape
(2m) prior to the 1960s courts maintained a(n) _______ with respect to corrections
hands-off policy
(3m) which of the following is a reward associated with the jailing lifestyle?
increased prestige within the inmate social system
(3m) many, if not most, defendants housed in jails are
indigent
(3m) a set of rules of conduct that reflect the values and norms of the prison social system and help to define for inmates the characteristics associated with the model prisoner is known as the
inmate code
(2m) the new movement that seeks to establish correctional programs falling between standard probation and prison is referred to as:
intermediate sanctions
(1m) ____________ was an english prison reformer whose research and writing led to the passage of the penitentiary act of 1779 by the house of commons
john howard
(3m) according to Sykes, the greater degree of solidarity among inmates within the inmate social system, the:
less severely the pains of imprisonment are felt
(3m) jails are generally administered by:
locally elected officials (i.e., sheriff)
(2m) home confinement is best suited to:
low-risk offenders with relatively stable residences
(3m) ninety-three percent of the adult prison population is
male
(3m) a majority of all state prisoners throughout the country are housed in _________ prisons
medium security
(2m) the __________ offender is most likely to be the object of exploitation and practical jokes
mentally handicapped
(1m) the term "wergild" focuses on which of the following?
money paid to relatives or victims of a crime
(1m) which of the following is NOT one of the "big 3" states in corrections?
montana (big 3: california, texas, florida)
(3m) the process by which a new inmate absorbs the customs of the prison society and learns to adapt to the environment is known as
prisonization
(2m) _________ conditions provide constraints on some probationers to increase the restrictiveness of probation including fines, community service, and restitution
punitive
(1m) the _______ was an institution for young offenders that emphasized training, a mark system of classification, indeterminate sentences, and parole
reformatory
(1m) during the Progressive Reform Era, two main correctional strategies were implemented. they included improving conditions in social environments and
rehabilitating individual offenders
(1m) according to community-based corrections, the goal of the criminal justice system is to:
reintegrate the offender
(1m) in new england, the quakers maintained a society governed by what type of principles?
religious
(3m) _____________ power refers to the ability to obtain compliance in exchange for material resources
remunerative
(3m) the warden's job security rests on her or his ability to
run the institution efficiently
(1m) the penitentiary act was based upon core principles under which prisoners were confined in cells and labored silently in common rooms and were subjected to:
secure and sanitary conditions
(2m) in recent years, america's prison population has been:
shrinking
(3m) overall, jail population sizes tend to be
small
(1m) like all other government services, corrections is constantly confronted by frequently shifting _________ forces that further complicate administration
social and political
(1m) the leasing of convicts to private entrepreneurs first took hold in the
south
(3m) a management principle that holds that a supervisor can effectively oversee only a limited number of subordinates is known as
span of control
(1m) most correctional offenders today are housed in which types of facilities?
state prisons
(3m) prisons designed to hold the "toughest of the tough" are called
super-max prisons
(1m) which of the following countries now has the highest incarceration rate in the world?
the U.S.
(1m) the dominant social institution during the middle ages in england and europe was
the church
(1m) with the rise of the medical model, the emphasis in corrections shifted to
the treatment and diagnosis of criminals
(2m) according to your text, situational offenders pose many problems for the correctional system. which of the following has been identified as a problem with these offenders?
they are extremely difficult to provide resources due to the lack of needs and risks
(2m) the circumstances in a correctional facility that, when considered as a whole, may violate the protections guaranteed by the eighth amendment are known as:
totality of the conditions
(1m) the practice of removing offenders from the community to another land was known as:
transportation
(2m) _____________ conditions provide constraints on some probationers to force them to deal with a significant problem and need such as substance abuse
treatment
(1) according to the authors, rehabilitation is oriented solely toward the offender and does not imply any consistent relationship between the severity of the punishment and the gravity of the crime
true
(1) community based punishments such as probation and intermediate sanctions are imposed for more often that prison sentences in the united states
true
(1) english trends and practices greatly influenced american corrections
true
(1) from the earliest accounts of human kind, punishment has been used as means of social control
true
(1) incarceration, the death penalty, and probation all may have more that one intended goal behind their implementation
true
(1) the founder of the classical school of criminology is cesare beccaria, who applied the rationalist philosophy of the enlightenment to the criminal justice system
true
(1) the growth in the corrections system has resulted mostly from deliberate policies that have increased the severity of sentences
true
(1) the original penitentiary relied on penance and contemplation as the means for the criminal offender to move from sin toward perfection
true
(1) the pennsylvania system focused on the isolation of inmates serving penance
true
(1) the period known as the "enlightenment" brought about new ideas based on rationalization, the importance of individuals, and the limitations of government
true
(1) under the law of retaliation, lex talionis, vengeance was a duty to be carried out by the person wronged or by a family member of the victim
true
(2tf) a continuum of sanctions means that punishments vary in intrusiveness and control
true
(2tf) a key way to prevent AIDs both inside and outside of a correction setting is through knowledge about the virus
true
(2tf) by the end of the 1970s, federal judges had imposed changed on prisons and jails in every state
true
(2tf) during the sentencing pahse of a revocation hearing, the judge decides whether to impose a term of incarceration and if so, for how long
true
(2tf) evaluations of intensive supervision found that probation officers uncovered more rule violations than they did in regular probation
true
(2tf) it would be sage to say that significant numbers of correctional clients have a history of substance abuse
true
(2tf) like inmates in correctional facilities, convicted offenders in the community also have rights
true
(2tf) parolees have the right to be notified of the charges against them
true
(2tf) probation may be revoked if the probationer fails to attend a therapy program
true
(2tf) sixty percent of probation sentences are received directly from the judge
true
(2tf) the cost of prison continues to increase with the rising number of offenders entering the system
true
(2tf) the law enforcer role of probation focuses on surveillance and control of the offender
true
(3tf) adaptive roles help inmates cope with prison and survive behind bars
true
(3tf) by far the most successful alternative approach to bail is being released on one's own recognizance
true
(3tf) eastern state penitentiary followed the concept of a radial design to house inmates
true
(3tf) inmates who are "doing time" see prison as a long-term stay and continue their criminality while incarcerated
true
(3tf) most jails in the u.s. hold fewer that 50 people
true
(3tf) most u.s. prisons emphasize the custodial model of incarceration
true
(3tf) one factor in the prison inmate code is not interfering with other inmates' interests
true
(3tf) pretrial detainees comprise a large percentage of the u.s. jail population
true
(3tf) section 1982 allows inmates to sue public officials for constitutional violations
true
(3tf) some inmates, upon incarceration, decide to withdraw from others as well as isolate themselves as a form of coping with the inmate society
true
(3tf) the most pressing medical problem in jails is the problem of HIV and AIDs
true
(3tf) the percentage of gangs organized along racial lines contributes to violence in prison
true
(3tf) the reintegration model is linked to the structures and goals of community corrections
true
(1m) approximately _______ of all people under correctional supervision are living in the community on probation or parole
two-thirds (2/3)
(1m) in regard to the convict lease system, prisoners were
used for labor for profit by private interests
(2m) judicial reprieve in the united states:
was declared unconstitutional in 1916
(1m) the following is an example of corporal punishment:
whipping
(2m) which court decision held that the basic elements of procedural due process must be present when decisions are made concerning the disciplining of an inmate?
wolff v. mcdonnell