Difference between revisions of "Crime" - New World Encyclopedia

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A '''crime''' is generally a deliberate act that results in harm, physical or otherwise, toward one or more people, in a manner prohibited by [[law]]. The determination of which acts are to be considered criminal has varied historically, and continues to do so among [[culture]]s and [[nation]]s. When a crime is committed, a process of discovery, [[trial]] by judge or [[jury]], conviction, and [[punishment]] occurs. Just as what is considered criminal varies between [[jurisdiction]]s, so does the punishment, but elements of restitution and deterrence are common.
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Although extensive studies in [[criminology]] and [[penology]] have been carried out, and numerous theories of its causes have emerged, no criminal justice system has succeeded in eliminating crime. Understanding and resolving the root of crime involves the depths of human nature and relationships. Some regard religious faith as a preventative, turning ex-convicts to a meaningful life in society. There is evidence that the bonds of family can be a deterrent, embedding the would-be criminal within bonds of caring and obligation that make a life of crime unattractive.
  
A '''crime''' in a nontechnical sense is an act that violates a [[politics|political]] or [[morality|moral]] rule. But in many [[nation]]s, the [[government]]s have discovered that informal sanctions are ineffective to control some types of antisocial behaviour, so the system of [[social control]] has to be formalised. [[Law]]s are designed to regulate human behaviour and the [[state (law)|state]] provides [[remedy|remedies]] and [[sanctions (law)|sanctions]] to protect its [[citizen]]s if the laws are broken. But not all breaches of the law are considered crimes, e.g. [[breach of contract|breaches of contract]]. In some cases, the government itself is a perpetrator of crime. The [[label (sociology)|label]] of "crime" and the accompanying [[social stigma]] are usually reserved for those activities causing more serious loss and damage to the citizens of the state. Its use is intended to reflect a consensus of condemnation for the identified behaviour and, in the event that an accused is [[conviction (law)|convicted]] following a [[trial (law)|trial]] applying principles of [[due process]], to justify the state imposing [[punishment]]. The term is also applied to minor [[regulatory offences]] or [[infraction]]s, e.g. where the [[criminal law]] is used to keep order on the roads.
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== Definition of Crime ==
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Crime can be viewed from either a [[law|legal]] or [[norm|normative]] perspective.  
  
== Definition of Crime  ==
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A legalistic definition takes as its starting point the [[common law]] or the statutory/codified definitions contained in the laws enacted by the [[government]]. Thus, a crime is any culpable action or omission prohibited by law and punished by the state. This is an uncomplicated view: a crime is a crime because the law defines it as such.  
The systematic study of the causes ([[aetiology]]), prevention, control, and penal responses to crime is called [[criminology]]. For these purposes, the definition of crime depends on the theoretical stance taken. The nature of crime could be viewed from either a legal or [[norm (sociology)|normative]] perspective. A legalistic definition takes as its starting point the [[common law]] or the [[statute|statutory]]/[[codification|codified]] definitions contained in the laws enacted by the [[sovereignty|sovereign]] government. Thus, a crime is any [[culpability|culpable]] action or [[omission (criminal)|omission]] prohibited by law and punished by the state. This is an uncomplicated view: a crime is a crime because the law defines it as such.  
 
  
A normative definition views crime as [[deviant behavior|deviant behaviour]] that violates prevailing norms, i.e. [[culture|cultural]] standards specifying how humans ought to behave. This approach considers the complex realities surrounding the concept of crime and seeks to understand how changing [[society|social]], political, [[psychology|psychological]], and [[economics|economic]] conditions may affect the current definitions of crime and the form of the legal, [[law enforcement]], and penal responses made by the state. These [[structuralism|structural]] realities are fluid and often contentious. For example, as cultures change and the political environment shifts, behaviour may be [[criminalisation|criminalised]] or [[decriminalisation|decriminalised]] which will directly affect the [[statistics|statistical]] [[crime rate]]s, determine the allocation of resources for the enforcement of such laws, and influence public opinion. Similarly, changes in the way that crime data are collected and/or calculated may affect the public perceptions of the extent of any given "crime problem". All such adjustments to [[crime statistics]], allied with the experience of people in their everyday lives, shape attitudes on the extent to which law should be used to enforce any particular social norm. There are many ways in which behaviour can be controlled without having to resort to using the criminal law. Indeed, in those cases where there is no clear consensus on the given norm, the use of the criminal law by the group in [[power (sociology)|power]] to prohibit the behaviour of another group may be considered an improper limitation of the second group's [[Freedom (philosophy)|freedom]], and the ordinary members of society may lose some of their respect for the law in general whether the disputed law is actively enforced or not.
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A normative definition views crime as deviant behavior that violates prevailing norms, i.e. [[culture|cultural]] standards specifying how humans ought to behave. This approach considers the complex realities surrounding the concept of crime and seeks to understand how changing social, [[politics|political]], [[psychology|psychological]], and [[economics|economic]] conditions may affect the current definitions of crime and the forms of legal, [[law enforcement]], and penal responses made by the state.  
  
===Crime and Deviance===
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Deviance and crime are related but not the same. Actions can be criminal and deviant, criminal but not deviant, or deviant but not criminal. For instance, a crime that is not deviant may be speeding or jaywalking. While legally criminal, speeding and jaywalking are not considered socially unacceptable, nor are the perpetrators considered criminals by their peers. An example of a deviant but not criminal act is [[homosexuality]]. Homosexuality deviates from mainstream [[value]]s, but a person is not labeled a criminal just for being homosexual. Crimes that are deviant include [[murder]], [[rape]], [[assault]], and other violent crimes. These realities are fluid and often contentious. For example, as [[culture]]s change and the political environment shifts, behavior may be criminalized or decriminalized.
[[Deviance]] and crime are related but not the same. Actions can be criminal and deviant, criminal but not deviant, or deviant but not criminal. Crime is the equivalent of legal rule breaking, but deviance is the equivalent of social rule breaking.  For instance, a crime that is not deviant may be speeding or jay walking. While legally criminal, speeding and jay walking is not considered socially unacceptable.  A person can speed and will not be considered a criminal by his or her peers. A deviant but not criminal act may include [[homosexuality]]. Homosexuality is deviant from mainstream values, but a person is not labeled a criminal just for being homosexual. Crimes that are deviant include murder, rape, assault, and other violent crimes. These actions break the legal rule, as well as violate social norms held by society
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Similarly, crime is distinguished from [[sin]], which generally refers to disregard for [[religion|religious]] or [[moral]] law, especially norms revealed by God. Sins such as murder and rape are generally also crimes, whereas [[blasphemy]] or [[adultery]] may not be treated as criminal acts.
  
==History==
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In modern conceptions of [[natural law]], crime is characterized as the violation of individual rights. Since rights are considered as natural, rather than manmade, what constitutes a crime is also natural, in contrast to laws, which are manmade. [[Adam Smith]] illustrated this view, saying that a [[smuggling|smuggler]] would be an excellent citizen, "had not the laws of his country made that a crime which nature never meant to be so."  
The first civilisations had codes of [[law]], containing both [[civil]] and penal rules mixed together, though these codes were not always recorded. According to Oppenheim (1964), the first known written codes were produced by the [[Sumerians]], and it was probably their king [[Ur-Nammu]] (who ruled over [[Ur]] in the 21st century B.C.E.) who acted as the first legislator, creating a formal system in thirty-two articles. The Sumerians later issued other codes including the "code of Lipit-Istar" (last king of the 3rd dynasty of Ur, Isin - 20th century B.C.E.). This code contains some fifty articles and has been reconstructed by the comparison among several sources. Kramer (1971: 4) adds a further element: "The Sumarian was deeply conscious of his personal rights and resented any encroachment on them, whether by his King, his superior, or his equal. No wonder that the Sumerians were the first to compile laws and law codes."
 
  
In [[Babylon]], Driver and Mills (1952-55) and Skaist (1994) describe the successive legal codes, including the [[code of Hammurabi]] (one of the richest of ancient times), which reflected society's belief that law was derived from the will of the gods (see [[Babylonian law]]. Many of the states at this time were [[theocracy|theocratic]], and their codes of conduct were religious in origin or reference.
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Natural law theory therefore distinguishes between "criminality" which is derived from human nature, and "illegality" which is derived from the interests of those in power. The two concepts are sometimes expressed with the phrases ''malum in se'' and ''malum prohibitum.'' A crime ''malum in se'' is argued to be inherently criminal; whereas a crime ''malum prohibitum'' is argued to be criminal only because the law has decreed it so. This view leads to a seeming paradox, that an act can be illegal but not a crime, while a criminal act could be perfectly legal.  
  
[[Sir Henry Maine|Maine]] (1861) studied the ancient codes and failed to find any criminal law in the modern sense of the word. While modern systems distinguish between offences against the "State" or "Community", and offences against the "Individual", what was termed the penal law of ancient communities was not the law of "Crimes" (''crimina''); it was the law of "Wrongs" (''delicta''). Thus, the Hellenic laws (see Gagarin: 1986; and Garner: 1987) treated all forms of [[theft]], [[assault]], [[rape]], and [[murder]] as private wrongs, and action for enforcement was up to the victim or their survivors (which was a challenge in that although there was law, there were no formalised courts in the earliest system). It was the Romans who systematised law and exported it to their Empire. Again, the initial rules of [[Roman Law]] were that assaults were a matter of private compensation. The significant Roman Law concept was of ''dominion'' (see Daube: 1969). The ''[[pater familias]]'' was in possession of all the family and its property (including slaves). Hence, interference with any property was enforced by the ''pater''. The Commentaries of Gaius on the [[Twelve Tables]] treated ''furtum'' (modern theft) as if it was a [[tort]]. Similarly, assault and violent [[robbery]] were allied with [[trespass]] as to the ''pater's'' property (so, for example, the rape of a female slave, would be the subject of compensation to the ''pater'' as having trespassed on his "property") and breach of such laws created a ''vinculum juris'' (an obligation of law) that could only be discharged by the payment of monetary compensation (modern [[damages]]). Similarly, in the consolidated Teutonic Laws of the Germanic tribes (see Guterman: 1990), there was a complex system of money compensations for what would now be considered the complete range of criminal offences against the person from murder down.  
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The action of crime is settled in a criminal [[trial]]. In the trial, a specific law, one set in the legal code of a society, has been broken, and it is necessary for that society to understand who committed the crime, why the crime was committed, and the necessary punishment against the offender to be levied. Civil trials are not necessarily focused on a broken law. Those trials are usually focused on private parties and a personal dispute that arose between them. The solution in civil trials usually aims, through monetary compensation, to provide restitution to the wronged party.  
  
Even though Rome abandoned [[England]] sometime around 400 C.E., the Germanic mercenaries who had largely been enforcing the Roman occupation, stayed on and continued to use a mixture of Roman and Teutonic Law, with much written down by the early Anglo-Saxon Kings (see Attenborough: 1963). But, it was not until a more unified Kingdom emerged following the Norman invasion and the King was attempting to assert power over the land and its peoples, that the modern concept emerged, namely that a crime is not only an offence against the "individual", it is also a wrong against the "state" (see Kern: 1948; Blythe: 1992; and Pennington: 1993.). This is a [[common law]] idea and the earliest conception of a criminal act involved events of such major significance that the "state" had to usurp the usual functions of the civil tribunals and direct a special law or ''privilegium'' against the perpetrator. All the earliest criminal trials were wholly extraordinary and arbitrary without any settled law to apply, whereas the civil delictual law was highly developed and consistent in its operation (except where the King wanted to raise money by selling a new form of [[Writ]]). The development of the idea that it is the "state" dispensing [[justice]] in a court only emerges in parallel with or after the emergence of the concept of sovereignty.  
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In some societies, crimes have been prosecuted entirely by civil law. In early [[United Kingdom|England]], after the [[Roman Empire]] collapsed, communities prosecuted all crimes through civil law. There were no prisons and serious criminals were declared "outlaws." This meant that if any harm befell one who was outside the law, no trial would be conducted. Outlaws fled for fear they would be dead on the street the next morning. This is why many outlaws found sanctuary in Sherwood Forest.
  
In continental Europe, Vinogradoff (1909) reports the persistence of Roman Law, but with a stronger influence from the Church (see Tierney: 1964, 1979). Coupled with the more diffuse political structure based on smaller state units, rather different legal traditions emerged, remaining more strongly rooted in Roman [[jurisprudence]] modified to meet the prevailing political climate. In Scandinavia, the effect of Roman law was not felt until the 17th century, and the courts grew out of the ''[[thing (assembly)|thing]]s'', which were the assemblies of the people. The cases were decided by the people (usually largest freeholders dominating) which later gradually transformed into a system of a royal judge nominating a number of most esteemed men of the parish as his board, fulfilling the function of "the people" of yore.  
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===Types of Crime===
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Antisocial behavior is criminalized and treated as offenses against society, which justifies punishment by the [[government]]. A series of distinctions are made depending on the passive subject of the crime (the victim), or on the offended interest(s), in crimes against:
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* '''Personality of the state.''' For instance, a person may not agree with the laws in their society, so he or she may commit a crime to show their disapproval. For instance, there have been crimes committed by those disapproving of [[abortion]], involving attacks on abortion [[clinic]]s.
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* '''Rights of the citizen.'''
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* '''Administration of justice.''' This type of crime includes abuse of the judicial system and non-compliance with the [[court]]s and [[law enforcement]] agencies.
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* '''[[Religion|Religious]] sentiment and [[faith]].''' For instance, [[church]] burnings, graffiti on [[synagogue]]s, and religiously motivated attacks on the [[Muslim]] community post-September 11, 2001 in the [[United States]] reflect crimes against religion.
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* '''Public order.''' [[Riot]]s and unwarranted demonstrations represent crimes against public order, as they break down established order and create hysteria, panic, or chaos.
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* '''Public economy, [[industry]], and commerce.''' Any illegal buying and selling of goods and services classifies as this type of crime, for example, [[bootlegging]], [[smuggling]], and the [[black market]].
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* '''Person and honor.''' In certain societies, there exists the "culture of honor," in which people may act to defend their honor if they feel it is insulted or violated.  
  
From the Hellenic system onwards, the policy rationale for requiring the payment of monetary compensation for wrongs committed has been to avoid feuding between [[clan]]s and [[family|families]] (note the concept of ''pater familias'' as a unifying factor in extended kin groups, and the later practice of [[wergild]] in this context). If families' feelings could be mollified by compensation, this would help to keep the peace. On the other hand, the threat of feudal warfare was played down also by the institution of oaths. Both in archaic Greece and in medieval [[Scandinavia]], the accused was released if he could get a sufficient number of male relatives to swear him unguilty. This may be compared with the [[United Nations]] [[Security Council]] where the [[veto]] power of the permanent members ensures that the organization is not drawn into crises where it could not enforce its decisions. These means of restraining private feuds did not always work or prevented the fulfilment of justice but, in the earliest times, the "states" were not prepared to provide an independent police force. Thus, criminal law grew out of what is now tort and, in real terms, many acts and omissions that are classified as crimes overlap civil law concepts.
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Crimes may also be distinguished based on the related [[punishment]] prescribed in line with the perceived seriousness of the offense with fines and noncustodial sentences for the least serious, and in some places, [[capital punishment]] for the most serious.
  
==Why criminalise?==
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Crimes are also grouped by severity, some common categorical terms being: [[felony]] and [[misdemeanor]], indictable offense, and summary offense. For convenience, infractions are also usually included in such lists although, in the U.S., they may not be the subject of the [[criminal law]], but rather of the [[civil law]].
Criminalisation is intended as a pre-emptive, harm-reduction device, using the threat of punishment as a [[deterrent]] to those proposing to engage in the behaviour causing harm. The state becomes involved because the costs of not criminalising (i.e. allowing the harms to continue unabated) outweigh the costs of criminalising it (i.e. restricting individual [[liberty]] and so minimising harm to others). The process of criminalisation should be controlled by the state because:
 
*Victims or witnesses of crimes might be deterred from taking any action if they fear retaliation. Even in policed societies, fear may inhibit reporting or co-operation in a trial.
 
*The victims may only want compensation for the injuries suffered, while being indifferent to the more general need for [[deterrence]]: see Polinsky & Shavell (1997) on the fundamental divergence between the private and the social motivation for using the legal system.
 
*Even if the victims recognise that they are victims, they may not have the resources to investigate and seek legal redress for the injuries suffered: the enforcers formally appointed by the state have the expertise and the resources.
 
*Victims do not have economies of scale to administer a penal system, let alone collect any fines levied by a court (see Polinsky (1980) on the enforcement of fines). Garoupa & Klerman (2002) warn that a [[rent-seeking]] government's primary motivation is to maximise revenue and so, if offenders have sufficient wealth, a rent-seeking government is more aggressive than a [[social welfare function|social-welfare]]-maximising government in enforcing laws against minor crimes (usually with a fixed penalty such as parking and routine traffic violations), but more lax in enforcing laws against major crimes.
 
  
===Natural law theory===
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The following are considered crimes in many [[jurisdiction]]s:
The consistent theoretical problem has been to justify the state's use of force to coerce compliance with its laws. One of the earliest justifications was the theory of [[natural law]]. This posits that the standards of morality are derived from or constructed by the nature of the world or of human beings. [[Thomas Aquinas]] said: "the rule and measure of human acts is the reason, which is the first principle of human acts" (Aquinas, ST I-II, Q.90, A.I), i.e. since people are by nature rational beings, it is morally appropriate that they should behave in a way that conforms to their rational nature. Thus, to be valid, any law must conform to natural law and coercing people to conform to that law is morally acceptable. [[William Blackstone]] (1979: 41) describes the thesis:
 
:"This law of nature, being co-eval with mankind and dictated by God himself, is of course superior in obligation to any other. It is binding over all the globe, in all countries, and at all times: no human laws are of any validity, if contrary to this; and such of them as are valid derive all their force, and all their authority, mediately or immediately, from this original."
 
But [[John Austin (legal philosophy)|John Austin]], an early [[Legal positivism|positivist]], applied [[utilitarianism]] in accepting the calculating nature of human beings and the existence of an objective morality, but denied that the legal validity of a norm depends on whether its content conforms to morality, i.e. a moral code can objectively determine what people ought to do, the law can embody whatever norms the legislature decrees to achieve social utility, but every individual is free to choose what he or she will do. Similarly, [[H.L.A. Hart|Hart]] (1961) saw the law as an aspect of sovereignty with lawmakers able to adopt any law as a means to a moral end. Thus, the necessary and sufficient conditions for the truth of a proposition of law were simply that the law was internally logical and consistent, and that state power was being used with responsibility. Dworkin (2005) rejects Hart's theory and argues that fundamental among political rights is the right of each individual to the equal respect and concern of those who govern him. He offers a theory of compliance overlaid by a theory of [[deference]] (the citizen's duty to obey the law) and a theory of enforcement, which identifies the legitimate goals of enforcement and punishment. Legislation must conform to a theory of legitimacy, which describes the circumstances under which a particular person or group is entitled to make law, and a theory of legislative justice, which describes the law they are entitled or obliged to make.
 
  
Indeed, the majority of natural law theorists accept that a primary function of the law is to enforce the prevailing morality. The problem with this view is that it makes any moral criticism of the law impossible in that, if conformity with natural law is a necessary condition for legal validity, all valid law must, by definition, be morally just. Thus, on this line of reasoning, the legal validity of a norm necessarily entails its moral justice. The solution to this problem is to admit some degree of [[moral relativism]] and to accept that norms may evolve over time and, therefore, the continued enforcement of old laws may be criticised in the light of the current norms. The law may be acceptable but the use of state power to coerce citizens to comply with that law is not morally justified. In more modern conceptions of the theory, crime is characterised as the violation of [[individual rights]]. Since rights are considered as natural, rather than man-made, what constitutes a crime is also natural, in contrast to laws, which are man-made. [[Adam Smith]] illustrates this view, saying that a [[smuggling|smuggler]] would be an excellent citizen, "''...had not the laws of his country made that a crime which nature never meant to be so.''"  
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{| border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 align="center" width="80%"
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|-
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|style="text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"|
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* [[Arson]]  
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* [[Assault]]
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* [[Child abuse]]
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* [[Counterfeiting]]
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|style="text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"|
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* [[Cybercrime]]
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* [[Defamation]]
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* [[Embezzlement]]
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* [[Espionage]]
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|style="text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"|
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* [[Extortion]]
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* [[Forgery]]
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* [[Fraud]]
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* [[Homicide]]
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|style="text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"|
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* [[Kidnapping]]
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* [[Perjury]]
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* [[Piracy]]
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* [[Rape]]
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|style="text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"|
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* [[Smuggling]]
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* [[Theft]]
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* [[Treason]]
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* [[Trespass]]
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|-
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|}
  
Natural law theory therefore distinguishes between "criminality" which is derived from human nature, and "illegality" which is derived from the interests of those in power. The two concepts are sometimes expressed with the phrases ''[[malum in se]]'' and ''[[malum prohibitum]]''. A crime ''malum in se'' is argued to be inherently criminal; whereas a crime ''malum prohibitum'' is argued to be criminal only because the law has decreed it so. This view leads to a seeming [[paradox]], that an act can be illegal that is no crime, while a criminal act could be perfectly legal. Many [[the Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] thinkers such as [[Adam Smith]] and the American [[Founding Fathers]] subscribed to this view to some extent, and it remains influential among so-called [[liberalism#classical liberalism|classical liberals]] and [[libertarian]]s.
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==Theories of Crime==
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There are many theories discussing why people commit crimes and deviant acts. Criminal theories can be divided into biological theories versus classical theories. Biological theories focus on pathology, sickness, and determinism, basically assuming that a person is born a criminal. Classical theories focus on free will and the idea of a [[social contract]] to which people conform. These theories assume that no one is born a criminal, and that they come to commit criminal acts as a result of their experiences.  
  
===Trial===
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'''Psychoanalytical Theories of Crime''' assume that criminals are different from non-criminals, and that criminal offenders have different [[personality|personalities]] from those of non-offenders. [[Sigmund Freud|Freudian theory]] suggests that crime is a result of frustration, resulting from stunted growth in one of the four stages of maturation: oral, anal, genital, and phallic. [[Aggression]] is then a result of the frustration that developed from lack of goal attainment.
  
====The form of the trial====
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'''Cognitive Theories of Crime''' involve the development of people's ability to make judgments. [[Psychologist]]s and criminologists have detailed a variety of theories of [[developmental psychology]] and [[moral psychology]] and its relationship to crime. [[Jean Piaget]] suggested that there are two stages in the cognitive development of judgment. The first stage involves the "acceptance of rules as absolute." For instance, in order for a child to develop judgment, he or she must realize from a young age that the rules his or her parents make are unchanging in nature and apply directly to them. The second step describes the "spirit of law." This is basically a realization that the law has consequences, that if one acts counter to the law, it will affect them. [[Lawrence Kohlberg]] also researched the development of moral judgment, describing six steps, which were then divided into three stages: "pre-conventional," "conventional," and "post-conventional." These stages represent Kohlberg's stages of moral development. In the "pre-conventional stage," the first two steps, the goals in life are to maximize pleasure and minimize pain, and the desire to gain reward without punishments or consequences. Kohlberg suggested that most criminals are stuck in this stage. The next stage, the "conventional stage," involves people following the rules absolutely in order to gain social approval and respect. People feel [[empathy]] and guilt in this stage, and according to Kohlberg, most people are in this stage. The final stage, the "post-conventional stage," involves people judging rules according to their own values along with a sense of there being a universal justice. Most people do not reach this stage.
There are two primary systems for conducting a trial:
 
*[[Adversarial system|Adversarial]]: In the [[common law]] systems, an adversarial or accusatory approach is used to adjudicate [[guilt]] or [[innocence]]. The assumption is that the truth is more likely to emerge from the open contest between the [[prosecution]] and the defence in presenting the [[evidence (law)|evidence]] and opposing legal arguments with a [[judge]] acting as a neutral referee and as the arbiter of the law. In more serious cases, there is a [[jury]] to determine the facts. This polarises the issues, with each competitor acting in its own self-interest, and so presenting the facts and interpretations of the law in a deliberately biased way. The intention is that through a process of argument and counter-argument, examination-in-chief and cross-examination, each side will test the truthfulness, relevancy, and sufficiency of the opponent's evidence and arguments. To maintain [[fairness]], there is a [[presumption of innocence]], and the [[burden of proof]] lies on the prosecution. Critics of the system argue that the desire to win is more important than the search for truth. Further, the results are likely to be affected by structural inequalities. Those [[defendant]]s with resources can afford to hire a the best [[lawyers]], whereas those who are poor are more easily victimised because, even when the state operates a system of financial support for defendants, the quality of legal representation is often inferior to the lawyers acting for the state.
 
*[[Inquisitorial system|Inquisitorial]]: In the [[civil law (common law)|civil law]] systems, the responsibility for supervising the investigation by the police into whether a crime has been committed falls on an examining magistrate or judge who then conducts the trial. The assumption is that the truth is more likely to emerge from an impartial and exhaustive investigation both before and during the trial itself. The examining magistrate or judge acts as an inquisitor who directs the fact-gathering process by questioning witnesses, interrogating the suspect, and collecting other evidence. The lawyers who represent the interests of the state and the accused have a limited role to offer legal arguments and alternative interpretations to the facts that emerge during the process. All the interested parties are expected to co-operate in the investigation by answering the magistrate or judge's questions and, when asked, supplying all relevant evidence. The trial only takes place after all the evidence has been collected and the investigation is completed. Thus, most of the factual uncertainties will already be resolved, and the examining magistrate or judge will already have resolved that there is ''[[prima facie]]'' of guilt. The trial is no more than the public resolution of the ongoing investigation where the accused has the burden of rebutting the presumption of guilt. Critics argue that the examining magistrate or judge has too much power in that he or she will both investigate and adjudicate on the merits of the case. Although lay assessors do sit as a form of jury to offer advice to the magistrate or judge at the conclusion of the trial, their role is subordinate. Further, because a professional has been in charge of all aspects of the case to the conclusion of the trial, there are fewer opportunities to appeal the conviction alleging some procedural error.
 
  
====The function of the trial====
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The '''Functionalist Theory of Crime''' involves a macro level theory of crime. [[Functionalism]] assumes that: society is a living [[organism]], comprised of social institutions that overlap, and that social institutions work to keep society in order. [[Emile Durkheim]] suggested that crime is functional because it has always existed in society, making crime a normal part of society. Crime serves as a guide for acceptable social behavior, and it creates consensus among people in a society on what is deviant. Durkheim also suggested that deviance brings [[social change]], which is a positive and needed aspect in all societies. Too much crime, however, results in weakened social consensus and social order, leading to ''anomie,'' a state of normlessness, which no society can survive for long.  
There are two forms of deterrence:
 
*Specific: The intention underlying the penal system is to deter future wrongdoing by the defendant if convicted. The punishment is supposed to demonstrate the unfortunate consequences that will follow any decision to break the law. If the convicted person considers the possibility of breaking the law again in the future, the assumption is that the individual will choose not to break the law and so avoid further punishment.
 
*General: The punishment imposed on the particular accused is also a warning to other potential wrongdoers. Thus the function of the trial is to gain the maximum publicity for the crime and its punishment so that others will be deterred from following in the particular accused's footsteps.
 
  
==Crime and Society==
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The '''Social Disorganization Theory of Crime''' is an [[ecology|ecological]] perspective on crime, dealing with places, not people, as the reason crime happens: where one lives is causal to criminality; the physical and social conditions a person is surrounded by create crime. The assumption of this theory is that people are inherently good, but are changed by their environment. According to this theory, five types of change are most responsible for criminality. They are: [[urbanization]], [[migration]], immigration, [[industrialization]], and [[technology|technological]] change. If any one of these aspects occurs rapidly, it breaks down social control and social bonds, creating disorganization.
  
===Crime and Families===
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The '''Strain Theory of Crime''' proposes that crime occurs when a person is unable to attain their goals through legitimate means. [[Robert K. Merton]] described strain by showing different ways an individual can meet their goals. Conformity is the method by which most people achieve what they want: a person conforms to the ideals and values of mainstream society. Merton said that criminals use "innovation" to achieve their goals, which means that they agree with the goals that mainstream society offers, but seek or require different means to achieve them. He also identified other ways in which individuals achieve their own goals, including "retreatism," "rebellion," and "ritualism." Strain theory was modified by Robert Agnew (2005) when he said that it was too tied to [[social class]] and [[culture|cultural]] variables and needed to take into account a more universal perspective of crime. Three components of Agnew's modification of strain theory are: failure to achieve positive goals, loss of some positively valued stimuli, and presentation of negative stimuli. He suggested that these cause strain between a person and the society they live in, resulting in a negative affective state, which may lead to criminal activity.
It has long been suggested that a core family is a valuable preventitive measure to crime. While this could be considered true, there is much more to this idea than simply a core family. For one, especially today, a core family can be a single father, a single mother, two parents, two fathers, two mothers, and any other numerous combinations.  The type of family is irregardless. The relationship between criminal activity and a strong family has a number of different dimensions.
 
  
[[Collective Efficacy]] in neighborhoods is often thought of as the foundations for preventing violent crime in neighborhoods. Collective efficacy holds that there is social cohesion among neighbors, common values of neighborhood residents, an informal social control, and a willingness to regulate crime or deviance amongst neighbors.  This collective efficacy requires the presence of strong families, each member commited to each other and their neighbors.
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==Crime as a Function of Family and Community==
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It has long been suggested that a core [[family]] is a valuable preventative measure to crime. However, the relationship between criminal activity and a strong family has a number of different dimensions.
  
The studies of [[Mary Pattillo-McCoy]] examine collective efficacy, but bring a startling new revelation to light.  Pattillo, in her study on Groveland (a middle class typically African American neighborhood in Chicago), concluded that collective efficacy can lead to a unique pattern of violent crime.  Groveland had a strong collective efficacy, however, gang violence was also tied up in this neighborhood.  The neighborhood gang members participated in violent activity, but since they were involved in the collective efficacy, they kept violent crime out of their home neighborhood.  They did not want their families or friends put in harm because of their gang activity. This unique take of collective efficacy show how strong family and neighborhood bonds can foster as well as prevent violent crime.
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"Collective efficacy" in neighborhoods is often thought of as the foundations for preventing violent crime in [[community|communities]]. Collective efficacy holds that there is social cohesion among neighbors, common values of neighborhood residents, an informal social control, and a willingness to regulate crime or deviance amongst neighbors. This collective efficacy requires the presence of strong families, each member committed to each other and their neighbors.  
  
[[Travis Hirschi]] suggested an idea called '''social bond theory'''.  The underlying idea of this theory says that the less attachment a person has to society, the more likely they are to participate in activities that harm society or go against mainstream social values. Hirschi contends that attachment to friends and family, commitment to family and career, involvement in education and family, and belief in the law and morality will ensure that a person will not undertake criminal activities.  If even one of these variables is weakened, the chances one will participate in crime increases. This is an element of [[social control theory]], which states that peoples bonds and relationships are what determines their involvement in crime.
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The studies of Mary Pattillo-McCoy (2000) examined collective efficacy, but brought a startling new revelation to light. Her study on Groveland (a middle class typically African American neighborhood in [[Chicago]]), concluded that collective efficacy can lead to a unique pattern of violent crime. Groveland had a strong collective efficacy; however, [[gang]] violence was also prevalent. The neighborhood gang members participated in violent activity, but since they were involved in the collective efficacy, they kept violent crime out of their home neighborhood. They did not want their families or friends put in harm's way due to their gang activity. This unique take on collective efficacy shows how strong family and neighborhood bonds can foster, as well as prevent, violent crime.
  
[[Elijah Anderson]] identifies families as perhaps the most important factor in criminality. Anderson is responsible for the idea of the '''code of the street''', which are informal rules governing interpersonal behavior, particularly violence. His studies identify two types of families in socially disorganized neighborhoods: decent families and street families.  Decent families, he says, accept mainstream social values and socialize their children to these values, sometimes using the knowledge of the [[code of the street]] to survive.  Street families have very destructive behaviors and a lack of respect for those around them. They apparently have superficial ties to the community and other family members, only vying for respect of those around them.  Anderson argues that street families breed criminals, suggesting that the family one is raised one could possibly identify if a person will become a criminal.
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Travis Hirschi (1969) suggested an idea called "social bond theory." The underlying idea of this theory is that the less attachment a person has to society, the more likely they are to participate in activities that harm society or go against mainstream social [[value]]s. Hirschi contended that attachment to friends and family, commitment to family and career, involvement in [[education]] and family, and belief in the law and [[morality]] will ensure that a person will not undertake criminal activities. If even one of these variables is weakened, the chances one will participate in crime increases. This is an element of "social control theory," which states that people's bonds and relationships are what determine their involvement in crime.
  
===Age, Race, and Gender===
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Elijah Anderson (2000) identified families as perhaps the most important factor in criminality. Anderson is responsible for the idea of the "code of the street," which are informal rules governing interpersonal behavior, particularly violence. His studies identified two types of families in socially disorganized neighborhoods: "decent families" and "street families." Decent families, he said, accept mainstream social values and socialize their children to these values, sometimes using the knowledge of the "code of the street" to survive. Street families have very destructive behaviors and a lack of respect for those around them. They apparently have superficial ties to the [[community]] and other family members, only vying for respect of those around them. Anderson argued that street families breed criminals, suggesting that the family one is raised in could possibly identify if a person will become a criminal.
The idea of crime being specific to a particular age, race, or gender is examined thoroughly in criminology. Crime is committed by all different people, men and women, of any age. There is evidence, however, that these different variables have important effects on crime rates, which criminal theories attempt to explain.
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==Age, Race, and Gender==
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The idea of crime being specific to a particular age, race, or gender has been examined thoroughly in [[criminology]]. Crime is committed by all types of people, men and women, of any age. There is evidence, however, that these different variables have important effects on crime rates, which criminal theories attempt to explain.
  
 
====Age====
 
====Age====
In 2002, 58.6% of violent crime offenders were under the age of 25, with 14.9% being under the age of 18.
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Studies in [[criminology]] detail what is popularly known as the "age-crime curve," named for the curve of the graph comparing age as the independent variable to crime as the dependent variable. The graph shows an increase in crime in teenage years, tapering off and decreasing in the early to mid-twenties, and continuing to decrease as age increases. This "age-crime curve" has been discovered in nearly every society, internationally and historically.
  
Modern criminology details what is popularly known as the [[age-crime curve]], named for the curve of the graph in comparing age as an independent variable to crime as a dependent variable. The graph shows an increase in crime in teenage years, tapering off and decreasing in the early to mid twenties, and continuing to decrease as age increases.  The [[age-crime curve]] is such a phenomenon because it is something criminologists have discovered at an international level.  The curve is applicable to nearly every society, modern and historical.  Because the age-crime curve is universally demonstrated, it is universally accepted as a part of criminology and the nature of crime.  Research is currently being conducted on potential reasons behind the [[age-crime curve]].  Organizations such as Sheffield Pathways Out of Crime Study conduct longitudinal studies concerning the [[age-crime curve]] and why this phenomenon might exist.
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In 2002, according to the Uniform Crime Report in the [[United States]], 58.6 percent of violent crime offenders were under the age of 25, with 14.9 percent being under the age of 18. A disturbing trend in the U.S. from the very end of the twentieth century has been the increasing incidence of [[homicide]]s and other violent [[assault]]s by teenagers and even younger children, occurring in the context of [[robbery|robberies]], [[gang]]-related incidents, and even random shootings in public places, including their own [[high school]]s.
  
 
====Race====
 
====Race====
In 2002, according to the Uniform Crime Report, whites made up 59.7% of all violent crime arrestees, blacks comprising of 38.0%, and other minorities making up 2.3%.  
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In 2002, according to the Uniform Crime Report in the United States, whites made up 59.7 percent of all violent crime arrestees, blacks comprised 38.0 percent, and other minorities 2.3 percent.  
  
Race is very difficult to measure in terms of crime.  Is one race more prone to crime than other races?  Historically, through phrenology and biology, scientists have attempted to prove that certain people are destined to commit crime. These theories have been proven unfounded. No race or culture is biologically predisposed towards committing crimes or deviance.
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Historically, through [[phrenology]] and [[biology]], scientists attempted to prove that certain people were destined to commit crime. However, these theories were proven unfounded. No race or culture has been shown to be biologically predisposed towards committing crimes or deviance.
  
Social Disorganization Theory of Crime explains instances of urban crime.  It divides the city into different regions, explaining that the transitional zone, which surrounds the business zone, is the most notorious for crime. For example, the transitional zone is known for deteriorated housing, factories, and abandoned buildings. In urban areas, minorities are usually inhabitants of the transitional zone, surrounding them in urban decay. This urban decay results in strain (as described in Agnew's strain theory) and leads to criminal activity, having been disenfranchised from mainstream goals. In other words, societies failure to maintain urban transitional zones is a major factor in minorities committing crimes.
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The Social Disorganization Theory of Crime explains instances of urban crime, dividing the [[city]] into different regions, explaining that the transitional zone, which surrounds the business zone, is the most notorious for crime. For example, the transitional zone is known for deteriorated housing, factories, and abandoned buildings. In urban areas, minorities are usually inhabitants of the transitional zone, surrounding them in urban decay. This urban decay results in strain (as described in Agnew's strain theory) and leads to criminal activity, through their having been disenfranchised from mainstream goals. In other words, society’s failure to maintain urban transitional zones is a major factor in minorities committing crimes.
  
[[Ellijah Anderson]], an African American professor, has written much on the subject of race and crime.  He says that often times, institutions of social control engage in color coding.  In other words, in this instance, an African American is assumed guilty until proven innocent. Many social institutions are victims of institutional racism. For instance, in Jeffrey Reiman's "The Rich Get Richer, and the Poor Get Prison," Reiman examines the differences between white middle to upper class teenagers and black lower class teenagers and how police might treat them. The difference in treatment for even first time offenders of both white and black teenagers is unsettling. White teenagers typically get treated with respect, their parents are informed immediatly, and often jurisdiction and punishment is given to the parents to decide. However, black teenagers are often held over night, their parents are informed later or not at all, and first time offenders are treated like multiple offenders.
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Elijah Anderson, an African American who has written much on the subject of race and crime, claimed that institutions of social control often engage in "color coding," such that an African American is assumed guilty until proven innocent (Anderson 2000). Others have noted that social institutions are victims of institutional [[racism]]. For instance, in ''The Rich Get Richer, and the Poor Get Prison,'' Jeffrey Reiman examined the differences between white middle to upper class teenagers and black lower class teenagers and how they were treated by the [[police]]. The difference he discovered for even first time offenders of both white and black teenagers was unsettling. White teenagers typically were treated with respect, their parents are informed immediately, and often jurisdiction and punishment was given to the parents to decide. However, black teenagers were often held over night, their parents informed later or not at all, and first time offenders treated like multiple offenders.  
  
Overall, there are many different aspects of society responsible for minority crime.  The most unsettling aspect of it, however, is that failures in the law and society are responsible for such a large ratio of minority crime.
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Thus, overall, there appear to be many different aspects of society responsible for the preponderance of minority crime.
  
 
====Gender====
 
====Gender====
Gender distribution in criminal behavior is very disproportionate. In 2002, according to Uniform Crime Report, men made up 82.6% of violent crime arrestees.  This is a very significant gap between genders in terms of violent crime.
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Gender distribution in criminal behavior is very disproportionate. In 2002, according to Uniform Crime Report in the United States, men made up 82.6 percent of violent crime arrestees.  
  
There are different gender theories and criticisms that attempt to explain gender discrepancies.  Most of the gender criticisms are aimed at modern criminology theories that neglect to explain why women do not engage in violent crime at the rates that men do.  This gender gap is usually referred to as the [[gender-ratio problem of crime]]. It is still uncertain why females do not engage in the violent crime at nearly the rate that men do, but there are many sociological theories that attempt to account for the gender gap in violent crime.
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There are different gender theories and criticisms that attempt to explain gender discrepancies, usually referred to as the "gender-ratio problem of crime." While it is still uncertain why women do not engage in violent crime at nearly the rate that men do, there are many [[sociology|sociological]] theories that attempt to account for this difference.  
  
The '''Marxist-Feminist''' approach suggests that gender oppression is a result of social class oppression.  It states that feminine deviance and crime occurs because of womens marginalized economic position within the legitimate world and the world of crime. For instance, [[prostitution]] represents those at the top of the hierarchy abusing those at the bottom of the hierarchy through corruption of wage labor.
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The '''Marxist-Feminist''' approach suggests that gender oppression is a result of [[social class]] oppression, and that feminine deviance and crime occurs because of women's marginalized economic position within the legitimate world and the world of crime. For instance, [[prostitution]] represents those at the top of the hierarchy abusing those at the bottom of the hierarchy through corruption of wage labor. Women do not engage in violent crime because gender and [[Capitalism|capitalistic]] oppression disenfranchises them from mainstream criminal activities.
  
The '''Liberal-Feminist''' approach assumes that the gender of female represents one of many competing categories in a society. For example, another competing category could be elderly citizens, or the impoverished, or minority cultures. Those who agree with this approach support initiatives designed to improve womens standing in the existing social structure, but do not wish to challange the system as a whole. A liberal-feminist would argue that prostitution is acceptable because it represents a business contract between two people: one person pays for a rendered service.
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The '''Liberal-Feminist''' approach assumes that gender represents one of many competing categories in a society. For example, another competing category could be elderly citizens, or the impoverished, or minority cultures. Those who agree with this approach support initiatives designed to improve women's standing in the existing [[social structure]], but do not wish to challenge the system as a whole. A liberal-feminist would argue that prostitution is acceptable because it represents a business [[contract]] between two people: one person pays for a rendered service. Liberal-feminists suggest that low levels of violent crime among women are a result of their social category, that there is no perceived benefit for females to engage in violent crime.  
  
'''Radical-Feminist''' approaches are opposite to the '''Liberal Feminist''' approach. Radical-Feminist's argue that gender is the most important form of social oppression. Through this approach, women need to start a social movement to create a new government or system with equality written into the social structure. To a radical-feminist, prostitution is a form of gender oppression that needs to end.
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The '''Radical-Feminist''' approach is opposite to the liberal-feminist approach. Radical-feminists argue that gender is the most important form of social oppression. Through this approach, women need to start a [[social movement]] to create a new system with equality written into the social structure. To a radical-feminist, prostitution is a form of gender oppression that needs to end. Radical-feminists argue that some women are driven to violent crime because of perceived hopelessness and abandonment by society because of the oppression of a patriarchal society.
  
==Criminal Theories==
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==Crime and Punishment==
Many theories discuss why people commit crimes and acts of deviance.  While no theory has been proven as the main criminal theory, these theories do their best to explain the nature of crime.  Criminal theories center around biological theories versus classical theories.  Biological theories focus on pathology, sickness, and determinism, basically assuming that a person is born a criminal.  Classical theories focus on free will and the idea of a [[social contract]] by which people conform to. These theories assume that no one is born a criminal, and that they are made to do criminal activities through their experiences.  
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Generally, in the criminal justice system, when a crime is committed the perpetrator is discovered, brought to [[trial]] in a [[court]], and if convicted, receives [[punishment]] as prescribed by the penal system. [[Penology|Penologists]], however, have differing views on the role of punishment.  
  
'''Psychoanalytical Theories of Crime''' falls in the realm of [[positivism]], the idea that crime is [[genetic]] or [[inherent]]. The theory gives the assumptions that [[criminals]] are different from non-criminals and that criminal offenders have different personalities from that of non-offenders. [[Freudian theory]] suggested that crime is a result of the [[Frustration-Aggression Theory]], which says that deviant behavior is a result of stunted growth in one of the four stages of maturation: oral, anal, genital, and phallic.  Aggression is a result of frustration that develops from lack of goal attainment.
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Punishment is as much to protect society as it is to penalize and reform the criminal. Additionally, it is intended as a deterrent to future crimes, by the same perpetrator or by others. However, the efficacy of this is not universally accepted, particularly in the case of [[capital punishment]]. A desired punishment is one that is equal to the crime committed. Any more is too severe, any less is too lenient. This serves as justice in equilibrium with the act of crime. Punishment gives the criminal the tools to understand the way they wronged the society around them, granting them the ability to one day possibly come to terms with their crime and rejoin society, if their punishment grants the privilege.  
  
'''Cognitive Theories of Crime''' involve how people develop their ability of judgement.  Different psychologists and criminologists detail their own theories on [[cognitive development]] and its relationship to crime. [[Jean Piaget]] suggested that there are two stages in cognitive development of judgement. The first stage involves the '''acceptance of rules as absolute'''.  For instance, in order for a child to develop judgement, he or she must realize from a young age that the rules his or her parents make are unchanging in nature and apply directly to themselves.  The second step describes the '''spirit of law'''.  This is basically a realization that the law has consequences, that if one acts counter to the law, it will effect them.  [[Lawrence Kohlberg]] also described cognitive criminal motivations.  He detailed six steps, which were then divided into three stages: '''pre-conventional''', '''conventional''', and '''post-conventional'''.  These stages represent [[Kohlberg's Stages of Moral Development]].  In the '''pre-conventional stage''', the first two steps, the goals in life are to maximize pleasure and minimize pain, and the desire to gain reward without punishments or consequences.  [[Kohlberg]] suggests that most criminals are stuck in this stage.  The next stage, the '''conventional stage''',  involves people following the rules absolutely in order to gain social approval and respect.  People feel empathy and guilt in this stage, and [[Kohlberg]] relates that most people are in this stage.  The final stage, the '''post-conventional stage''', involves people judging rules according to their own values along with a sense of there being a universal justice.  Most people do not reach this stage.
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Punishmment as deterrence can take two forms:
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*'''Specific:''' The intention underlying the penal system is to deter future wrongdoing by the defendant, if convicted. The [[punishment]] demonstrates the unfortunate consequences that follow any act that breaks the law.  
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*'''General:''' The punishment imposed on the particular accused is also a warning to other potential wrongdoers. Thus the function of the trial is to gain the maximum publicity for the crime and its punishment, so that others will be deterred from following in the particular accused's footsteps.
  
'''Functionalist Theory of Crime''' involves a macro level theory of crime.  [[Functionalism]] assumes that: society is a living [[organism]], full of social institutions that overlap, and that [[social institutions]] work to keep society in order. [[Emile Durkheim]] suggests that is crime is functional because it has always existed in society, making crime a normal part of society. Crime serves as a guide for acceptable social behavior, and it creates consensus among people in a society on what is deviant. [[Durkheim]] also suggests that deviance brings social change, which is a positive and needed aspect in all societies.  Too much crime, however, results in weakened social consensus and social order.  It also leads to [[anomie]], a state of normlessness, and no society can last under [[anomie]].
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===Theoretical justification of punishment===
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A consistent theoretical problem has been to justify the state's use of punishment to coerce compliance with its laws. One of the earliest justifications was the theory of [[natural law]]. This posits that the standards of [[morality]] are derived from or constructed by the nature of the world or of human beings. [[Thomas Aquinas]] said: "the rule and measure of human acts is the reason, which is the first principle of human acts" (Aquinas, ST I-II, Q.90, A.I), i.e. since people are by nature rational beings, it is morally appropriate that they should behave in a way that conforms to their rational nature. Thus, to be valid, any law must conform to natural law and coercing people to conform to that law is morally acceptable. [[William Blackstone]] (1979) described the thesis:
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<blockquote>This law of nature, being co-eval with mankind and dictated by God himself, is of course superior in obligation to any other. It is binding over all the globe, in all countries, and at all times: no human laws are of any validity, if contrary to this; and such of them as are valid derive all their force, and all their authority, mediately or immediately, from this original (41).</blockquote>
  
'''Social Disorganization Theory of Crime''' is an ecological perspective on crime; the theory deals with places, not people, as the reason crime happens. Where one lives is causal to criminality, the physical and social conditions a person is surrounded by is what creates crime. The assumption of this theory states that people are inherently good, but are changed by their environment.  According to this theory, five types of change are most responsible for criminality. They are: '''urbanization''', '''migration''', '''immigration''', '''industrialization''', and '''technological change'''.  If any one of these aspects occur rapidly, it breaks down social control and social bonds, creating disorganization.
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[[John Austin]], an early [[positivism|positivist]], developed a theory based on [[utilitarianism|utilitarian]] principles, which deviates slightly from natural law theory. This theory accepts the calculating nature of human beings and the existence of an objective morality, but, unlike natural law theory, denies that the legal validity of a norm depends on whether its content conforms to morality, i.e. a moral code objectively determines what people ought to do, and the law embodies whatever norms the legislature decrees to achieve social utility. Similarly, Hart (1961) saw the law as an aspect of [[sovereignty]], with lawmakers able to adopt any law as a means to a moral end. Thus, the necessary and sufficient conditions for the truth of a proposition of law were simply that the law was internally logical and consistent, and that state power was being used with responsibility.  
  
'''Strain Theory of Crime''' says that crime occurs when a person is unable to attain their goals through legitimate means. [[Robert K. Merton]] described strain by showing different ways an individual can meet their goals.  '''Conformity''' is the method by which most people achieve what they want: a person conforms to the ideals and values of mainstream society.  [[Merton]] says that criminals use '''innovation''' to achieve their goals, which means that they agree with the goals that mainstream society offers, but seek or require different means than mainstream society to achieve these goals.  He also identifies other ways individuals achieve their own goals which include '''retreatism''', '''rebellion''', and '''ritualism'''.  [[Strain Theory]] was modified by [[Robert Agnew]] in the early 1990's. Agnew said that strain theory was too tied to social class and cultural variables and needed to take into account a more universal perspective of crime.  Three components of Agnew's modification of [[strain theory]] are: failure to achieve positive goals, loss of some positively valued stimuli, and presentation of negative stimuli.  This causes strain between a person and the society they live in, resulting in a negative affective state.
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Dworkin (2005) rejected Hart's theory and argued that fundamental among political rights is the right of each individual to the equal respect and concern of those who govern him. He offered a theory of compliance overlaid by a theory of deference (the citizen's duty to obey the law) and a theory of enforcement, which identified the legitimate goals of enforcement and punishment. According to his thesis, legislation must conform to a theory of legitimacy, which describes the circumstances under which a particular person or group is entitled to make law, and a theory of legislative justice, which describes the law they are entitled or obliged to make and enforce.
  
==Reasons==
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===History of Criminal Law===
Antisocial behaviour is criminalised and treated as offences against [[society]] which justifies punishment by the government. A series of distinctions are made depending on the passive subject of the crime (the victim), or on the offended interest(s), in crimes against:
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The first [[civilization]]s had codes of [[law]], containing both [[civil law|civil]] and [[criminal law|penal]] rules mixed together, though these codes were not always recorded. According to Oppenheim (1964), the first known written codes were produced by the [[Sumerians]], and it was probably their king [[Ur-Nammu]] (who ruled over [[Ur]] in the twenty-first century <small>B.C.E.</small>) who acted as the first legislator, creating a formal system in 32 articles. The Sumerians later issued other codes including the "code of Lipit-Istar" (last king of the third [[dynasty]] of Ur, Isin, twentieth century <small>B.C.E.</small>). This code contained some 50 articles and has been reconstructed by the comparison among several sources. Kramer (1971) adds a further element: "The Sumerian was deeply conscious of his personal rights and resented any encroachment on them, whether by his King, his superior, or his equal. No wonder that the Sumerians were the first to compile laws and law codes" (4).
* Personality of the state.
 
* [[Right]]s of the citizen.
 
* Public [[administration]].
 
* Administration of [[justice]].
 
* [[Religion|Religious]] sentiment and [[faith]].
 
* [[Public order]].
 
* Public [[economy]], [[industry]], and [[commerce]].
 
* Public [[morality]].
 
* Person and [[honour]].
 
* [[Patrimony]].
 
  
Or they can be distinguished depending on the related punishment with [[sentence (law)|sentencing]] [[tariff]]s prescribed in line with the perceived seriousness of the offence with [[fine]]s and noncustodial sentences for the least serious, and in some states, [[capital punishment]] for the most serious.
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In [[Babylon]], Driver and Mills (1952–1955) and Skaist (1994) describe the successive legal codes, including the [[code of Hammurabi]] (one of the richest of ancient times), which reflected society's belief that law was derived from the will of the gods. Many of the states at this time were [[theocracy|theocratic]], and their codes of conduct were [[religion|religious]] in origin or reference.
  
==Classification==
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While modern legal systems distinguish between offenses against the "State" or "Community," and offenses against the "Individual," what was termed the penal law of ancient communities was not the law of "Crimes" ''(criminal)''; it was the law of "Wrongs" ''(delicta)''. Thus, the [[Hellenic]] laws (Gagarin 1986 and Garner 1987) treated all forms of [[theft]], [[assault]], [[rape]], and [[murder]] as private wrongs, and action for enforcement was up to the victim or their survivors (which was a challenge in that although there was law, there were no formalized [[court]]s in the earliest system).  
In the [[United States]] since 1930, [[Uniform Crime Reports]] (UCR) have been tabulated annually by the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation|FBI]] from crime data submitted by [[law enforcement]] agencies across the [[United States]]. This data is compiled at the city, county, and state levels into the [[Uniform crime report]]s (UCR). Violations of laws, which are derived from [[common law]], are classified as Part I (index) crimes in UCR data, and further categorised as violent and property crimes. Part I violent crimes include murder and criminal homicide (voluntary manslaughter), forcible rape, aggravated assault, and robbery, while Part I property crimes include burglary, arson, larceny/theft, and motor vehicle theft. All other crimes are classified as Part II crimes.
 
  
Crimes are also grouped by severity, some common categorical terms being: [[felony|felonies]], [[indictable offence]]s, [[misdemeanor]]s, and [[summary offence]]s. For convenience, [[infraction]]s are also usually included in such lists although, in the U.S., they may not be the subject of the criminal law, but rather of the [[Civil law (private law)|civil law]].
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It was the Romans who systematized law and exported it to their [[Roman Empire|empire]]. Again, the initial rules of [[Roman law]] were that assaults were a matter of private compensation. The significant Roman law concept was of ''dominion'' (Daube 1969). The ''pater familias'' was in possession of all the [[family]] and its property (including slaves). Hence, interference with any property was enforced by the ''pater.'' The Commentaries of Gaius on the Twelve Tables treated ''furtum'' (modern theft) as if it was a [[tort]]. Similarly, assault and violent [[robbery]] were allied with [[trespass]] as to the ''pater''’s property (so, for example, the rape of a female slave, would be the subject of compensation to the ''pater'' as having trespassed on his "property") and breach of such laws created a ''vinculum juris'' (an obligation of law) that could only be discharged by the payment of monetary compensation (modern [[damages]]). Similarly, in the consolidated Teutonic Laws of the Germanic tribes (Guterman 1990), there was a complex system of money compensations for what would now be considered the complete range of criminal offenses against the person.
 
 
The following are crimes in many [[criminal jurisdiction]]s:
 
 
 
{| border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 align="center" width="80%"
 
|-
 
|style="text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"|
 
* [[Arson]] (not in [[English law]])
 
* [[Assault]]s
 
* [[Battery (crime)|Battery]]
 
* [[Blackmail]]
 
* [[Burglary]]
 
* [[Child sexual abuse]]
 
* [[Counterfeiting]]
 
|style="text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"|
 
* [[Drug possession]]
 
* [[Embezzlement]]
 
* [[Espionage]]
 
* [[Extortion]]
 
* [[Forgery]]
 
* [[Fraud]]/[[Deception offences]]
 
* [[Homicide]]
 
|style="text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"|
 
* [[Identity theft]]
 
* [[Gambling|Illegal gambling]]
 
* [[Inchoate offense]]s
 
* [[Kidnapping]]
 
* [[Larceny]]
 
* [[Looting]]
 
|style="text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"|
 
* [[Motor vehicle theft]]/[[TWOC]]
 
* [[Perjury]]
 
* [[Rape]]
 
* [[Robbery]]
 
* [[Sexual assault]]s
 
* [[Smuggling]]
 
|style="text-align:left;vertical-align:top;"|
 
* [[Stalking]]
 
* [[Tax evasion]]
 
* [[Theft]]
 
* [[Treason]]
 
* [[Trespass]] (not in English law)
 
* [[Vandalism]] (see [[Criminal Damage Act 1971]] for the codified offence in English law)
 
* [[Weapon possession]]
 
|-
 
|}
 
  
== External link ==
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Even though Rome abandoned [[England]] sometime around 400 <small>C.E.</small>, the Germanic mercenaries who had largely been enforcing the Roman occupation, stayed on and continued to use a mixture of Roman and Teutonic law, with much written down by the early Anglo-Saxon kings (Attenborough 1963). But, it was not until a more unified kingdom emerged following the Norman invasion and the king attempting to assert power over the land and its peoples, that the modern concept emerged, namely that a crime is not only an offense against the "individual," it is also a wrong against the "state" (Kern 1948, Blythe 1992, and Pennington 1993). This is a [[common law]] idea and the earliest conception of a criminal act involved events of such major significance that the "state" had to usurp the usual functions of the civil tribunals and direct a special law or ''privilegium'' against the perpetrator. The [[Magna Carta]], issued in 1215, also granted more power to the state, clearing the passage for legal procedures that [[King John]] had previously refused to recognize. All the earliest criminal trials were wholly extraordinary and arbitrary without any settled law to apply, whereas the civil law was highly developed and generally consistent in its operation. The development of the idea that it is the "state" dispensing justice in a [[court]] only emerged in parallel with or after the emergence of the concept of sovereignty.
  
* [http://www.nationmaster.com/graph-T/cri_tot_cri Crime incidence by country]
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In continental [[Europe]], Vinogradoff (1909) reported the persistence of Roman law, but with a stronger influence from the church (Tierney 1964, 1979). Coupled with the more diffuse political structure based on smaller state units, rather different legal traditions emerged, remaining more strongly rooted in Roman [[jurisprudence]], modified to meet the prevailing political climate. In [[Scandinavia]], the effect of Roman law was not felt until the seventeenth century, and the courts grew out of the ''things'' (or ''tings''), which were the assemblies of the people. The cases were decided by the people (usually the largest [[freehold]]ers dominating), which later gradually transformed into a system of a royal judge nominating a number of most esteemed men of the parish as his board, fulfilling the function of "the people" of yore.
* ''(de)'' [http://www.crime-prevention.de| Theory, practice and evaluation: www.crime-prevention.de]
 
  
==Bibliography==
+
==Conclusion==
*Aquinas, Thomas. (1988). ''On Law, Morality and Politics''. 2nd edition. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Co. ISBN 0872206637
+
Crime has existed in all societies, and that efforts to legislate, enforce, punish, or otherwise correct criminal behavior have not succeeded in eliminating crime. While some have concluded that crime is a necessary evil in human society, and have sought to justify its existence by pointing to its role in [[social change]], an alternative view is that the cause of crime is to be found in the problems of human nature and human relationships that have plagued us since the origins of human history. Correcting these problems would effectively remove the source of crime, and bring about a peaceful world in which all people could realize their potential as individuals, and develop satisfying, harmonious relationships with others.
*Attenborough, F. L. (ed. and trans.) (1922). ''The Laws of the Earliest English Kings''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Reprint March 2006. The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. ISBN 9781584775836
 
*Blackstone, William. (1765-1769). ''Commentaries on the Law of England: A Facsimile of the First Edition of 1765-1769, Vol. 1''. (1979). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226055388
 
*Blythe, James M. (1992). ''Ideal Government and the Mixed Constitution in the Middle Ages''. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691031673
 
*Daube, David. (1969). ''Roman Law: Linguistic, Social and Philosophical Aspects''. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0852240511
 
*Driver, G. R. & Mills, John C. (1952-55). ''The Babylonian Laws''. 2 Vols. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198251106
 
*Dworkin, Ronald. (2005). ''Taking Rights Seriously''. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674867114
 
*Gagarin, Michael. (1986). ''Early Greek Law''. Reprint edition (1989). Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0520066022
 
*Garner, Richard. (1987). ''Law and Society in Classical Athens''. London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0312008562
 
*Garoupa, Nuno & Klerman, Daniel. (2002). "Optimal Law Enforcement with a Rent-Seeking Government". ''American Law and Economics Review'' Vol. 4, No. 1. pp116-140.
 
*Guterman, Simeon L. (1990). ''The Principle of the Personality of Law in the Germanic Kingdoms of Western Europe from the Fifth to the Eleventh Century''. New York: P. Lang. ISBN 0820407313
 
*Hart, H.L.A. (1961). ''The Concept of Law''. 2nd revised edition (1997). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198761236
 
*Hart, H.L.A. (1972). ''Law, Liberty and Morality''. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0804701547
 
*Kern, Fritz. (1948). ''Kingship and Law in the Middle Ages''. Reprint edition (1985), Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
 
*Kramer, Samuel Noah. (1971). ''The Sumerians: Their History, Culture, and Character''. Chicago: University of Chicago. ISBN 0226452387
 
*Maine, Henry Sumner. (1861). ''Ancient Law: Its Connection with the Early History of Society, and Its Relation to Modern Ideas''. Reprint edition (1986). Tucson: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 0816510067
 
*Oppenheim, A. Leo (and Reiner, Erica as editor). (1964). ''Ancient Mesopotamia: Portrait of a Dead Civilization''. Revised edition (September 15, 1977). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226631877
 
*Pennington, Kenneth. (1993). ''The Prince and the Law, 1200–1600: Sovereignty and Rights in the Western Legal Tradition''. Berkeley: University of California Press.
 
*Polinsky, A. Mitchell. (1980). "Private versus Public Enforcement of Fines". ''The Journal of Legal Studies'', Vol. IX, No. 1, (January), pp105-127.
 
*Polinsky, A. Mitchell & Shavell, Steven. (1997). "On the Disutility and Discounting of Imprisonment and the Theory of Deterrence," NBER Working Papers 6259, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. [http://ideas.repec.org/p/nbr/nberwo/6259.html]
 
*Skaist, Aaron Jacob. (1994). ''The Old Babylonian Loan Contract: Its History and Geography''. Ramat Gan, Israel: Bar-Ilan University Press. ISBN 9652261610
 
*Tierney, Brian. (1979). ''Church Law and Constitutional Thought in the Middle Ages''. London: Variorum Reprints. ISBN 0860780368
 
*Tierney, Brian. (1964). ''The Crisis of Church and State, 1050–1300''. Reprint edition (1988). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0802067018
 
*Vinogradoff, Paul. (1909). ''Roman Law in Medieval Europe''. Reprint edition (2004). Kessinger Publishing Co. ISBN 1417949090
 
  
 +
==References==
 +
*Aquinas, Thomas. 1988. ''On Law, Morality and Politics,'' 2nd ed. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing. ISBN 0872206637
 +
*Agnew, Robert. 2005. ''Pressured Into Crime: An Overview of General Strain Theory.'' Roxbury Publishing. ISBN 1933220252
 +
*Anderson, Elijah. 2000. ''Code of the Street: Decency, Violence, and the Moral Life of the Inner City.'' W.W. Norton and Company. ISBN 093320782
 +
*Attenborough, F. L., ed. and trans. 1922. ''The Laws of the Earliest English Kings.'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Reprint March 2006: The Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 9781584775836
 +
*Blackstone, William. 1979 (original 1765–1769). ''Commentaries on the Law of England,'' vol. 1. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226055388
 +
*Blythe, James M. 1992. ''Ideal Government and the Mixed Constitution in the Middle Ages.'' Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691031673
 +
*Daube, David. 1969. ''Roman Law: Linguistic, Social and Philosophical Aspects.'' Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0852240511
 +
*Driver, G. R., and John C. Mills. 1952–1955. ''The Babylonian Laws,'' 2 vols. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198251106
 +
*Dworkin, Ronald. 2005. ''Taking Rights Seriously.'' Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674867114
 +
*Gagarin, Michael. 1989 (original 1986). ''Early Greek Law,'' reprint ed. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0520066022
 +
*Garner, Richard. 1987. ''Law and Society in Classical Athens.'' London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0312008562
 +
*Garoupa, Nuno, and Daniel Klerman. 2002. "Optimal Law Enforcement with a Rent-Seeking Government" in ''American Law and Economics Review'' vol. 4, no. 1: pp. 116–140.
 +
*Guterman, Simeon L. 1990. ''The Principle of the Personality of Law in the Germanic Kingdoms of Western Europe from the Fifth to the Eleventh Century.'' New York: P. Lang. ISBN 0820407313
 +
*Hart, H. L. A. 1972. ''Law, Liberty and Morality.'' Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0804701547
 +
*Hart, H. L. A. 1997 (original 1961). ''The Concept of Law,'' 2nd rev. ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198761236
 +
*Hirischi, Travis. 1969. ''Causes of Delinquency.'' University of California Press. ISBN 0765809001
 +
*Kern, Fritz. 1985 (original 1948). ''Kingship and Law in the Middle Ages,'' reprint ed. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
 +
*Kohlberg, Lawrence. 1984. ''The Psychology of Moral Development: The Nature and Validity of Moral Stages.'' Harpercollins College Division. ISBN 0060647612
 +
*Kramer, Samuel Noah. 1971. ''The Sumerians: Their History, Culture, and Character.'' Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226452387
 +
*Maine, Henry Sumner. 1986 (original 1861). ''Ancient Law: Its Connection with the Early History of Society, and Its Relation to Modern Ideas,'' reprint ed. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 0816510067
 +
*Merton, Robert. 1967. ''On Theoretical Sociology.'' Free Press. ISBN 0029211506
 +
*Oppenheim, A. Leo. 1977 (original 1964). ''Ancient Mesopotamia: Portrait of a Dead Civilization,'' edited by Erica Reiner, revised ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226631877
 +
*Patillo-McCoy, Mary. 2000. ''Black Picket Fences: Privilege and Peril Among the Black Middle Class.'' Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226649269
 +
*Pennington, Kenneth. 1993. ''The Prince and the Law, 1200–1600: Sovereignty and Rights in the Western Legal Tradition.'' Berkeley: University of California Press.
 +
*Polinsky, A. Mitchell. 1980. "Private versus Public Enforcement of Fines" in ''Journal of Legal Studies'' vol. IX, no. 1 (January): pp. 105–127.
 +
*Polinsky, A. Mitchell, and Steven Shavell. 1997. "On the Disutility and Discounting of Imprisonment and the Theory of Deterrence," NBER Working Papers 6259, National Bureau of Economic Research [http://ideas.repec.org/p/nbr/nberwo/6259.html].
 +
*Reiman, Jeffrey. 2005. ''The Rich Get Richer, and the Poor Get Prison: Ideology, Class, and Criminal Justice.'' Allyn and Bacon Publishing. ISBN 0205480322
 +
*Skaist, Aaron Jacob. 1994. ''The Old Babylonian Loan Contract: Its History and Geography.'' Ramat Gan, Israel: Bar-Ilan University Press. ISBN 9652261610
 +
*Tierney, Brian. 1979. ''Church Law and Constitutional Thought in the Middle Ages.'' London: Variorum Reprints. ISBN 0860780368
 +
*Tierney, Brian. 1988 (original 1964). ''The Crisis of Church and State, 1050–1300,'' reprint ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0802067018
 +
*Vinogradoff, Paul. 2004 (original 1909). ''Roman Law in Medieval Europe,'' reprint ed. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 1417949090
  
 
{{Credit1|Crime|57266579|}}
 
{{Credit1|Crime|57266579|}}

Latest revision as of 17:16, 25 November 2017


A crime is generally a deliberate act that results in harm, physical or otherwise, toward one or more people, in a manner prohibited by law. The determination of which acts are to be considered criminal has varied historically, and continues to do so among cultures and nations. When a crime is committed, a process of discovery, trial by judge or jury, conviction, and punishment occurs. Just as what is considered criminal varies between jurisdictions, so does the punishment, but elements of restitution and deterrence are common.

Although extensive studies in criminology and penology have been carried out, and numerous theories of its causes have emerged, no criminal justice system has succeeded in eliminating crime. Understanding and resolving the root of crime involves the depths of human nature and relationships. Some regard religious faith as a preventative, turning ex-convicts to a meaningful life in society. There is evidence that the bonds of family can be a deterrent, embedding the would-be criminal within bonds of caring and obligation that make a life of crime unattractive.

Definition of Crime

Crime can be viewed from either a legal or normative perspective.

A legalistic definition takes as its starting point the common law or the statutory/codified definitions contained in the laws enacted by the government. Thus, a crime is any culpable action or omission prohibited by law and punished by the state. This is an uncomplicated view: a crime is a crime because the law defines it as such.

A normative definition views crime as deviant behavior that violates prevailing norms, i.e. cultural standards specifying how humans ought to behave. This approach considers the complex realities surrounding the concept of crime and seeks to understand how changing social, political, psychological, and economic conditions may affect the current definitions of crime and the forms of legal, law enforcement, and penal responses made by the state.

Deviance and crime are related but not the same. Actions can be criminal and deviant, criminal but not deviant, or deviant but not criminal. For instance, a crime that is not deviant may be speeding or jaywalking. While legally criminal, speeding and jaywalking are not considered socially unacceptable, nor are the perpetrators considered criminals by their peers. An example of a deviant but not criminal act is homosexuality. Homosexuality deviates from mainstream values, but a person is not labeled a criminal just for being homosexual. Crimes that are deviant include murder, rape, assault, and other violent crimes. These realities are fluid and often contentious. For example, as cultures change and the political environment shifts, behavior may be criminalized or decriminalized.

Similarly, crime is distinguished from sin, which generally refers to disregard for religious or moral law, especially norms revealed by God. Sins such as murder and rape are generally also crimes, whereas blasphemy or adultery may not be treated as criminal acts.

In modern conceptions of natural law, crime is characterized as the violation of individual rights. Since rights are considered as natural, rather than manmade, what constitutes a crime is also natural, in contrast to laws, which are manmade. Adam Smith illustrated this view, saying that a smuggler would be an excellent citizen, "had not the laws of his country made that a crime which nature never meant to be so."

Natural law theory therefore distinguishes between "criminality" which is derived from human nature, and "illegality" which is derived from the interests of those in power. The two concepts are sometimes expressed with the phrases malum in se and malum prohibitum. A crime malum in se is argued to be inherently criminal; whereas a crime malum prohibitum is argued to be criminal only because the law has decreed it so. This view leads to a seeming paradox, that an act can be illegal but not a crime, while a criminal act could be perfectly legal.

The action of crime is settled in a criminal trial. In the trial, a specific law, one set in the legal code of a society, has been broken, and it is necessary for that society to understand who committed the crime, why the crime was committed, and the necessary punishment against the offender to be levied. Civil trials are not necessarily focused on a broken law. Those trials are usually focused on private parties and a personal dispute that arose between them. The solution in civil trials usually aims, through monetary compensation, to provide restitution to the wronged party.

In some societies, crimes have been prosecuted entirely by civil law. In early England, after the Roman Empire collapsed, communities prosecuted all crimes through civil law. There were no prisons and serious criminals were declared "outlaws." This meant that if any harm befell one who was outside the law, no trial would be conducted. Outlaws fled for fear they would be dead on the street the next morning. This is why many outlaws found sanctuary in Sherwood Forest.

Types of Crime

Antisocial behavior is criminalized and treated as offenses against society, which justifies punishment by the government. A series of distinctions are made depending on the passive subject of the crime (the victim), or on the offended interest(s), in crimes against:

  • Personality of the state. For instance, a person may not agree with the laws in their society, so he or she may commit a crime to show their disapproval. For instance, there have been crimes committed by those disapproving of abortion, involving attacks on abortion clinics.
  • Rights of the citizen.
  • Administration of justice. This type of crime includes abuse of the judicial system and non-compliance with the courts and law enforcement agencies.
  • Religious sentiment and faith. For instance, church burnings, graffiti on synagogues, and religiously motivated attacks on the Muslim community post-September 11, 2001 in the United States reflect crimes against religion.
  • Public order. Riots and unwarranted demonstrations represent crimes against public order, as they break down established order and create hysteria, panic, or chaos.
  • Public economy, industry, and commerce. Any illegal buying and selling of goods and services classifies as this type of crime, for example, bootlegging, smuggling, and the black market.
  • Person and honor. In certain societies, there exists the "culture of honor," in which people may act to defend their honor if they feel it is insulted or violated.

Crimes may also be distinguished based on the related punishment prescribed in line with the perceived seriousness of the offense with fines and noncustodial sentences for the least serious, and in some places, capital punishment for the most serious.

Crimes are also grouped by severity, some common categorical terms being: felony and misdemeanor, indictable offense, and summary offense. For convenience, infractions are also usually included in such lists although, in the U.S., they may not be the subject of the criminal law, but rather of the civil law.

The following are considered crimes in many jurisdictions:

Theories of Crime

There are many theories discussing why people commit crimes and deviant acts. Criminal theories can be divided into biological theories versus classical theories. Biological theories focus on pathology, sickness, and determinism, basically assuming that a person is born a criminal. Classical theories focus on free will and the idea of a social contract to which people conform. These theories assume that no one is born a criminal, and that they come to commit criminal acts as a result of their experiences.

Psychoanalytical Theories of Crime assume that criminals are different from non-criminals, and that criminal offenders have different personalities from those of non-offenders. Freudian theory suggests that crime is a result of frustration, resulting from stunted growth in one of the four stages of maturation: oral, anal, genital, and phallic. Aggression is then a result of the frustration that developed from lack of goal attainment.

Cognitive Theories of Crime involve the development of people's ability to make judgments. Psychologists and criminologists have detailed a variety of theories of developmental psychology and moral psychology and its relationship to crime. Jean Piaget suggested that there are two stages in the cognitive development of judgment. The first stage involves the "acceptance of rules as absolute." For instance, in order for a child to develop judgment, he or she must realize from a young age that the rules his or her parents make are unchanging in nature and apply directly to them. The second step describes the "spirit of law." This is basically a realization that the law has consequences, that if one acts counter to the law, it will affect them. Lawrence Kohlberg also researched the development of moral judgment, describing six steps, which were then divided into three stages: "pre-conventional," "conventional," and "post-conventional." These stages represent Kohlberg's stages of moral development. In the "pre-conventional stage," the first two steps, the goals in life are to maximize pleasure and minimize pain, and the desire to gain reward without punishments or consequences. Kohlberg suggested that most criminals are stuck in this stage. The next stage, the "conventional stage," involves people following the rules absolutely in order to gain social approval and respect. People feel empathy and guilt in this stage, and according to Kohlberg, most people are in this stage. The final stage, the "post-conventional stage," involves people judging rules according to their own values along with a sense of there being a universal justice. Most people do not reach this stage.

The Functionalist Theory of Crime involves a macro level theory of crime. Functionalism assumes that: society is a living organism, comprised of social institutions that overlap, and that social institutions work to keep society in order. Emile Durkheim suggested that crime is functional because it has always existed in society, making crime a normal part of society. Crime serves as a guide for acceptable social behavior, and it creates consensus among people in a society on what is deviant. Durkheim also suggested that deviance brings social change, which is a positive and needed aspect in all societies. Too much crime, however, results in weakened social consensus and social order, leading to anomie, a state of normlessness, which no society can survive for long.

The Social Disorganization Theory of Crime is an ecological perspective on crime, dealing with places, not people, as the reason crime happens: where one lives is causal to criminality; the physical and social conditions a person is surrounded by create crime. The assumption of this theory is that people are inherently good, but are changed by their environment. According to this theory, five types of change are most responsible for criminality. They are: urbanization, migration, immigration, industrialization, and technological change. If any one of these aspects occurs rapidly, it breaks down social control and social bonds, creating disorganization.

The Strain Theory of Crime proposes that crime occurs when a person is unable to attain their goals through legitimate means. Robert K. Merton described strain by showing different ways an individual can meet their goals. Conformity is the method by which most people achieve what they want: a person conforms to the ideals and values of mainstream society. Merton said that criminals use "innovation" to achieve their goals, which means that they agree with the goals that mainstream society offers, but seek or require different means to achieve them. He also identified other ways in which individuals achieve their own goals, including "retreatism," "rebellion," and "ritualism." Strain theory was modified by Robert Agnew (2005) when he said that it was too tied to social class and cultural variables and needed to take into account a more universal perspective of crime. Three components of Agnew's modification of strain theory are: failure to achieve positive goals, loss of some positively valued stimuli, and presentation of negative stimuli. He suggested that these cause strain between a person and the society they live in, resulting in a negative affective state, which may lead to criminal activity.

Crime as a Function of Family and Community

It has long been suggested that a core family is a valuable preventative measure to crime. However, the relationship between criminal activity and a strong family has a number of different dimensions.

"Collective efficacy" in neighborhoods is often thought of as the foundations for preventing violent crime in communities. Collective efficacy holds that there is social cohesion among neighbors, common values of neighborhood residents, an informal social control, and a willingness to regulate crime or deviance amongst neighbors. This collective efficacy requires the presence of strong families, each member committed to each other and their neighbors.

The studies of Mary Pattillo-McCoy (2000) examined collective efficacy, but brought a startling new revelation to light. Her study on Groveland (a middle class typically African American neighborhood in Chicago), concluded that collective efficacy can lead to a unique pattern of violent crime. Groveland had a strong collective efficacy; however, gang violence was also prevalent. The neighborhood gang members participated in violent activity, but since they were involved in the collective efficacy, they kept violent crime out of their home neighborhood. They did not want their families or friends put in harm's way due to their gang activity. This unique take on collective efficacy shows how strong family and neighborhood bonds can foster, as well as prevent, violent crime.

Travis Hirschi (1969) suggested an idea called "social bond theory." The underlying idea of this theory is that the less attachment a person has to society, the more likely they are to participate in activities that harm society or go against mainstream social values. Hirschi contended that attachment to friends and family, commitment to family and career, involvement in education and family, and belief in the law and morality will ensure that a person will not undertake criminal activities. If even one of these variables is weakened, the chances one will participate in crime increases. This is an element of "social control theory," which states that people's bonds and relationships are what determine their involvement in crime.

Elijah Anderson (2000) identified families as perhaps the most important factor in criminality. Anderson is responsible for the idea of the "code of the street," which are informal rules governing interpersonal behavior, particularly violence. His studies identified two types of families in socially disorganized neighborhoods: "decent families" and "street families." Decent families, he said, accept mainstream social values and socialize their children to these values, sometimes using the knowledge of the "code of the street" to survive. Street families have very destructive behaviors and a lack of respect for those around them. They apparently have superficial ties to the community and other family members, only vying for respect of those around them. Anderson argued that street families breed criminals, suggesting that the family one is raised in could possibly identify if a person will become a criminal.

Age, Race, and Gender

The idea of crime being specific to a particular age, race, or gender has been examined thoroughly in criminology. Crime is committed by all types of people, men and women, of any age. There is evidence, however, that these different variables have important effects on crime rates, which criminal theories attempt to explain.

Age

Studies in criminology detail what is popularly known as the "age-crime curve," named for the curve of the graph comparing age as the independent variable to crime as the dependent variable. The graph shows an increase in crime in teenage years, tapering off and decreasing in the early to mid-twenties, and continuing to decrease as age increases. This "age-crime curve" has been discovered in nearly every society, internationally and historically.

In 2002, according to the Uniform Crime Report in the United States, 58.6 percent of violent crime offenders were under the age of 25, with 14.9 percent being under the age of 18. A disturbing trend in the U.S. from the very end of the twentieth century has been the increasing incidence of homicides and other violent assaults by teenagers and even younger children, occurring in the context of robberies, gang-related incidents, and even random shootings in public places, including their own high schools.

Race

In 2002, according to the Uniform Crime Report in the United States, whites made up 59.7 percent of all violent crime arrestees, blacks comprised 38.0 percent, and other minorities 2.3 percent.

Historically, through phrenology and biology, scientists attempted to prove that certain people were destined to commit crime. However, these theories were proven unfounded. No race or culture has been shown to be biologically predisposed towards committing crimes or deviance.

The Social Disorganization Theory of Crime explains instances of urban crime, dividing the city into different regions, explaining that the transitional zone, which surrounds the business zone, is the most notorious for crime. For example, the transitional zone is known for deteriorated housing, factories, and abandoned buildings. In urban areas, minorities are usually inhabitants of the transitional zone, surrounding them in urban decay. This urban decay results in strain (as described in Agnew's strain theory) and leads to criminal activity, through their having been disenfranchised from mainstream goals. In other words, society’s failure to maintain urban transitional zones is a major factor in minorities committing crimes.

Elijah Anderson, an African American who has written much on the subject of race and crime, claimed that institutions of social control often engage in "color coding," such that an African American is assumed guilty until proven innocent (Anderson 2000). Others have noted that social institutions are victims of institutional racism. For instance, in The Rich Get Richer, and the Poor Get Prison, Jeffrey Reiman examined the differences between white middle to upper class teenagers and black lower class teenagers and how they were treated by the police. The difference he discovered for even first time offenders of both white and black teenagers was unsettling. White teenagers typically were treated with respect, their parents are informed immediately, and often jurisdiction and punishment was given to the parents to decide. However, black teenagers were often held over night, their parents informed later or not at all, and first time offenders treated like multiple offenders.

Thus, overall, there appear to be many different aspects of society responsible for the preponderance of minority crime.

Gender

Gender distribution in criminal behavior is very disproportionate. In 2002, according to Uniform Crime Report in the United States, men made up 82.6 percent of violent crime arrestees.

There are different gender theories and criticisms that attempt to explain gender discrepancies, usually referred to as the "gender-ratio problem of crime." While it is still uncertain why women do not engage in violent crime at nearly the rate that men do, there are many sociological theories that attempt to account for this difference.

The Marxist-Feminist approach suggests that gender oppression is a result of social class oppression, and that feminine deviance and crime occurs because of women's marginalized economic position within the legitimate world and the world of crime. For instance, prostitution represents those at the top of the hierarchy abusing those at the bottom of the hierarchy through corruption of wage labor. Women do not engage in violent crime because gender and capitalistic oppression disenfranchises them from mainstream criminal activities.

The Liberal-Feminist approach assumes that gender represents one of many competing categories in a society. For example, another competing category could be elderly citizens, or the impoverished, or minority cultures. Those who agree with this approach support initiatives designed to improve women's standing in the existing social structure, but do not wish to challenge the system as a whole. A liberal-feminist would argue that prostitution is acceptable because it represents a business contract between two people: one person pays for a rendered service. Liberal-feminists suggest that low levels of violent crime among women are a result of their social category, that there is no perceived benefit for females to engage in violent crime.

The Radical-Feminist approach is opposite to the liberal-feminist approach. Radical-feminists argue that gender is the most important form of social oppression. Through this approach, women need to start a social movement to create a new system with equality written into the social structure. To a radical-feminist, prostitution is a form of gender oppression that needs to end. Radical-feminists argue that some women are driven to violent crime because of perceived hopelessness and abandonment by society because of the oppression of a patriarchal society.

Crime and Punishment

Generally, in the criminal justice system, when a crime is committed the perpetrator is discovered, brought to trial in a court, and if convicted, receives punishment as prescribed by the penal system. Penologists, however, have differing views on the role of punishment.

Punishment is as much to protect society as it is to penalize and reform the criminal. Additionally, it is intended as a deterrent to future crimes, by the same perpetrator or by others. However, the efficacy of this is not universally accepted, particularly in the case of capital punishment. A desired punishment is one that is equal to the crime committed. Any more is too severe, any less is too lenient. This serves as justice in equilibrium with the act of crime. Punishment gives the criminal the tools to understand the way they wronged the society around them, granting them the ability to one day possibly come to terms with their crime and rejoin society, if their punishment grants the privilege.

Punishmment as deterrence can take two forms:

  • Specific: The intention underlying the penal system is to deter future wrongdoing by the defendant, if convicted. The punishment demonstrates the unfortunate consequences that follow any act that breaks the law.
  • General: The punishment imposed on the particular accused is also a warning to other potential wrongdoers. Thus the function of the trial is to gain the maximum publicity for the crime and its punishment, so that others will be deterred from following in the particular accused's footsteps.

Theoretical justification of punishment

A consistent theoretical problem has been to justify the state's use of punishment to coerce compliance with its laws. One of the earliest justifications was the theory of natural law. This posits that the standards of morality are derived from or constructed by the nature of the world or of human beings. Thomas Aquinas said: "the rule and measure of human acts is the reason, which is the first principle of human acts" (Aquinas, ST I-II, Q.90, A.I), i.e. since people are by nature rational beings, it is morally appropriate that they should behave in a way that conforms to their rational nature. Thus, to be valid, any law must conform to natural law and coercing people to conform to that law is morally acceptable. William Blackstone (1979) described the thesis:

This law of nature, being co-eval with mankind and dictated by God himself, is of course superior in obligation to any other. It is binding over all the globe, in all countries, and at all times: no human laws are of any validity, if contrary to this; and such of them as are valid derive all their force, and all their authority, mediately or immediately, from this original (41).

John Austin, an early positivist, developed a theory based on utilitarian principles, which deviates slightly from natural law theory. This theory accepts the calculating nature of human beings and the existence of an objective morality, but, unlike natural law theory, denies that the legal validity of a norm depends on whether its content conforms to morality, i.e. a moral code objectively determines what people ought to do, and the law embodies whatever norms the legislature decrees to achieve social utility. Similarly, Hart (1961) saw the law as an aspect of sovereignty, with lawmakers able to adopt any law as a means to a moral end. Thus, the necessary and sufficient conditions for the truth of a proposition of law were simply that the law was internally logical and consistent, and that state power was being used with responsibility.

Dworkin (2005) rejected Hart's theory and argued that fundamental among political rights is the right of each individual to the equal respect and concern of those who govern him. He offered a theory of compliance overlaid by a theory of deference (the citizen's duty to obey the law) and a theory of enforcement, which identified the legitimate goals of enforcement and punishment. According to his thesis, legislation must conform to a theory of legitimacy, which describes the circumstances under which a particular person or group is entitled to make law, and a theory of legislative justice, which describes the law they are entitled or obliged to make and enforce.

History of Criminal Law

The first civilizations had codes of law, containing both civil and penal rules mixed together, though these codes were not always recorded. According to Oppenheim (1964), the first known written codes were produced by the Sumerians, and it was probably their king Ur-Nammu (who ruled over Ur in the twenty-first century B.C.E.) who acted as the first legislator, creating a formal system in 32 articles. The Sumerians later issued other codes including the "code of Lipit-Istar" (last king of the third dynasty of Ur, Isin, twentieth century B.C.E.). This code contained some 50 articles and has been reconstructed by the comparison among several sources. Kramer (1971) adds a further element: "The Sumerian was deeply conscious of his personal rights and resented any encroachment on them, whether by his King, his superior, or his equal. No wonder that the Sumerians were the first to compile laws and law codes" (4).

In Babylon, Driver and Mills (1952–1955) and Skaist (1994) describe the successive legal codes, including the code of Hammurabi (one of the richest of ancient times), which reflected society's belief that law was derived from the will of the gods. Many of the states at this time were theocratic, and their codes of conduct were religious in origin or reference.

While modern legal systems distinguish between offenses against the "State" or "Community," and offenses against the "Individual," what was termed the penal law of ancient communities was not the law of "Crimes" (criminal); it was the law of "Wrongs" (delicta). Thus, the Hellenic laws (Gagarin 1986 and Garner 1987) treated all forms of theft, assault, rape, and murder as private wrongs, and action for enforcement was up to the victim or their survivors (which was a challenge in that although there was law, there were no formalized courts in the earliest system).

It was the Romans who systematized law and exported it to their empire. Again, the initial rules of Roman law were that assaults were a matter of private compensation. The significant Roman law concept was of dominion (Daube 1969). The pater familias was in possession of all the family and its property (including slaves). Hence, interference with any property was enforced by the pater. The Commentaries of Gaius on the Twelve Tables treated furtum (modern theft) as if it was a tort. Similarly, assault and violent robbery were allied with trespass as to the pater’s property (so, for example, the rape of a female slave, would be the subject of compensation to the pater as having trespassed on his "property") and breach of such laws created a vinculum juris (an obligation of law) that could only be discharged by the payment of monetary compensation (modern damages). Similarly, in the consolidated Teutonic Laws of the Germanic tribes (Guterman 1990), there was a complex system of money compensations for what would now be considered the complete range of criminal offenses against the person.

Even though Rome abandoned England sometime around 400 C.E., the Germanic mercenaries who had largely been enforcing the Roman occupation, stayed on and continued to use a mixture of Roman and Teutonic law, with much written down by the early Anglo-Saxon kings (Attenborough 1963). But, it was not until a more unified kingdom emerged following the Norman invasion and the king attempting to assert power over the land and its peoples, that the modern concept emerged, namely that a crime is not only an offense against the "individual," it is also a wrong against the "state" (Kern 1948, Blythe 1992, and Pennington 1993). This is a common law idea and the earliest conception of a criminal act involved events of such major significance that the "state" had to usurp the usual functions of the civil tribunals and direct a special law or privilegium against the perpetrator. The Magna Carta, issued in 1215, also granted more power to the state, clearing the passage for legal procedures that King John had previously refused to recognize. All the earliest criminal trials were wholly extraordinary and arbitrary without any settled law to apply, whereas the civil law was highly developed and generally consistent in its operation. The development of the idea that it is the "state" dispensing justice in a court only emerged in parallel with or after the emergence of the concept of sovereignty.

In continental Europe, Vinogradoff (1909) reported the persistence of Roman law, but with a stronger influence from the church (Tierney 1964, 1979). Coupled with the more diffuse political structure based on smaller state units, rather different legal traditions emerged, remaining more strongly rooted in Roman jurisprudence, modified to meet the prevailing political climate. In Scandinavia, the effect of Roman law was not felt until the seventeenth century, and the courts grew out of the things (or tings), which were the assemblies of the people. The cases were decided by the people (usually the largest freeholders dominating), which later gradually transformed into a system of a royal judge nominating a number of most esteemed men of the parish as his board, fulfilling the function of "the people" of yore.

Conclusion

Crime has existed in all societies, and that efforts to legislate, enforce, punish, or otherwise correct criminal behavior have not succeeded in eliminating crime. While some have concluded that crime is a necessary evil in human society, and have sought to justify its existence by pointing to its role in social change, an alternative view is that the cause of crime is to be found in the problems of human nature and human relationships that have plagued us since the origins of human history. Correcting these problems would effectively remove the source of crime, and bring about a peaceful world in which all people could realize their potential as individuals, and develop satisfying, harmonious relationships with others.

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