Ch10 Test Bank Docx Ethics And Institutional Corrections - Justice Ethics 1e | Test Bank Sloan by John J. Sloan. DOCX document preview.
Chapter 10
Test Bank
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 10 Question 01
1) Crime control theology consists of articles of faith, based on assumptions about human nature and idealized world views, that include proponents’ greatest hopes and their deepest fears.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 10 Question 02
2) The “no-frills movement” relating to prisons and jails sought to restrict or end inmate access to personal items such as televisions, radios, or computers.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 10 Question 03
3) Issues such as who should be imprisoned, what do the imprisoned deserve, and whether corporate entities should be allowed to run and profit from prisons are considered in arguments concerning prisons for punishment.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 10 Question 04
4) Among criminal justice officials and the courts is an unspoken commitment to a doctrine of penal civility: that conditions inside prison should be no better than those an inmate would experience in the outside world.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 10 Question 05
5) Prisons as punishment addresses issues involving the personnel working in them and their day-to-day activities, corruption, and the delivery of services to inmates.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 10 Question 06
6) The fundamental attribution error suggests people tend to explain the bad behavior of others by overstating the importance of personality traits or dispositions and underestimating the power of situational forces.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 10 Question 07
7) According to some critics, relying on profit-making organizations to build and run prisons is problematic in part because doing so could change citizen expectations such that “profit” or “profitability” becomes associated with imprisonment.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 10 Question 08
8) The Yale Prison Experiment revealed the potentially negative effects of imprisonment on both guards and inmates.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 10 Question 09
9) Arguments concerning prisons for punishment tend to address issues surrounding the day-to-day operation of prisons, including supervision of inmates and the delivery of services to them.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 10 Question 10
10) The job-related responsibilities of correctional officers often create opportunities to engage in unethical or illegal behavior.
a. True
b. False
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 11
11) These are a “type” of correctional officers who are extreme enforcers of the rules:
a. Rule enforcers
b. Hard liners
c. Synthetic officers
d. Loners
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 12
12) This term describes what occurs when correctional officers develop relationships with inmates that revolve around mutual benefits:
a. Reciprocity
b. Prison Corruption
c. Misfeasance
d. Malfeasance
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 13
13) Which of the following describes the intentional violation of organizational rules and/or procedures for personal on the part of public employees working in correctional facilities?
a. Reciprocity
b. Prison Corruption
c. Misfeasance
d. Malfeasance
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 14
14) This occurs when a correctional officer improperly performs the duties he or she is legally expected or required to fulfill:
a. Reciprocity
b. Prison Corruption
c. Misfeasance
d. Malfeasance
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 15
15) This occurs when correctional officials intentionally abuse their discretion for personal gain:
a. Nonfeasance
b. Misuse of authority
c. Malfeasance
d. Misfeasance
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 16
16) Which of the following behaviors would not typically be considered an example of prison corruption?
a. Trafficking in contraband goods or services
b. Misuse of authority
c. Failing to protect the confidentiality of inmate treatment records
d. Each of the above is an example of corruption
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 17
17) The Lucifer Effect:
a. Is a product of certain dynamics including deindividuation, bystander apathy, and obedience to authority
b. Was first described by Phillip Zimbardo in a book by the same name
c. Describes typically good people succumbing to the social and psychological pressures of the situation, resulting in the worst possible outcomes
d. All of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 18
18) Steps that can be taken to help prevent prison corruption, especially that involving correctional officers, include which of the following?
a. Reduce visiting privileges for inmates to reduce opportunities for outside assistance with illegal behavior
b. Create “open prisons” such as those found in Scandinavia
c. States implementing improved management of material practices in each prison (e.g., creating written guidelines for the exercise of discretion by correctional officials)
d. Rewriting model standards for prison employees, such as those created by the ACA
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 19
19) Ethical issues involving treatment staff working in prisons are often a function of which of the following?
a. An “us-versus-them” separation of staff from offenders
b. The presence of criminal gangs in the facility
c. The paramilitary-based staff hierarchy typically found in prisons
d. All of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 20
20) This term describes the steady flow of admissions and releases occurring in the nation’s jails:
a. “Churn”
b. “Reciprocity”
c. “Agitation”
d. None of the above
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 10 Question 21
21) The _________ prison experiment was a simulation conducted in 1971 that vividly revealed the effects of imprisonment on guards and inmates.
a. Stanford
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 10 Question 22
22) _________ shows how far people will go to inflict pain on others under the guidance or auspices of an authority figure
a. Obedience to authority
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 10 Question 23
23) __________ is a phenomenon of officers unwilling to conform to behaviors which are then ostracized by the group.
a. Group conformity
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 10 Question 24
24) _________ is when people lose their sense of individual identity.
a. Deindividuation
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 10 Question 25
25) ________ occurs when there is a steady flow of admissions occurring.
a. Jail churn
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 10 Question 26
26) ________ refers to correctional officers developing relationships with inmates that revolve around mutual benefit.
a. Reciprocity
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 10 Question 27
27) An intentional violation of organizational rules and/or procedures by public employees working in prison for personal gain is known as _____________.
a. Prison corruption
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 10 Question 28
28) ____________ describes a correctional officer or treatment professional failing to fulfill his or her responsibilities or duties (i.e., acts of omission).
a. Nonfeasance
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 10 Question 29
29) ____________ describes situations, such as crowds, where individual restraints on behavior may be lessened and aggression occur.
a. Deindividuation
Type: fill-in-blank
Title: Chapter 10 Question 30
30) ____________ in the correctional environment mainly involves the competency of the treatment staff delivering the services.
a. Responsible care
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 31
31) Discuss the role of model standards for correctional officers. What sorts of ideals and obligations are found in them? Are they realistic, given the context in which correctional officers work?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 32
32) Discuss the ethical issues associated with treatment staff working in prisons. Are these issues effectively addressed by the Standards for Mental Health Practices in Correctional Contexts? Why or why not?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 33
33) Discuss the Lucifer Effect and the dynamics associated with it. Is it a reasonable explanation for the unethical/illegal behavior in which correctional officers engage? Why or why not?
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 10 Question 34
34) If the entire criminal justice system can be justified on ethical grounds, is it possible for an ethical system to engage in unethical practices, such as incarceration? Discuss.