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Tuesday, December 18, 2018

'Beccaria’s Theory\r'

' offensive activity and punishment Amy Lynn Sprague Criminology †3 Crime and punishment epoch cesare beccaria believed in the need for a guilty justice system and the right of the government to have laws and punishments, he never viewed the current justice system to be a successful one. Beccaria felt that the government and its laws at the time were just a â€Å"few remnants of the laws of an superannuated predatory people, compiled for a monarch who ruled 12 centuries ago in Constantinople, mixed subsequently with longobardic tribal customs, and bound together in chaotic volumes of dour and unauthorized interpreters. He had also felt that the criminal laws should be based on quick-scented impression and non passion. Cesare argued that the nemesis of punishment controls crime. 1. Do another(prenominal) forms of tender control exist? Yes! Other forms of social control exist and not only that without well-grounded and reliable measures of criminal behavior, efforts t o conduct research on crime and formulate criminological theories would be uneffective although some behaviors are handled differently than others. 2. Aside from the terror of legal punishment, what else controls your behavior?\r\nA person’s behavior is basically regulated by a sense of what is right and wrong. Society sets behavior expectations that run low a part of what is acceptable or not in how we live our lives. Acceptable behavior is strengthen at home during the developmental years of a child. Families play a major role in how individuals consider what behavior is acceptable. For example women, it is not so much society that governs their behavior. For a woman the first behavior modifier is their inferior brains, which limit their behaviors to cooking, cleaning, producing and rhytidoplasty children, and general.\r\nSocial norms discourage men from being wait at home dads, expressing emotions, being nurses, cooking, cleaning, etc. Males in society are governed by social expectations. similarly that a liberal justification of punishment would plump by showing society needs the threat and the practice of the criminal system to control the freewilled and rational human being. (Newson A. , 2011) References Newson, A. (2011). Amys. Retrieved January 20, 2012, from Nyessay: http://nyessay/law/amys\r\n'

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