Criminology, crime analysis, statistics, self-report surveys, victimization surveys, criminal behavior, crime statistics, forensic science, criminal personality, crime scene investigation
This document discusses various criminology techniques, including statistics, self-report surveys, and victimization surveys, to understand crime and criminal behavior.
[...] - We must sort, filter out the harmful elements - Biosafety has 3 dimensions : protect the population : ? against vulnerability, fragility, threat (protective laws) - The State must free from fear and free from needs. - Ulrich Beck will speak of risk society. - The world is full of threats and localized or globalized risks. - Human activity produces risks (nuclear) - The Cop 21 also raises the principle of precaution at the climate level - We must protect the populations by imagining the worst-case scenarios, therefore reducing our pollution. [...]
[...] - the corpse must remain a working tool - First phase: analyze the collected indices on the crime scene and generate analytical results. - Second phase: interpret these results in the context of the file Tasks: It must: -Film and photograph the crime scene -make a plan of the scene and the position of the clues -find and make the clues appear with various techniques -collect, number Biography Alphonse Bertillon ? first to think of creating an ingenious system of measurement that all states will adopt ? [...]
[...] - What does a security culture consist of through policies? - We will soon pass a law to bring illegal practices into legality - For example: use by police services of internet surveillance - In 1994, complete overhaul of the CP - Security laws are taken after emotional reactions to media-covered events. - Politics responds to the emotions of the population. - For example: Dutroux affair of Outreau . - We don't take the time to think because if we don't take a measure, we're not credible in the eyes of the population. [...]
[...] For an act (blameworthy, negative) to become a crime, there must be a a social practice that aims to target certain (of these) acts in this way, so that the actors think of a penal category (theft, etc.). Susceptible of hosting the brutal event concerned, they read the event with penal glasses and they succeed in convincing the penal system. Let's imagine two supporters who are the best of friends but one supports one football club and the other supports another, they shout at each other because one of them has won, they come to blows? In short, are these blows and injuries intentional? [...]
[...] Another way the criminal personality : « The criminal personality can be defined as the common attitude of those who accept or seek situations that put them outside of or in opposition to the norms accepted by the group G. Houchon The word 'personality' has 50 different definitions . in criminology . Is there a criminal personality? Some have supported it, while others consider the criminal to be a man like any other . What about recidivism? = persistence in adopting an antisocial behavior? What is the underlying question? Ask the question of the ineffectiveness of measures taken during the first offense and that of the ineffectiveness of prison sentences. [...]
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