QCM : Understanding Crime: Law, Society, and Justice — 9 questions

Questions et réponses du QCM

1. What does the legal definition of crime primarily involve?

An act that violates specific laws, committed voluntarily with intent, and punishable by law
Behaviors that violate social norms or moral standards, regardless of legality
Actions that are morally wrong but not necessarily illegal
Any act that causes harm to society, regardless of legal prohibition

An act that violates specific laws, committed voluntarily with intent, and punishable by law

Explication

The correct answer is that a crime involves an act that violates specific laws, committed voluntarily with criminal intent (mens rea), and is subject to legal sanctions. This aligns with the legal criteria for criminal liability. The distractors are plausible but incorrect because they focus on harm, morality, or social norms, which are related concepts but not the core of the legal definition.

2. What is the primary requirement for an act to be considered a crime under the legal definition?

The act must be voluntarily performed and violate a legal code.
The act must cause physical injury to another person.
The act must be morally wrong according to social norms.
The act must be committed in a public place.

The act must be voluntarily performed and violate a legal code.

Explication

The legal definition of a crime requires that the act be performed voluntarily and in violation of a specific legal code, emphasizing intent and legality over morality or location.

3. According to criminal law, what are the two essential elements required to establish most criminal offenses?

Causation and Concurrence
Actus Reus and Mens Rea
Legality and Punishment
Moral Intent and Social Harm

Actus Reus and Mens Rea

Explication

The fundamental requirement in criminal law is that both actus reus (the physical act) and mens rea (the mental intent) must be present for most crimes to establish criminal liability, as explicitly supported by the course content.

4. Which of the following best describes 'actus reus' in criminal law?

The mental state or intent of the defendant.
The physical act or unlawful omission that constitutes a crime.
The social perception of the act as harmful.
The legal punishment prescribed for an act.

The physical act or unlawful omission that constitutes a crime.

Explication

Actus reus refers to the physical act or unlawful omission involved in committing a crime, differentiating it from mens rea, which is about mental intent.

5. What is the primary role of legislative crime definitions?

To express the moral judgment of the community
To reflect societal moral standards and social norms
To determine the social perception of deviance
To serve as a basis for law enforcement and social regulation

To serve as a basis for law enforcement and social regulation

Explication

The primary role of legislative crime definitions is to serve as a basis for law enforcement and social regulation by clearly specifying what acts are considered crimes under the law. This provides a legal framework for prosecution and maintaining social order, rather than merely reflecting morals or social perceptions.

6. How does the concept of 'mens rea' contribute to criminal liability?

It determines whether an act was performed voluntarily.
It assesses the mental state, such as intent or recklessness, at the time of the act.
It defines the physical act that constitutes the crime.
It prescribes the legal sanctions for a crime.

It assesses the mental state, such as intent or recklessness, at the time of the act.

Explication

Mens rea involves assessing the mental state of the defendant, such as intent or recklessness, which is crucial in establishing criminal liability.

7. According to the revision, what is one reason many harmful acts are not prosecuted as crimes?

Because not all acts are explicitly prohibited by law.
Because all harmful acts automatically become criminal.
Because social perceptions always favor the accused.
Because the law does not consider intent.

Because not all acts are explicitly prohibited by law.

Explication

Many harmful acts are not prosecuted because they are not explicitly prohibited by law, highlighting the difference between harm and criminality in legal terms.

8. What does the social constructivist perspective suggest about the definition of crime?

Crime is a fixed entity universally recognized across cultures.
Crime is shaped by social perceptions, norms, and power dynamics.
Crime is solely based on biological factors.
Crime is determined only by formal laws without social influences.

Crime is shaped by social perceptions, norms, and power dynamics.

Explication

From a social constructivist perspective, crime is influenced by social perceptions and power relations, not just fixed laws or biological factors.

9. Why is understanding the social context important when studying crime?

Because laws and social norms evolve over time, influencing what is seen as criminal.
Because social context has no influence on crime definitions.
Because all crimes are universally defined regardless of cultural differences.
Because social context determines the legal sanctions alone.

Because laws and social norms evolve over time, influencing what is seen as criminal.

Explication

Studying social context is vital because it shows how laws, norms, and perceptions of crime change over time and across cultures, impacting what is considered criminal.

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Legal crime — definition?

An act violating a specific law, with actus reus and mens rea.

Crime — legal definition?

Actus reus, mens rea, legal prohibition.

Actus Reus — role?

Physical act or omission constituting a crime.

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