finals hbvict
  • 1. scientific study of victimization, including the relationships between
    victims and offenders, the interactions between victims and the criminal
    justice system and the connections between victims and other societal
    groups and institutions, such as the media, businesses, and social
    movements
A) Victim
B) Scope of victimology
C) Victimology
  • 2. The causation of crime by including the relationship between victims and
    offenders up to the interaction of victims with the pillar of criminal justice
    system.
A) Scope of victimology
B) Victim
C) Victimology
  • 3. The concept of victim dates back to ancient cultures and civilizations. Its
    original meaning was rooted in the exercise of sacrifice - the taking of the
    life of a person or animal to satisfy a deity.
A) The crime victim
B) Victim victimology
C) Scope of victimology
  • 4. Who is the two criminologists who explore the field of victimology by creating typologies
A) Cesare lombroso and enrico smith
B) Hans Von Hentig and cesare lombroso
C) Mendesohn and Hans von Hentig
  • 5. A criminologist who develope a typology of victim?
A) Cesare lombroso
B) Hans von Hentig
C) Becarria acosta
  • 6. The extent to which a
    victim is responsible for his
    victimization.
A) Victim precipatation
B) Victim facilatation
C) Victim provocation
  • 7. When the victim makes it
    easier for the offender to
    commit crime.
A) Victim provocation
B) Victim precipatation
C) Victim facilatation
  • 8. A person does something
    that incites another person
    to commit crime.
A) Victim precipatition
B) Victim provocation
C) Victim facilatition
  • 9. The victim significantly
    contributed to his/her
    victimization by allowing
    himself to be a target
A) Victim precipatition
B) Victim provocation
C) Victim facilatition
  • 10. Offender is given the
    opportunity to actually
    commit the crime.
A) Victim provocation
B) Victim precipatation
C) Victim facilatition
  • 11. The victim is considered to
    be even more responsible
    for the crime than the
    offender himself by
    provoking the offender.
A) Victim precipatation
B) Victim facilatation
C) Victim provocation
  • 12. This kind of victim directly suffers the harm or injury which is physical,
    psychological, and economic losses.
A) Direct or Primary Crime Victim
B) Tertiary crime
  • 13. Victims who experience the harm second hand, such as intimate partners or
    significant others of rape victims or children of a battered woman. This may
    include family members of the primary victims. However, Karmen also
    included first responders and rescue workers who race to crime scenes (such
    as police officers, forensic evidence technicians, paramedics, fire- fighters
    and the like) as secondary victims because they are also exposed to
    emergencies and trauma on such a routine basis and that they also need
    emotional support themselves.
A) ndirect or Secondary Crime Victim
B) Tertiary crime
C) Indirect crime
  • 14. Victims who experience the harm vicariously, such as through media
    accounts, the scared public or community due to watching news regarding
    crime incidents
A) Tertiary crime
B) Mutual
  • 15. when the criminal is retaliated against and become a victim himself.
A) Indirect crime
B) Mutual
C) No victimazation
  • 16. A victim who lacks ordinary prudence and discretion. It is an easy target,
    careless and unsuspecting. They are submissive by virtue of emotional
    condition.
A) Greedy of Gain or Acquisitive Type
B) Depressive type
  • 17. A victim who lacks all normal inhibitions and well-founded suspicions. This
    victim is easily duped because his or her motivation for easy gain lowers his
    or her natural tendency to be suspicious.
A) Greedy of Gain or Acquisitive Type
B) Indirect type
C) Depressive type
  • 18. A victim where "females foibles play a role. This victim is particularly
    vulnerable to stresses that occur at a given period of time in the life cycle,
    such as juvenile victims. Further, this victim is ruled by passion and
    thoughtlessly seeking pleasure.
A) Dull normal
B) Wanton or Overly Sensual Type
C) Tormentor type
  • 19. The victim of attack from the target of his or her abuse, such as in battered
    women. Primary abusers in relationships and become victims when the one
    being abused turns on them.
A) Troll type
B) Tormentor type
C) Depressive type
  • 20. Emotionally disturbed by virtue of heartaches and pains. Often prone to
    victimization by intimate partners. They desire to be with someone at any
    cost. They are susceptible to manipulation.
A) Depressive type
B) Tormentor type
C) Lonesome Type or Broken-hearted
  • 21. viewed as born victims because criminals and swindlers exploit their
    vulnerabilities.
A) Tormentor type
B) Dull normal
C) Depressive type
  • 22. Enter situations in which they are taken advantage such as blackmail.
A) Dull normal
B) Depressive type
C) Blocked, exempted, and fighting victims
  • 23. The Young is weak by virtue of age and
A) The immigrant
B) The young immaturity
C) The old
  • 24. Female is physically less powerful and is easily dominated by male.
A) The female
B) The young immaturity
C) The old
  • 25. The Old is incapable of physical defense and the common object of illegal
    scheme.
A) The young
B) The old
C) The immaturity
  • 26. Mentally Defective person is unable to think clearly or to respond to threats
A) The young immaturity
B) The mentally defective
C) The old
  • 27. Immigrant is unsure of the rules of conduct in the surrounding society.
A) The immigrant
B) The young
C) The old
  • 28. Racial prejudice may lead to victimization or unequal treatment by the agency
    of justice.
A) The old
B) The minorities
C) The young
  • 29. he developed a six- category typology of victims
    based on legal considerations of the degree of a victim's culpability.
A) Cesare lombroso
B) Benjamin mendelsohn
C) Hans Von hentig
  • 30. a victim who bears no responsibility at all for victimization. Victimized simply
    because of his or her nature, such as a child
A) Victim with minor guilt
B) Complete innocent victim
C) Most guilty victim
  • 31. victimized due to ignorance. A victim who inadvertently places himself to
    harm.
A) Victim with minor guilt
B) Most guilty victim
  • 32. bears much responsibility as the offenders.
A) Victim as guilty as offender
B) Most guilty victim
  • 33. victim who instigates or provokes his victimization.
A) Victim more guilty than offender
B) More guilty victim
  • 34. victimized during the perpetration of the crime or as a result of a crime.
A) Victim with minor guilt
B) More guilty victim
  • 35. a victim who is not victimized at all but instead, fabricates a victimization
    event.
A) More guilty victim
B) Simulating or imaginary victim
  • 36. many people are victims of crime not just once, but several times during their
    lifetime.
A) Simulating or imaginary victim
B) More guilty victim
C) Repeat Victimization and the Cycle of Violence
  • 37. victims of crime, especially victims of childhood abuse, are more likely to
    commit crimes themselves.
A) More guilty victim
B) Repeated violence
C) Cycle of violence
  • 38. The view that victimization results from the interaction of three everyday
    factors: the availability of suitable targets, the absence of capable guardians
    and the presence of motivated offenders
    - Ordinary routines of life present opportunities for crime.
A) Routine activity theory
B) High risk
C) Low risk
  • 39. Views on how people become crime victims because of lifestyles that
    increase their exposure to criminal offenders.
A) Risk theory
B) Lifestyle theory
C) Routine theory
  • 40. remain close at home and at work; lock the doors at night, have
    steady jobs and numerous friends
A) Low risk theory
B) High risk theory
C) Moderate theory
  • 41. works at night, interacts with strangers, uses drugs, sexually active
    lifestyles.
    Ex: sex workers
A) Low risk theory
B) Moderate theory
C) High risk theory
  • 42. same as low risk but indiscriminate, at times they venture out at
    night along.
A) High risk theory
B) Moderate risk theory
C) Low risk theory
  • 43. The view that victimization is primarily a function of where (place) people live.
A) High risk theory
B) Deviant place theory
C) Low risk theory
  • 44. The view that victims may initiate, either actively or passively, the
    confrontation that leads to their victimization.
A) Victim precipatation theory
B) Moderate risk theory
  • 45. Aggressive or provocative behavior of victims that result in their victimization.
A) Active precipatation
B) Passive precipatation
  • 46. Personal or social characteristics of victims that make them attractive
    targets for criminals; such victims may unknowingly either threaten or
    encourage the attacker.
A) Active precipatation
B) Passive precipatation
  • 47. The law that created the Board of Claims under the Department of Justice for
    victims of unjust imprisonment or detention and victims of violent crimes.
A) RA 7930
B) RA 7903
C) RA 7309
  • 48. The Rape Victim Assistance and Protection Act of 1998 mandated the
    establishment and operation of rape crisis centers in every province and city
    that shall assist and protect rape victims in the litigation of their cases and
    their recovery.
A) RA 5805
B) RA 8550
C) RA 8505
  • 49. The Human Rights Victims Reparation and Recognition Act of 2013 created
    the Human Rights Victims' Claims Board, an independent and quasi-judicial
    body attached to the Commission on Human Rights
A) RA 10638
B) RA 10863
C) RA 10368
  • 50. a process through which remorseful offenders accept responsibility for their
    misconduct, particularly to their victims and to the community.
    - creates obligation to make things right through proactive involvement of
    victims, ownership of the offender of the crime and the community in search
    for solutions which promote repair, reconciliation and reassurance.
A) Restorative justice
B) Retroactive justice
C) Proactive justice
  • 51. The restoring to the rightful owner what has been lost or taken away returning
    what was taken from the victim.
A) Restitustion
B) Reparation
C) Retribution
  • 52. The restoring to good condition of something that has been damaged
    compensation for loss paid by an offender to a victim as part of a criminal
    sentence or as a condition of probation.
A) Restitution
B) Prostitution
C) Reparation
  • 53. The restoration of peaceful or amicable relations between two individuals who
    were previously in conflict with one another.
    - implies forgiveness for injuries on either or both sides.
A) Reparation
B) Reconciliation
C) Restitution
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