Chapter 01: Early History of Punishment and the Development of Prisons in the United States
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1.What set of codified laws was based on equal retaliation?
a. / Book of the Covenantb. / Sumerian Code
c. / Draco’s Code
d. / Code of Hammurabi
ANS:DPTS:1DIF:Easy
REF:Babylonian and Sumerian CodesOBJ:1.2
COG:Knowledge
2.In the Roman Empire, a complete loss of citizenship and liberty, confiscation of property, and release of a spouse to remarry is called ______.
a. / civil deathb. / slavery
c. / offender marginalization
d. / offender disenfranchisement
ANS:APTS:1DIF:Easy
REF:Roman Law and PunishmentOBJ:1.2COG:Knowledge
3.What was the Church’s early equivalent to a legal proceeding?
a. / Secular trialb. / Trial by redemption
c. / Trial by intervention
d. / Trial by ordeal
ANS:DPTS:1DIF:Medium
REF:Early Historical Role of Religion, Punishments, and Corrections
OBJ:1.2COG:Comprehension
4.The infliction of physical pain upon an offender is called ______.
a. / capital punishmentb. / redemption punishment
c. / secular punishment
d. / corporal punishment
ANS:DPTS:1DIF:EasyREF:Corporal Punishment
OBJ:1.2COG:Knowledge
5.William Penn, and the Pennsylvania Quakers, created a body of laws called the ______.
a. / Great Lawb. / Ordeal Law
c. / Brutalization Law
d. / Disablement Law
ANS:APTS:1DIF:Easy
REF:William Penn, the Quakers, and the Great LawOBJ:1.3
COG:Knowledge
6.Who is recognized as the founder of the classical school of criminology?
a. / Jeremy Benthamb. / Cesare Beccaria
c. / William Penn
d. / Francois Voltaire
ANS:BPTS:1DIF:Medium
REF:Charles Montesquieu, Francois Voltaire, and Cesare Beccaria
OBJ:1.3COG:Comprehension
7.Which of the following philosophers developed the hedonistic calculus?
a. / Cesare Beccariab. / John Howard
c. / Jeremy Bentham
d. / Francois Voltaire
ANS:CPTS:1DIF:Medium
REF:Jeremy Bentham: Hedonistic CalculusOBJ:1.3
COG:Comprehension
8.Who worked to alleviate some of the abuses and improve sanitary conditions in correctional facilities?
a. / William Pennb. / Jeremy Bentham
c. / John Howard
d. / Cesare Beccaria
ANS:CPTS:1DIF:MediumREF:John Howard
OBJ:1.4COG:Comprehension
9.What was the first prison in America?
a. / Mamertine Prisonb. / Old Newgate Prison
c. / The Walnut Street Jail
d. / The Hulk
ANS:BPTS:1DIF:Easy
REF:Punishment During Early American History: 1700s-1800s
OBJ:1.4COG:Knowledge
10.What was the first American institution exclusively dedicated to the correction of felons?
a. / Mamertine Prisonb. / The Walnut Street Jail
c. / Old Newgate Prison
d. / The Hulk
ANS:BPTS:1DIF:MediumREF:The Walnut Street Jail
OBJ:1.4COG:Comprehension
11.The two major competing concepts or systems of prison designs used within the United States for the majority of the 20th century were ______.
a. / the Pennsylvania system and the New York systemb. / the Philadelphia system and the Auburn system
c. / the Philadelphia system and the New York system
d. / the Pennsylvania system and the Auburn system
ANS:DPTS:1DIF:Easy
REF:The Pennsylvania SystemOBJ:1.6COG:Knowledge
12.The ______system was an early prison system requiring inmate silence, individual cells, and inmate labor within those cells.
a. / New Yorkb. / Philadelphia
c. / Auburn
d. / Pennsylvania
ANS:DPTS:1DIF:Hard
REF:The Pennsylvania SystemOBJ:1.6COG:Application
13.______was/were a significant consequent of inmates incarcerated through the Pennsylvania system.
a. / Sanitary issuesb. / Diseases
c. / Mental illness
d. / Breakup of families
ANS:CPTS:1DIF:Medium
REF:The Pennsylvania SystemOBJ:1.6COG:Analysis
14.Which is the correct timeline for the opening of early American prisons?
a. / Eastern Penitentiary, Western Penitentiary, Auburn Prison, Walnut Street Jail, Old NewgatePrisocb. / Old Newgate Prison, Walnut Street Jail, Auburn Prison, Western Penitentiary, Eastern Penitentiary
c. / Old Newgate Prison, Auburn Prison, Eastern Penitentiary, Walnut Street Jail, Western Penitentiary
d. / Auburn Prison, Old Newgate Prison, Walnut Street Jail, Eastern Penitentiary, Western Penitentiary
ANS:BPTS:1DIF:HardREF:The Auburn System
OBJ:1.6COG:Application
15.The ______system was a prison model consisting of small individual cells, a large work area for group labor, and enforced silence.
a. / New Yorkb. / Philadelphia
c. / Auburn
d. / Pennsylvania
ANS:CPTS:1DIF:MediumREF:The Auburn System
OBJ:1.6COG:Comprehension
16.Maconochie’s principles are often referred to as the ______system.
a. / markb. / determinate
c. / check
d. / reformatory
ANS:APTS:1DIF:Easy
REF:The Age of the Reformatory in AmericaOBJ:1.5
COG:Knowledge
17.The first reformatory was named ______Reformatory.
a. / Elmirab. / Brockway
c. / Walnut Street
d. / Auburn
ANS:APTS:1DIF:Easy
REF:The Age of the Reformatory in AmericaOBJ:1.5
COG:Knowledge
18.The prototype prison farm was in what state?
a. / Arkansasb. / Texas
c. / Mississippi
d. / Louisiana
ANS:CPTS:1DIF:HardREF:Prison Farming Systems
OBJ:1.5COG:Application
19.Which states are the “Big Four” in corrections?
a. / California, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Ohiob. / California, New York, Texas, and Florida
c. / Pennsylvania, Colorado, Ohio, and Florida
d. / Texas, Virginia, Colorado, and California
ANS:BPTS:1DIF:Hard
REF:The Emergency of the “Big Four” in CorrectionsOBJ:1.6
COG:Application
TRUE/FALSE
20.The brutalization hypothesis states the use of harsh punishments is an effective deterrent.
ANS:FPTS:1DIF:Medium
REF:The Notion of Punishment and Corrections Throughout History
OBJ:1.2COG:Comprehension
21.The legal basis for lextalionis is the desire for revenge.
ANS:TPTS:1DIF:Medium
REF:Babylonian and Sumerian CodesOBJ:1.2
COG:Comprehension
22.Among early societies, religious offenses were considered less dangerous than secular offenses.
ANS:FPTS:1DIF:Medium
REF:Public and Private WrongsOBJ:1.2COG:Analysis
23.The infliction of physical pain upon an offender is called corporal punishment.
ANS:TPTS:1DIF:EasyREF:Corporal Punishment
OBJ:1.2COG:Knowledge
24.Banishment was the punishment most often used in lieu of capital punishment.
ANS:TPTS:1DIF:MediumREF:Banishment
OBJ:1.2COG:Comprehension
25.The majority of offenders who had been subjected to transportation were male, skilled, and from the lower classes.
ANS:FPTS:1DIF:MediumREF:Transporting Offenders
OBJ:1.2COG:Analysis
26.Ultimately, the Auburn system was the model that states adopted due to economic advantages over the Pennsylvania system.
ANS:TPTS:1DIF:Medium
REF:Two American Prototypes in ConflictOBJ:1.6
COG:Analysis
27.Prior to the Civil War, separate laws were required of free slaves and free men who turned criminal.
ANS:TPTS:1DIF:Easy
REF:The Southern System of Penology: Pre and Post-Civil War
OBJ:1.5COG:Knowledge
28.The Martinson Report argued that rehabilitation greatly reduced recidivism.
ANS:FPTS:1DIF:MediumREF:The reintegration model
OBJ:1.6COG:Analysis
ESSAY
29.Explain the process that led to the development of crimes being an act in violation of a king or queen’s authority.
ANS:
After the fall of the Roman Empire large populations of commoners were unskilled laborers. These unskilled laborers or peasants were given a small plot of land, by the manor lords, to work and raise crops for their own purposes while also working the fields of the manor lord. In essence, these commoners were little more than slaves of the state. Simultaneously, the royalty had established themselves as being the absolute power. Ultimately, all forms of revenue obtained from fines went to the state (or the Crown), and the state administered all punishments. This also led to the development of crime being an act in violation of a king or queen’s authority. This meant that harsh punishments deterred those who might challenge the ruler’s position, thereby solidifying the secular approach to punishment and corrections. It was at this time that criminal behavior became widely recognized as an offense against the state.
PTS:1DIF:Medium
REF:Early Secular History of Punishment and CorrectionsOBJ:1.2
COG:Analysis
30.Corporal punishment was a common form of state punishment. Provide a definition of corporal punishment. Name at least three forms of corporal punishment and describe their purpose.
ANS:
Corporal punishment is any physical pain inflicted short of death. Common methods include whipping, flogging, torture, mutilations, branding, and cat-o’-nine-tails. The purpose often was to extract a confession from the accused, used in an attempt to match the crime with an appropriate punishment or to be an example and a deterrent to other potential offenders.
PTS:1DIF:MediumREF:Corporal Punishment
OBJ:1.2COG:Comprehension
31.What effects did the American Civil War have on prisons and offenders? How did these effects influence the industrial prison era?
ANS:
The question requires a discussion on migration of citizens to cities, unemployment, and entrepreneurial efforts to profit from offenders. Specifically, incarceration rates and profits from prisons increased.
PTS:1DIF:Medium
REF:The Southern System of Penology: Pre and Post-Civil War
OBJ:1.6COG:Analysis