CHAPTER SIX – CRIME AND CRIMINALS
1. _________ advanced the argument that every society has a problem
with criminality, i.e., crime is normal in society.
a. Herbert Spencer
b. Karl Marx
c. Auguste Comte
d. Max Weber
e. Emile Durkheim
2. The “official” rates of crime are found in the Federal Bureau of
Investigation’s publication, entitled _________.
a. Crime in America
b. Uniform Crime Reports
c. Systematic Reporting on Crime
d. National Crime Statistics
e. United States Crime Record
3. The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s reporting of “official” statistics
on crime is based on crimes _________.
a. reported to the police
b. uncovered by the police
c. committed
d. cleared by arrest
e. discovered
4. Between 1994 and 1995, there was a __________ percent drop in the
rate of serious crime.
a. .5
b. 1
c. 2
d. 3
e. 10
5. During the mid-1980s, official statistics reveal that crime rates
in the United States began to increase after a short period of leveling
off and decline earlier in that decade. This increase is probably
explained by:
a. declining economic conditions in older manufacturing centers and
some farming communities.
b. Decreased funding of police agencies.
c. Overcrowding in prisons.
d. Excessive leniency on the part of judges.
e. Criminals becoming more skillful.
6. sociologists believe that the recent dip in crime rates is a result
of:
a. the rapid increase in the number of prison inmates.
b. the waning of the crack epidemic in the largest metropolitan centers
c. increases in police forces throughout the nation
d. all of the above
e. none of the above
7. Of the following crimes, _________ is not found on the official crime
index.
a. burglary
b. murder and nonnegligent manslaughter
c. aggravated assault
d. arson
e. embezzlement
8. __________ is defined as an act (or omission of an act) for which
the state can apply sanctions.
a. Deviance
b. Anti-social behavior
c. Crime
d. Personal injury
e. Delinquent activity
9. ___________ law deals with noncriminal acts in which one individual
injures another.
a. Civil
b. Administrative
c. Arbitrative
d. Criminal
e. Procedural
10. In practice, the definition of criminality is changed most
by what:
a. legislators decide in framing the criminal law.
b. judges do in passing sentence.
c. the public wants, as expressed in public opinion.
d. police believe criminal behavior to be as they exercise their discretion
e. prison administrators do as they decide whether to parole inmates.
11. William Chambliss studied how the biases of police and community
members affected their reactions to and treatment of middle- and lower-class
delinquents, and how the behavior and appearance of the delinquents themselves
determined what kind of treatment they received. The two groups of
adolescents under investigation were called the “__________” and the “__________”.
a. Jets; Angels
b. Saints; Roughnecks
c. Killers; Skinheads
d. Aces; Spades
e. Diamonds; Latinos
12. Official arrest rate data show that lower socioeconomic status minority
group members are more likely to be involved in crimes than are nonminority
individuals of the same social status. The chief reason for this
appears to be that:
a. offenders belonging to middle- and upper-class groups are rarely
caught
and punished.
b. poverty is the most important cause of crime
c. the criminal justice system is run by nonminority individuals who
do not arrest and prosecute members of their own groups
d. there are biological characteristics which minorities possess that
lead them to commit crime
e. minority group members commit most crimes.
13. _________ studies of crime ask respondents to report their own criminal
involvement through an anonymous questionnaire.
a. Offender reporting
b. Self report
c. Victimization
d. Offender interview
e. Official statistic
14. Which of the following is a major finding of self-report studies
on the amount of crime?
a. Official statistics of the FBI are quite accurate.
b. More crime is committed by poor people than the well-to-do.
c. Whites and nonwhites have similar rates of criminal activity.
d. The chances of being a victim of a criminal act are quite small
e. Most people do not violate the criminal law in their lifetimes.
15. _______ studies of the amount of crime are conducted by the Census
Bureau, basing their data on a representative sample of those asked whether
they had been the object of criminal activity.
a. Official FBI statistics
b. Victimization
c. Self-report
d. Object interview
e. Subjective report
16. According to the text, the social costs of which two types of crime
probably exceed the cost of all others combined?
a. violent personal and occasional property
b. public order and professional
c. professional and conventional
d. occupational and organized
e. occasional property and conventional
17. A recent study concluded that _________ percent of the population
aged 12 in 1987 can expect to be victims or intended victims of violent
crimes at least once in their lifetimes.
a. 8
b. 28
c. 44
d. 67
e. 83
18. Violent personal crime often involves offenders and victims who
are known to, or acquainted with, each other. ______ is the EXCEPTION
to this pattern.
a. Forcible rape
b. Robbery
c. Murder
d. Aggravated assault
e. Simple assault
19. Occasional property crime includes all of the following EXCEPT
a. robbery
b. vandalism
c. auto theft
d. check forgery
e. shoplifting
20. _______ criminals commit unsophisticated forms of theft without
a high level of skill as criminal. These individuals do not associate
with habitual lawbreakers and often do not consider themselves to be criminals.
a. Conventional
b. Public order
c. Organized
d. Professional
e. Occasional property
21. Edwin Sutherland make a major contribution to understanding crime
by studying people who break the law as part of their normal business activity.
Sutherland called these individuals ______ criminals.
a. business
b. professional
c. white-collar (occupational)
d. pragmatic
e. managerial
22. ___________ is/are NOT an example of occupational or white-collar
crime.
a. Labor-law violations
b. Price fixing
c. Anti-trust violations
d. Extortion
e. False advertising
23. A frequent occurrence in the securities industry, “insider trading”
is a good example of _________ crime.
a. business
b. managerial
c. occupational or white-collar
d. pragmatic
e. stockholder
24. Edwin H. Sutherland’s theory of _________ asserts that occupational
criminality, like other forms of systematic criminal behavior, is learned
through frequent direct or indirect relationships with people who are already
engaging in such behavior.
a. white-collar crime
b. differential association
c. functional criminality
d. conflicting criminality
e. interactionist criminality
25. __________ refers to theft from one’s employer, and is usually committed
by otherwise law-abiding people during the course of their employment.
a. Extortion
b. Embezzlement
c. Fraud
d. Antitrust violation
e. Fee-splitting
26. Donald Cressy’s study of embezzlers, Other People’s Money, found
that in addition to a financial problem, other conditions had to be present
for the person to embezzle. These are
a. an opportunity to steal and a formula for rationalizing the theft
b. a position of access and a way to pay the money back
c. a high level of greed and a way to neutralize law enforcement
d. all of the above
e. none of the above
27. Environmental crimes, illegal credit card manipulations, insider
trading in financial institutions, bribery of public officials, and computer
crimes are all examples of ________ crime.
a. violent
b. corporate
c. victimless
d. conventional
e. non-conventional
28. Public order crimes are often called _________ crime.
a. conventional
b. ordinary
c. occasional
d. immoral
e. victimless
29. Prostitution, gambling, vagrancy, and disorderly conduct are all
forms of _________ crime.
a. public order
b. occasional
c. occupational
d. conventional
e. violent personal
30. __________ criminals are mostly young adult males who begin their
involvement in robbery, larceny, and/or burglary as juvenile gang members.
They associate mostly with other criminals, have lengthy police records,
and have spent time in prison by the time they can be regarded as “semiprofessionals”.
a. Public order
b. Occasional
c. Conventional
d. Professional
e. Violent personal
31. For its success, organized crime depends upon
a. a division of labor that efficiently arranges efforts
b. a public that continues to want illegal goods and services
c. their ability to corrupt law enforcement through payoffs to ensure
operations
d. all of the above
e. none of the above
32. Which correctly orders (from highest to third highest) the sources
of illegal revenue of organized crime?
a. drugs, prostitution, gambling
b. pornography, prostitution, gambling
c. gambling, loansharking, drugs
d. loansharking, drugs, gambling
e. drugs, loansharking, prostitution
33. Safecrackers, conartists, and counterfeiters who skillfully dedicate
themselves to a life of crime and are seldom caught and punished because
of the skill at avoiding arrest are ________ criminals.
a. conventional
b. occasional
c. professional
d. organized
e. skilled
34. The purpose of laws that deal with juvenile delinquency is to
a. punish offenders
b. incapacitate offenders
c. deter youthful offenders
d. protect and redirect young offenders rather than to punish them
e. identify and single out those with criminal tendencies
35. criminologist John DiIulio’s research on the large number of juveniles
incarcerated today has convinced him that the proportion of repeat offenders
among youthful offenders has remained relatively constant over time AND
that
a. the level of violence of crimes committed by juveniles has escalated,
even while violent crime among adults is decreasing
b. the level of violence in crimes committed by juveniles has decreased
c. the nation’s poor neighborhoods and prisons are producing a new
breed of “super-predators.”
d. a and c above
e. none of the above
36. Among juveniles, a very common reason for arrest is ________, such
as running away and vagrancy.
a. status crimes
b. occasional offenses
c. property offenses
d. skilled crimes
e. youth busts
37. Cesare Lombroso’s concept of criminal atavism, which identified
the “criminal man” is a /an ________ explanation of crime.
a. conflict
b. functional
c. sociological
d. interactionist
e. biological
38. Cesare Lombroso is known for his conceptualization of criminal atavism,
which means that criminals
a. often repeat their crimes
b. are identifiable by their unique chromosomal structure
c. have physical characteristics resembling those of primitive humans
and lower primates
d. learn their criminality through association with other criminals
e. have a predatory drive to acquire wealth
39. Some modern theorists, like Wilson and Herrnstein, defend the identification
of biological characteristics that appear to be __________ in criminal
behavior.
a. basically unrelated
b. predisposing factors
c. functional prerequisites
d. conflicting ingredients
e. gender specific
40. Although there are significant variations from one society to another,
a review of numerous studies of crime in different countries concludes
that males are _________ times as likely to be arrested as females.
a. two to ten
b. three to fifteen
c. five to fifty
d. ten to one-hundred
e. fifty to one-thousand
41. According to the text, which of the following help to explain the
rise in the number of women incarcerated in United States prisons today?
a. Women have always committed more crime than men, but now the criminal
justice system is freer to recognize them.
b. There are increasing economic pressures on women today, and their
use of drugs is on the rise
c. Court decisions have required widespread release of male inmates
to ease the problems of prison crowding
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
42. Arrest rates for men are higher than for women. The best explanation
for this lies in
a. the biological differences in men and women
b. the psychological differences between men and women
c. how public opinion shapes the legislative process
d. the different patterns of socialization that men and women experience
e. the different life expectancies of males and females
43. Which of the following factors has been found to be most highly
correlated with criminal behavior?
a. age
b. occupation
c. body type
d. family type in which one grows up
e. race
44. In 1995, teenagers and young adults accounted for ______ percent
of arrests in the United States.
a. 16
b. 26.2
c. 36.4
d. 44.5
e. 86.7
45. Criminologist John DiIuilio and conservative social critic William
Bennet believe that the rate of violent felonies committed by children
aged 10-17 points to the emergence of a
a. Orwellian society
b. Big Brother mentality
c. Cohort of “super-predators”
d. Deteriorating social fabric
e. None of the above
46. conflict theorists believe that crime is caused by
a. biological deficiencies
b. different socialization patterns
c. confused or contradictory norms
d. association with members of criminal subcultures
e. inequalities of wealth, status, and power
47. In 1995, the poverty rate for African Americans ___________ percent.
a. dropped below 30
b. declined precipitously to less than 10
c. increased to 35
d. increased to over 40
e. stabilized at about 38
48. In the United States, blacks are overrepresented (compared to the
proportion of blacks in the population) among those arrested, convicted,
and imprisoned for street crimes. Among the following, which is the
LEAST plausible explanation?
a. There is more intense police patrol in black communities.
b. There is a disproportionately high percentage of blacks in the lower-income
classes.
c. Blacks tend to be isolated in racial ghettos where they are exposed
to norms and role models that encourage criminal behavior
d. Rates of family disorganization are high among blacks
49. In explaining criminality, Robert K. Merton’s anomie theory emphasizes
a. insufficient access to the approved means of attaining socially
approved goals
b. contact with others in criminal groups from whom one learns attitudes
and values supportive of criminality
c. social class inequalities that reflect exploitation of the poor
by the well-to-do
d. criminal and delinquent subcultures that form to express adolescent
rebellion
e. the process of developing a criminal self-identity
50. In Robert Merton’s anomie theory, criminality can be the result
of the adaptation called innovation. In committing crime, the innovator
a. discovers or invents a new way of committing crime
b. invents various rationalizations to justify his or her crime
c. participates in the formation of new criminal subcultures.
d. Accepts success goals, but abandons socially approve means and steals
in order to accumulate wealth
e. Develops new social norms which replace contradictory or confused
rules.
51. The theory of differential association and the subcultural approach
to juvenile delinquency exemplify which approach to the explanation of
crime?
a. anomie theory
b. interactionism
c. conflict theory
d. demographic factor biological
52. According to the text, the interactionist theory of criminality
that seems to explain the widest range of criminal acts is ________ theory.
a. differential association
b. delinquent subcultures
c. anomie
d. social disorganization
e. social pathology
53. Which of the following is not a part of Edwin Sutherland’s theory
of differential association?
a. Criminality is learned chiefly within small intimate groups
b. The exposure to criminal and noncriminal patterns varies in frequency,
duration, priority, and intensity.
c. A person learns favorable and unfavorable definitions of legal codes
d. A person gains a master-status as deviant or criminal and this affects
his or her self-concept
e. A person learns techniques for committing crimes and the specific
direction of motives and drives.
54. “A person becomes delinquent because of the excess of definitions
favorable to violation of law over definitions unfavorable to violation
of law.” This statement is central to
a. the principle of differential association
b. anomie theory
c. the theory of delinquent subcultures
d. conflict theories of crime
e. differential reinforcement theory
55. __________ views the formation of delinquent gangs ( a delinquent
subculture) as an effort to alleviate the hardships of being at the bottom
of the status ladder.
a. Walter Miller
b. Albert K. Cohen
c. Talcott Parsons
d. Gerald Suttles
e. Elijah Anderson
56. According to the delinquent subculture point of view, delinquents
form nonutilitarian, malicious, and negativistic subcultures. Delinquent
behave in this fashion
a. as a way of associating with others who will teach them the techniques
of skilled crime
b. in order to achieve enough power to control certain blocks in their
neighborhood
c. in order to celebrate lower class values
d. because through association with each other, they learn definitions
favorable to law violations
e. because a lower-class youth cannot meet the standards of the “middle-class
measuring rod” applied by teachers and others.
57. Walter Miller’s view of delinquency is that delinquent boys are
a. responding to the focal concerns of lower-class life
b. members of one or another of three basic lower-class subcultures
c. members of a delinquent subculture because they aspire to, but cannot
reach, middle-class standards
d. delinquent because they have been associating with delinquent peer
groups
e. adopting deviant means to reach socially approved goals
58. Which of the following is NOT, in Walter Miller’s view, a lower-class
focal concern?
a. smartness
b. trouble
c. toughness
d. fate
e. dependency
59. In Walter Miller’s view of delinquency, excitement, autonomy, and
toughness are
a. characteristics of the delinquent culture
b. lower-class focal concerns
c. each characteristic of the three major lower-class subcultures
d. dominant cultural values
e. values invented by lower-class youth as they join subcultures
60. The philosophy of crime control based on the idea that offenders
should be “paid back” with suffering in return for the suffering they caused
others is termed _________.
a. rehabilitation
b. retribution and deterrence
c. persuasion
d. prevention
e. incapacitation
61. Data from a 1990 poll show that about _______ percent of Americans
approve of the death penalty, although far fewer - _____ percent – believe
it is a deterrent.
a. 42; 29
b. 52; 39
c. 62; 49
d. 72; 59
e. 92; 79
62. Attempts to give criminal offenders the ability and motivation to
build a law-abiding life involve
a. incapacitation
b. deterrence
c. retribution
d. prevention
e. rehabilitation
63. _________ refers to the probability that a former inmate will break
the law after release and be arrested again.
a. Incapacitation
b. Deterrence
c. Recidivism
d. Recommission
e. Rehabilitation
64. In a 1990 study of the juvenile justice system and rehabilitation,
sociologists Mark Jacobs found that professionals in the system feel they
must _______ in order to make it rehabilitate rather than do further harm
to juvenile offenders and young people in need of supervision.
a. patronize the system
b. “screw” the system
c. perjure themselves
d. disobey the law
e. commit crimes
65. According to the text, the nature of the ______ itself is a major
hindrance to rehabilitative efforts.
a. criminal law
b. prison system
c. legal system
d. parole system
e. probation system
66. The usual “rehabilitation” that prisoners receive while within the
walls of the prison is _________.
a. secondary education
b. individual psychotherapy
c. education for basic literacy
d. group therapy
e. work training
67. Rehabilitation programs that allow the prisoner to leave the prison
during the day to work at an outside job are known as _________ programs.
a. furlough
b. apprenticeship
c. work release
d. probation
e. parole
68. According to the text, thus far, it appears that punitive “boot
camp” correctional programs are ________ in comparison to other types.
a. slightly more effective
b. more effective
c. much more effective
d. less effective
e. no more effective
69. Many states are experimenting with programs in which youthful can
attend school or job training while in prison or in lieu of prison.
Programs like these are controversial because
a. violent offenders are expected to do “hard time”
b. they are regarded as too expensive
c. politicians resent rehabilitative techniques
d. qualified personnel cannot be recruited to work in them
e. all of the above
70. The concept of crime and delinquency prevention involves
a. the sum total of all influences and activities that contribute to
the development of a nondeviant personality
b. attempts to deal with conditions in a person’s environment that
are believed to lead to crime and delinquency
c. specific services or programs designed to prevent further crime
and delinquency
d. all of the above
e. none of the above
71. The Chicago Area Project was
a. a project designed to develop youth welfare programs that would
work after the project leaders moved on
b. a program testing whether or not urban renewal is associated with
a decline in delinquency rates in an area
c. a study of whether or not the racial and/or ethnic characteristics
of residents of neighborhoods affect the crime rate in these areas
d. a study comparing the crime rates of immigrants and nonimmigrants
e. a program integrating ex-offenders into work situations in local
industries
72. Some observers, such as Charles Silberman, believe that a major
flaw in programs designed to control juvenile delinquency is that
a. too much emphasis is placed on local community involvement
b. too little emphasis is placed on government and the deterrent effect
of punishment
c. too much emphasis is placed on the detention and incarceration of
juveniles by police, courts, and correctional institutions
d. too few programs give juveniles an actual taste of what it is like
to be imprisoned
e. too many attempts try to deal with the social conditions in the
environments of juveniles while ignoring the rehabilitative effect of individual
therapies.
73. The text points out that crime remains a major concern of American,
but citizens are beginning to question certain recent policies. Which
of the following is NOT one of those policies?
a. mandatory sentences
b. federal allocations for more police
c. the “three strikes” policy
d. some aspects of the war on drugs, which have resulted in large increases
in the prison population
e. all of the above are mentioned in the text
74. In 1995 almost 14 million violent and property crimes were committed
in the United States. Of these, only about ______ percent were “cleared”
by arrests.
a. 5
b. 11
c. 21
d. 31
e. 41
75. Most judicial determinations of guilt are achieved by agreement
that produces a guilty plea in return for considerations such as a reduced
sentence. This is known formally as _________.
a. bargain justice
b. guilt agreements
c. plea bargaining
d. consideration exchange
e. dealing for a plea
76. ________ is community supervision of persons who have been released
from prison.
a. Probation
b. Prerelease
c. Furlough release
d. Domestic visitation
e. Parole
77. According to the text two approaches would probably deter much occupational
crime. They are
a. legal reform, particularly tougher penalties, and stronger enforcement
b. more lenient penalties and less rigorous enforcement
c. better federal reformatories and updated laws
d. more education and updated laws
e. elimination of the upper class and tough prisons
78. Much of the caseload of courts involves offenses covering behavior
that is illegal only when committed by juveniles. These offenses
are called _________.
a. delinquency crimes
b. status offenses
c. juvenile crimes
d. non-adult delinquencies
e. youth crimes
79. The text points out that by the early 1990s, rates of juvenile crimes
and the number of juveniles in criminal detention had risen dramatically.
These statistics have produced which of the following reactions?
a. victims of these crimes are calling for tougher penalties.
b. Critics of the trend toward greater punitiveness believe that putting
young offenders imprison will simply produce more super-predators
c. Some small-scale community-based approaches have been attempted
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
CHAPTER TWELVE –THE FAMILY
80. According to the text, about _______ of all children born in the
1980s will probably live
with a stepparent before
they reach the age of 18.
a. one-eighth
b. one-fourth
c. one-third
d. one-half
e. two-thirds
81. In the 1996 presidential election, there was a great deal of discussion
about how middle- and upper-middle class women, who often juggle family
responsibilities, would vote. These women were often referred to
as “_________ moms.”
a. soccer
b. baseball
c. football
d. basketball
e. tennis
82. Sociologists agree that the family is __________.
a. fractured and dying
b. becoming less diversified
c. here to stay as a social institution
d. doomed to extinction
e. inviable in the twenty-first century
83. The family is seen as a social problem when the pressures for change
can no longer be
accommodated within the
limits of the existing social structures or when those who want to
maintain those structures
fear that they cannot do so. A common response to such pressures
is to:
a. abandon the existing structure.
b. change the norms of the family.
c. withdraw from social life.
d. find a completely new type of family.
e. encourage contraception so that no new families can begin.
84. ____________ theorists take the view that some forms of crime and
other types of deviance result from the inability of some groups, such
as the poor, to maintain their traditional life in settings of rapid social
change
a. Conflict
b. Functional
c. Interactionist
d. Labeling
e. Group dynamics
85. __________ theorists view social problems like illegitimacy and
welfare dependency largely as the result of the stigmatization of those
in unconventional families.
a. Conflict
b. Functional
c. Interactionist
d. Social pathology
e. Social disorganization
86. A group of individuals who are related to one another either by
blood, marriage, or adoption is the definition of __________.
a. common law marriage
b. a primary group
c. a secondary group
d. incest
e. a kinship unit
87. The ________ family consists of a father, a mother, and their children,
living apart from other kin.
a. nuclear
b. social
c. modified extended
d. isolate
e. extended
88. The _____ family consists of parents, children, grandparents, aunts,
uncles and others living together.
a. nuclear
b. extended
c. secondary
d. expanded
e. modified extended
89. The ______ family is predominant in industrial societies.
a. matricentric
b. extended
c. egalitarian
d. nuclear
e. modified extended
90. In the ______ family, individual nuclear families live separately,
but the extended family remains a strong kinship organization through a
combination of interpersonal attachments and various forms of economic
exchanges and mutual aid.
a. matricentric
b. secondary
c. expanded
d. isolate
e. modified-extended
91. The ______ family is the predominate type of family in agrarian
societies.
a. expanded
b. nuclear
c. extended
d. matriarchal
e. egalitarian
92. Which of the following reflects the major effect of industrialization
on the family?
a. The nuclear family becomes the basic familial unit as the extended
family loses its major functions.
b. Birth rates and family size increase rapidly.
c. The family disappears.
d. A larger and larger proportion marry and start families of their
own.
e. Family solidarity increase and divorce and separation rates decrease.
93. All family types everywhere have a basic feature, which is:
a. male subordination
b. an organization of role
c. sibling equality
d. high social status
e. one adult male and one adult female, monogamously married to each
other
94. Families adapting to change experience stages in a “family cycle.”
________ is NOT an identifiable stage in this cycle.
a. Retirement
b. Childrearing
c. Retrenchment
d. Empty nest
e. Early marriage
95. A family has problems because a parent is serving in the military
during a war or because the “bread winner” is unemployed during an economic
recession. These family problems are due to ______.
a. a voluntary decision to act
b. external crises
c. personal inadequacies
d. family inflexibility
e. internal imposed crises
96. The text points out that it is extremely difficult to maintain loving
relationships when the family is experiencing severe economic hardship,
observing that in a recent survey, _______ percent of those questioned
said that lack of money was a major cause of their divorce.
a. 57
b. 67
c. 77
d. 87
e. 97
97. A family experiences problems because a family member is involved
in marital infidelity, a serious physical or mental disorder, or a decision
to work instead of taking care of the children. These family problems
are due to _______.
a. personal inadequacies
b. family inflexibility
c. internal crises
d. immortality
e. externally imposed crises
98. A/an ________ family is held together not so much by feelings of
warmth and attraction among the members as by outside pressures.
a. empty nest
b. imposed
c. constructed
d. empty shell
e. exposed
99. Which of the following is NOT an important factor in the continuation
of empty-shell marriages?
a. Habit and fear of change on the part of the partners
b. Dissolution that may cause sever financial hardships
c. Social pressures by others
d. Divorce laws that make it difficult to end these relationships
e. Marriage counselors who put first priority on saving the marriage
100. In the traditional conception of the American family, the husband
worked in the paid labor force while the wife worked unpaid, at home.
In 1993, ______percent of the American families conformed to this model.
a. 12
b. 19
c. 41
d. 58
e. 72
START NEW SCANTRON LABEL IT “SCANTRON #2”
101. Sociologists generally agree that one of the most important social
trends since 1950 has resulted in a total upheaval of traditional male
and female roles within the family. This trend is:
a. industrialization.
b. the movement we know as “women’s liberation (lib).”
c. the movement of women out of the home and into the workforce.
d. the movement of families from the cities to the suburbs.
e. Urbanization
102. Of the following, which has changed LEAST rapidly?
a. the number of women in the workforce
b. the attitudes toward women who work
c. the number of women in the workforce who have children
d. the movement of families from the cities to the suburbs
e. urbanization
103. According to the text’s discussion of the effects of women’s employment:
a. when wives work out of necessity, marital happiness is lower in
all cases.
b. most evidence does not support the view that women are fulfilled
by a domestic role
c. Surveys tend to show that the lives of both career women and full-time
homemakers include a mixture of satisfactions and problems in terms of
their fulfillment from the domestic role.
d. All of the above.
e. None of the above
104. In a landmark study of women’s attitudes about work and marriage,
Arlie Hochschild found that women who work have less time for themselves
and often think of the work they do in the home as a kind of :
a. “pink collar trap.”
b. “velvet ghetto.”
c. “second shift.”
d. “silver ceiling.”
e. “gold mortgage.”
105. In a study of middle-class men’s reactions to the prospect of shouldering
more of the responsibly for domestic tasks like child care, a significant
proportion of those interviews were choosing the single life and becoming
what were called “_________ males.”
a. retread
b. autonomous
c. emancipated
d. solo
e. singular
106. According to the text’s discussion of juggling work and family
responsibilities:
a. the imbalance in the traditional norm of male as provider, woman
as caregiver, has created stress in some marriages and innovative
role changes in others
b. in the 1990s, families have been less likely to shift work and family
roles, especially in the early years of marriage and child rearing.
c. Most recently, more men than women are choosing to sacrifice long-term
career goals and take part-time jobs so that they can spend more time in
child rearing
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
107. According to the text’s discussion of the difficulties couples
encounter in juggling work and family roles, marital happiness ________when
children were born.
a. remains constant
b. fluctuates wildly
c. increases slightly
d. increases substantially
e. often decreases
108. For most of the second half of the twentieth century, indicators
of family well being have been ________ for African Americans.
a. extremely positive
b. alarmingly negative
c. stable
d. fluctuating
e. improving
109. The text observers the between 1980 and 1992, when the rate of
births outside of marriage increased nationally by 54 percent, it rose
________ percent for whites and only 9 percent for blacks.
a. 54
b. 64
c. 74
d. 84
e. 94
110. In his 1996 study of family poverty and work problems in inter-city
Chicago, William J. Wilson determined that ______ percent of the African-American
parents aged 18-44 are currently married.
a. 8
b. 18
c. 28
d. 48
e. 68
111. Among minorities, and African American especially, the single most
important cause of the weakening of marriage norms during the second half
of the century has been the:
a. sudden and almost complete disappearance of work in inner-city
communities of the welfare system.
b. Collapse of the welfare system.
c. Long-term domination of the political sphere by the Republican Party
d. Promiscuity of minority males.
e. Decline in educational opportunity for minorities.
112. Which of the following does sociologist Valerie Kincade Oppenheimer
cite as the major source of the decline in marriageable males in the United
States?
a. American men’s increasing tendency to remain single
b. The increase on the proportion of adult males of marriageable age
who are neither enrolled in higher education nor at work.
c. The demise of the Welfare State
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
113. Which of the following are identical as major factors in explaining
black-white differences in the marital status of men?
a. occupational status and family background
b. family background and age at time of employment
c. previous experience with divorce and occupational status
d. income and education
e. None of the above
114. By the early 1990’s, the divorce rate in the United States was
nearly _______ per thousand.
a. 1
b. 5
c. 25
d. 50
e. 75
115. Recently in the United States, a category of the population with
relatively fewer divorces has shown an important increase in the divorce
rates. These are persons:
a. with college education and higher socioeconomic status
b. of middle-class standing and grade school education.
c. With little education and low class status
d. Of upper-class standing and little education
e. With college degrees but lower-class position
116. About one-third of all divorces take place within the first ______of
marriage.
a. month
b. year
c. three years
d. nine years
e. twenty years
117. According to research on the relationship between happiness in
marriage and having children:
a. having children helps to “cement” marriages.
b. Couples who plan the arrival of their children have a better marriage
and family prognosis than those who do not.
c. Having babies early in a marriage makes couples happier.
d. Having children helps to reduce the strain on couples’ resources.
e. None of the above
118. Demographer Paul Glick estimates that if present trends continue,
by the end of the century, approximately ____ of all the Americans will
be stepchildren, stepparents, or stepsiblings.
a. one-eight
b. one-fourth
c. one-half
d. two-thirds
e. three-quarters
119. Which of the following is/are (an) important reason(s) for the
increase in divorces?
a. Today’s attitudes toward divorce are less negative.
b. A growing number of women can earn a living independently of their
husbands.
c. Divorce laws have been changed to make obtaining a divorce easier
d. All of the above reasons
e. None of the above reasons
120. Of the 1.2 million divorces that occur every year in the United
States, approximately ______ percent occur among couples who have one or
more children.
a. 10
b. 20
c. 30
d. 40
e. 50
121. In their study of the effects of divorce on children, Wallerstein
and Blakeslee determined that:
a. some of the children were better off than they would have been in
an unhappy, intact family.
b. For the most children, divorce had very serious consequences.
c. Many divorced parents are unable to meet the challenges of
parenting and instead depend on the children to help them cope with their
own problems.
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
122. Robert Weiss observed three common sources of strain experienced
by single parents. One of these sources involved having to make all
of the decisions and having to provide for all family needs by oneself.
This he referred to as _______ overload.
a. emotional
b. responsibility
c. task
d. decision
e. provision
123. Robert Weiss observed three common sources of strain experienced
by single parents. These were:
a. financial, emotional, and economic overload
b. time, energy, and devoted overload
c. responsibility, emotional, and task overload
d. economic, familial, and educational overload
e. school, transportation, and athletic overload
124. According to the text, the basic social problem created by the
divorce rate is that:
a. delinquency among the children of divorced families creates many
difficulties.
b. Social policy has made divorce easier to get
c. Lines of lineage (descent) become confused
d. Large numbers of those divorced do not remarry.
e. The other institutions of society remain geared to the traditional
family.
125. According to the text’s discussion of cohabiting couples:
a. this pattern is most common among people over the age of 25 and
under age 65.
b. It is estimated that there are fewer than one-half million cohabiting
couples in the United States
c. The substantial research that has been done on this pattern
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
126. John Z. Zhao interviewed 177 Canadian cohabiting couples and followed
them over time to study the connections between premarital cohabiting and
marital stability. Zhao concluded that premarital cohabitation was
related to:
a. a higher risk of divorce.
b. Elevated marital stability
c. Elevated marital happiness.
d. Decrease marital communication.
e. Elevated marital communication.
127. In the United States today, the median age of women marrying for
the first time is approximately ______years; and for men, approximately
______ years.
a. 18.4; 21.6
b. 21.1; 20.3
c. 28.8; 27.2
d. 24.5; 26.7
e. 29.9; 31.4
128. The “marriage squeeze” refers to:
a. women who postpone marriage finding, when they look for marriage
partners at a later age, that the number of women is larger than the number
of men.
b. Larger families placing more financial demands on parents; in a
declining economy, family living standards decline.
c. Couples who are affectionate with each other experiencing lower
divorce rates than couples who are “stand-offish.”
d. Modern industrial society putting greater strain on families because
they are expected to do so much more.
e. Divorce persons who remarry and bring their children from previous
marriages to the new marriage often finding housing space too small for
their needs.
129. According to the text’s discussion of the changing norms of parenthood:
a. in recent years, there has been a growing trend toward enactment
of stricter child support laws and stronger enforcement of such laws.
b. Single mothers often do not have the resources to pursue deadbeat
fathers
c. New efforts are being made to enforce compliance with court orders
of child support for both legitimate and illegitimate children
d. All of the above
e. None of the above
130. According to the text’s discussion of illegitimacy:
a. this phenomenon is increasing among the upper class, but decreasing
among the poor.
b. The controversy over “family values” continues in sociology
c. All experts agree that growing up fatherless is never a desirable
condition
d. All of the above
e. a and c above
131. Between 1994 and 1995, births to unwed women:
a. increase by 5 percent
b. increase by 10 percent
c. dropped by 4 percent, the first decline in decades
d. stabilized
e. fluctuated at an all-time high
132. In the United States, about ______ teenage girls become pregnant
each year.
a. 250, 000
b. 500,000
c. 1 million
d. 10 million
e. 30 million
133. Among black teenage girls, almost one in _________ gives birth
to an illegitimate child before reaching the age of 18.
a. one hundred
b. fifty
c. ten
d. four
e. two
134. Teenage women, representing 25 percent of the population of childbearing
age in the United States, have over _______ percent of all illegitimate
births in this country.
a. 15
b. 30
c. 45
d. 60
e. 75
135. A 1990 investigation by the National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development studied black teenagers who came to family planning
clinic in Baltimore for pregnancy tests. The results showed that
among those young women who went full-term and bore children, ______ percent
dropped out of school.
a. 28
b. 38
c. 48
d. 58
e. 68
136. According to the text’s discussion of gay and lesbian families:
a. the AIDS epidemic has led homosexual couples to abandon thoughts
of having children of their own
b. very few homosexual couples consider themselves to be “married”
c. substantial research findings indicate that children in homosexual
families suffer devastating problems as a result of their parents’
nonconformity
d. all of the above
e. none of the above
137. An estimated ______ of lesbians and ______ of gay males have children
from previous heterosexual marriages.
a. one-third; one-fifth
b. one-half; one-fourth
c. two-thirds; one-half
d. three-fourths; two-thirds
e. seven-eighths; three-fourths
138. A 1986 study by Richard B. Freeman and Brian Hall estimated the
total number of homeless family members at:
a. 12,000
b. 22,000
c. 32,000
d. 82,000
e. 172,000
139. Christopher Jencks has pointed out that the actual number of homeless
family members:
a. exceeds 50,000
b. is about 100,000
c. is well above 200,000
d. could vary quiet widely, depending upon how one defines homelessness
e. cannot be estimated
140. Arthur Caplan, one of the world’s foremost students of bioethics,
has noted that:
a. advances in the reproductive technology have created an unprecedented
number of moral dilemmas
b. most of the world nations are accepting advances in reproductive
technology with little disturbance.
c. The moral dilemmas created by advance in reproductive technology
will likely become more vexing in the future.
d. a and c above
e. None of the above
141. _______ refers to the technique for drawing fluid from the uterus
during the first trimester of pregnancy, making it possible to detect severe
birth defects.
a. Contraceptive technology
b. Amniocentesis
c. Reproductive invasion
d. Clonapin examination
e. Abortive alternative
142. Clonapin is the name of a modern:
a. Contraceptive technology
b. Technique for evaluating the health of the unborn fetuses.
c. Fertility drug
d. Artificial insemination procedure
e. In utero implant
143. ________ refers to a procedure in which a woman is artificially
inseminated, receives up to $25,000 to bear the child and gives up the
baby to its natural father.
a. Surrogacy
b. In utero implantation
c. Artificial insemination
d. Clonapin examination
e. Contraceptive implantation
144. ________ is the only country in the world to allow commercial surrogacy.
a. Africa
b. Russia
c. China
d. Japan
e. The Untied States
145. Social policy related to the problems of families can be divided
into four major categories. Which of the following is NOT one of
these?
a. divorce law and alimony
b. Contraceptive technology
c. Efforts to reduce the rate of illegitimacy
d. Programs to assist low-income families
e. Child-care and family support policies
146. Beginning with _______ in 1970, many states liberalized their divorce
laws and moved toward no-fault divorce.
a. California
b. New York
c. Hawaii
d. Maine
e. New Jersey
147. The text mentions four states that are considering measures which
would make it more difficult for couples to divorce, especially if they
have children. Which of the following is NOT one of these?
a. Michigan
b. Georgia
c. Iowa
d. Idaho
e. New York
148. __________ is the money paid by one partner for the support of
the other, usually the husband to the wife.
a. Child support
b. Alimony
c. Welfare
d. No-fault funding
e. Substitute finance
149. Under the “__________” theory, one would expect to find higher
teenage birthrates in the states with the highest welfare payments, but
this was never true.
a. aid-to-dependent-youth
b. youth-transaction
c. welfare incentive
d. none of the above
e. teen childbearing
150. __________ authored a book on child care and family life that is
entitled It Takes a Village.
a. David Popenoe
b. Tipper Gore
c. Samuel Preston
d. Hillary Clinton
e. Janet Reno
151. The text identifies the ______Act, passed by Congress during President
Clinton’s first term in office, as one of the brightest areas of change
inn family-related social policy.
a. Family Values
b. Family Leave
c. Restore Fault Divorce
d. Workfare
e. Affirmative Action Reinstatement
CHAPTER NINE – PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION
152. In the early 1940s, the Swedish social scientist, Gunnar Myrdal,
published a book entitled An American Dilemma. In Myrdal’s view,
the “American dilemma” was
a. the United States’ indecision in the late 1930’s about joining the
Allies in World War II
b. the question of what to do about the Russians after World War II
was concluded
c. the large gap between American ideals of equality and white treatment
of blacks in the United States
d. the expropriation of land and extermination of Native Americans
during westward expansion
e. the United States’ failure to more quickly invade Germany in order
to stop what was happening to Jews in concentration camps.
153. The constitutional bases for racial equality in the United States
were laid by which Amendments to the Constitution?
a. thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth
b. first, fourth, and fifth
c. second, nineteenth, and twenty-second
d. sixth, seventh, and eighth
e. twelfth, eighteenth, and twentieth
154. In 1954 the United States Supreme Court handed down the Brown v.
Board of Education of Topeka decision. The Brown case involved
a. compensation for those Americans deprived of property and interned
on the west coast in World War II
b. opening voting rolls to minorities by ending the poll tax
c. making discrimination in housing illegal
d. deciding that segregation in vehicles and terminals in interstate
travel was unconstitutional
e. declaring segregated educational facilities to be inherently unequal
155. How did the Civil Rights Act of 1964 differ from those in 1957
and 1960?
a. Lyndon B. Johnson had an important role in the 1964 Act.
b. The 1964 Act provided ways to deny federal money to local government
units that allowed discrimination
c. The earlier acts did not cover discrimination against blacks
d. The 1964 Act covered schools as well as public facilities
e. The earlier acts focused on voting, not economic discrimination
156. The Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Acts were passed during
the
a. Truman presidency from 1945-1952
b. Eisenhower presidency from 1952-1960
c. Kennedy-Johnson presidencies from 1960-1968
d. Nixon-Ford presidencies from 1968-1976
e. Reagan presidency from 1980-88
157. The Civil Rights Act of 1968
a. included a federal prohibition against housing discrimination
b. established affirmative action plans
c. declared segregated schools unconstitutional
d. ruled that voting discrimination denies a basic civil right
e. was the first major civil rights act passed by the U.S. Congress
158. The first of the major urban riots of the 1960’s occurred in a
region called Watts, which was a mostly black section of ___________.
a. Detroit
b. Washington, D>C.
c. Los Angeles
d. Newark, New Jersey
e. Gary, Indiana
159. The National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders is best known
for its conclusion that
a. separate schools for white and blacks are inherently unequal
b. the U.S. Constitution permits segregation in housing when important
economic interests are threatened by desegregation
c. lee Harvey Oswald assassinated President John F. Kennedy
d. our nations is moving toward two societies, one black, one white
– separate and unequal
e. the riots were caused by a black underclass that came to these cities
from outside in order to make trouble.
160. The 1975 extension of the Voting Rights Act included two provisions
especially important to Americans whose native language is not English.
These provisions were
a. federal registrars and interpreters at the polls
b. bilingual elections if a city has a sizeable language minority and
a ban of literacy tests as a prerequisite for voting
c. bilingual instruction in our schools and ballots printed in two
languages
d. bilingual candidates and voting registration that ignores the residence
of voters so they could not be identified as residing in an ethnic residential
area
e. elections held on holidays celebrated by the minority and immediate
(no waiting) period registration
161. Stanley Lieberson argues that when an immigrant group is small,
adjustment to American society is facilitated. The advantage he believes
small size gives an immigrant group is that it
a. makes it easier to organize politically
b. is easier to maintain norms against out-marriage
c. provides a more compact group to move from place to place
d. makes it easier to register to vote since small numbers are less
likely to be recognized
e. makes it easier to develop and occupational niche or specialty
162. Categories of people who do not receive the same treatment as other
categories in the same society are termed __________.
a. selectivities
b. discriminators
c. minorities
d. categories
e. discriminates
163. People who share certain inherited characteristics (such as black
or brown skin) are, in the United States, members of _________ minorities.
a. ethnic
b. cultural
c. racial
d. religious
e. status
164. People in the United States who share non-American cultural features,
such as language and national origin, and regard themselves as a distinct
group are members of _________ minorities.
a. ethnic
b. religious
c. nationalist
d. racial
e. international
165. When members of either a racial or an ethnic minority group take
on the characteristics of the mainstream culture by adapting their own
culture patterns, ________ has occurred.
a. adaptation
b. assassination
c. co-optation
d. coercion
e. assimilation
166. Of the following, which is the LEAST important characteristic in
a group being defined as a minority by the larger society?
a. possession of socially visible physical or cultural traits seen
as undesirable by the dominant group in the society
b. a tendency to marry within the group
c. the subordination of the minority group
d. the numerical size of the minority group
e. a sense of group consciousness or “we-feeling”
167. Which of the following is not a basic characteristic of a racial
or ethnic minority group/
a. members of the group practice exogamy; i.e., they marry outside
the group.
b. Members of the group develop a sense of group consciousness or “we-feeling.”
c. Members of the group are born into it; their membership is transmitted
by rule of descent.
d. Members of the group have socially visible physical or cultural
traits singled out by the dominant group.
e. The group is subordinate to others in society.
168. Which of the following are minority groups in that they occupy
a subordinate status, possess special traits, and have group self-awareness?
a. racial and ethnic groups
b. the aged
c. women
d. all of the above
e. none of the above
169. Which is the principle characteristic of a minority group?
a. small numerical size
b. cultural distinctiveness
c. group out-marriage
d. a sense of group consciousness
e. subordinate status
170. The most important characteristic of dominant groups in all societies
around the world is their ___________.
a. white skin
b. Protestant religious ethic
c. larger numerical size
d. economic and political power
e. level of education
171. The principal weapons in the protection of dominant group privilege
are __________.
a. prejudice and discrimination
b. economic boycotts
c. beliefs and values
d. attitudes and inaction
e. political supplication and economic retaliation
172. ___________ refers to the differential treatment of individuals
considered to belong to a particular social group.
a. Prejudice
b. Behavior
c. Discrimination
d. Attitudes
e. Attractions
173. The two tendencies on the part of people that usually result in
prejudice against the subordinate group are the tendencies to:
a. be tentative and to be uneducated
b. rationalize discrimination and to be ethnocentric
c. hate and to be ignorant
d. accumulate wealth and to deny wealth to others
e. despise others and to do something about it.
174. ____________ refers to an emotional, rigid attitude toward the
members of a subordinate group.
a. Discrimination
b. Emotion
c. Prejudice
d. Predisposition
e. Emotional illness
175. Prejudice is to attitudes as discrimination is to ___________.
a. emotion
b. belief
c. strategy
d. thinking
e. behavior
176. The builder of a cooperative apartment house may not be negatively
predisposed toward Jews, but nevertheless may refuse to sell to a Jewish
family in the belief that doing so may make it difficult to rent the other
apartments. In Robert Mertons’s typology of the relationships between
prejudice and discrimination, this builder would be a __________.
a. prejudiced discriminator
b. nonprejudiced nondiscriminator
c. prejudiced nondiscriminator
d. nonprejudiced discriminator
e. latent bigot
177. Using Robert Merton’s perspective on the relationships between
prejudice and discrimination, “institutional discrimination” would involve:
a. discrimination where prejudice is absent
b. prejudice without discrimination occurring
c. discrimination where prejudice is present
d. prejudice combining with discrimination
e. discrimination combining with prejudice
178. An employer with substantial federal contracts holds negative attitudes
toward members of a particular group and doesn’t wish to hire them.
In fear of losing these contracts, the employer gives all applicants fair
consideration. In Robert Merton’s typology of the relationships between
prejudice and discrimination, this employer would be a/an ___________.
a. active or outright bigot
b. prejudiced nondiscriminator
c. prejudiced discriminator
d. nonprejudiced discriminator
e. nonprejudiced nondiscriminator
179. to understand the origins of prejudice and discrimination in a
society, one must consider both:
a. the felt needs of individuals and the structural organization of
society
b. society in theory as well as society in practice
c. individual psychological and physiological processed.
d. Individual ideals and individual actions
e. Dominant group practices and dominant group beliefs
180. sometimes, aggression cannot be directed at the real source of
frustration but is redirected toward a similar but safer and more convenient
target. This involves ___________.
a. submission
b. rejection
c. scapegoating
d. reorientation
e. stereotyping
181. In essence, scapegoating involves:
a. selecting the strongest target for your aggression
b. having prejudice eliminate reason
c. selecting dominant group members for acts of aggression
d. displacing aggression toward a safer target
e. lynching the supposed perpetrator of a crime
182. Attributing those personal traits that you consider undesirable
to the members of a minority group, and then condemning these people for
having these traits refers to _______.
a. rationalization
b. aggression
c. projection
d. rejection
e. frustration
183. According to the authors of your text, which of the following is
a commonly cited example of projection?
a. believing that the Russians want to dominate the world
b. blaming ourselves for prejudice against minorities
c. Hispanics beliefs that blacks take their jobs
d. Beliefs among immigrants that America will be, for them too, a land
of opportunity
e. White beliefs that exaggerate black sexuality
184. When we consider factors of social structure that are important
in origins of prejudice and discrimination, we observe that dominance and
subordination involves a competitive struggle for possession of valued
goods. According to the text, this is, ultimately:
a. a psychological process, understood by investigating human acquisitiveness.
b. an economic process of free-market competition
c. an educational process involving the acquisition of skills
d. a religious process, reflecting the dominant values of the society
e. a political process involving a struggle for power
185. Which of the following are the most obvious forms of economic exploitation
of subordinate groups by dominant groups?
a. slavery and serfdom
b. wage rates and piece-rate employment
c. expulsion and genocide
d. discrimination and underemployment
e. bureaucratic supervision and industrial management
186. A very important cultural factor in prejudice and discrimination
involves the social standards that specify the kind of behavior that is
appropriate in a given situation. These standards are called social
_________.
a. values
b. beliefs
c. norms
d. statuses
e. judgments
187. Children are likely to learn prejudices from their parents, and
group members are likely to discriminate if discrimination is common in
the group. This reflects the power of __________.
a. habit
b. social norms
c. education
d. individuality
e. values
188. ____________ is the requirement that one must marry a person similar
to oneself in religion, social class, and race or ethnicity.
a. Endogamy
b. Polygamy
c. Exogamy
d. Polyandry
e. Homogamy
189. Douglas J. Besherov and Timothey S. Sullivan analyzed census data
on marriages between 1970 and 1993 and found that:
a. the norm of homogamy is for stronger than it was 20 years ago
b. black women today are far more likely to marry an African-American
man than in the past
c. the rate of marriage between blacks and whites in the United
States is accelerating rapidly
d. rates of intermarriage are declining for most ethnic and racial
groups
e. none of the above
190. Attributing a fixed, exaggerated, distorted, and usually unfavorable
or inaccurate conception to a category of people illustrates the process
of ___________.
a. scapegoating
b. simulation
c. projection
d. stereotyping
e. rationalization
191. Some people believe that all Sicilians are gangsters, that all
old people are senile, that all people with long hair are drug addicts,
and that all Native Americans are alcoholics. These beliefs are the
product of _________.
a. empirical experience
b. stereotyping
c. projection
d. rationalization
e. scapegoating
Chapter Five – Alcohol and Other Drugs
192. According to your text, in reference to the consumption of drugs
in the U.S., we can conclude that
a. most Americans abstain from the use of harmful drugs
b. addiction to the most socially disapproved drugs is common at all
socioeconomic levels.
c. cocaine and heroin abuse involve the most harmful drugs.
d. major gains in reducing drug abuse have been made since the 1960s
e. Americans of all ages and at all socioeconomic levels consume vast
quantities of chemical substances
193. __________ abuse is at least as harmful as the abuse of less socially
acceptable drugs.
a. cocaine
b. Heroin
c. Amphetamine
d. Alcohol
e. Barbiturates
194. During the 1996 presidential election campaign, the Republican
candidate, Bob Dole, accused President Clinton of being responsible for
the increase in marijuana use among teenagers; Dole alleged that
Mr. Clinton had been “soft on drugs” in his first term as president.
Only about 6 percent of Americans polled on this issue blamed the president,
but 44 percent placed the blame on
a. federal drug enforcement bumbling
b. Attorney General Janet Reno
c. peer pressure among adolescents
d. poor parenting practices
e. all of the above.
195. From a pharmacological point of view, a drug is defined as
a. any substance, other than food, that chemically alters the structure
or function of a living organism
b. any substance prescribed by a physician or manufactured expressly
to relieve pain or to treat and prevent disease
c. any substance that alters physiological functioning so that pleasure
is perceived
d. any substance that is prepared from synthetic components that have
a chemical and not an organic basis
e. any chemical substance that affects physiological functions, mood,
perception, or consciousness and has the potential for misuse.
196. “Any substance that is prescribed by a physician or manufactured
expressly to relieve pain or to treat and prevent disease” defines a drug
in a ________ context.
a. sociological
b. medical
c. pharmacological
d. legal
e. social
197. sociologically, a drug denotes any habit-forming substance that
a. affects physiological functions, mood, perception, or consciousness,
has the potential for misuse, and may be harmful to the user or to society
b. authorities have deemed sufficiently harmful to penalize its use
by criminal sanction
c. chemically alters the structure or function of a living organism
d. is prescribed by a physician or manufactured expressly to relieve
pain or to treat and prevent disease
e. alters physiological functioning so that pleasure is perceived
198. when the members of society have used a habit forming substance
for many years, that substance may not be classified as a drug by that
society, even if it has been scientifically proven to be harmful.
Which two drugs exemplify this statement?
a. cocaine and caffeine
b. heroin and marijuana
c. alcohol and tobacco(nicotine)
d. cocaine and heroin
e. marijuana and tobacco (nicotine)
199. “The use of unacceptable drugs and/or the excessive or inappropriate
use of acceptable drugs in ways that can lead to physical, psychological,
or social harm” defines __________.
a. the legal use of drugs
b. drug use
c. social addiction
d. the degree of social harm
e. drug abuse
200. The _________ aspect of drug use refers to the degree to which
a substance causes physiological, psychological, or social problems for
the individual or the family, community, or entire society.
a. subjective
b. legal
c. sociological
d. pharmacological
e. objective
START NEW SCANTRON LABEL IT “SCANTRON #3”
201. The ____________ aspect of drug use refers to how people perceive
the consequences of drug use, and how their perceptions result in social
action with regard to drug use.
a. medical
b. subjective
c. pharmacological
d. causative
e. objective
202. _________ illustrates how the objective and subjective aspects
of drug use may not coincide.
a. cocaine
b. Heroin
c. Crack
d. Aspirin
e. Alcohol
203. In the case of __________, objectively little evidence exists that
users damage themselves psychologically, physiologically, or socially,
and yet subjectively, the drug is perceived as harmful and criminalized.
a. marijuana
b. cocaine
c. alcohol
d. heroin
e. tobacco (nicotine)
204. According to the text, which of the following illustrates the discrepancy
between subjective viewpoints and objective reality with regard to drug
use?
a. the prosecution of Oliver North for the “Iran-Contra” affair
b. Bill Clinton’s admission that he had tried marijuana, but never
“inhaled”
c. The ouster of former presidential assistant Donald Regan by former
President Reagan
d. Problems several years ago resulting from medication for a back
ailment experienced by Chief Justice William Rehnquist
e. Programs for wider testing for drugs proposed by former President
Reagan
205. According to the text the term drug abuse is used to refer to
a. the use of any socially approved substance
b. taking a drug for pleasure
c. the use of a drug to an extent that causes harm to the user
d. any medicinal substance that has the potential for abuse
e. taking a drug to avoid social responsibilities
206. Physical dependence and psychological dependence can be considered
as separable aspects of dependence on a drug. If this distinction
is made, another term for psychological dependence is ____________.
a. addiction
b. drug dependence
c. habituation
d. compulsive use
e. drug use
207. Experts who prefer not to make a distinction between physical and
psychological dependence characterize the compulsion to use a drug as
a. addiction
b. drug use
c. habituation
d. compulsive use
e. drug dependence
208. The average annual per capita consumption of beer by American adults
is ___________.
a. 1 quart
b. 3 gallons
c. 11 gallons
d. 32 gallons
e. 115 gallons
209. Alcohol is implicated in ___________ of all fatal highway accidents
in the United States.
a. one-fourth
b. one-third
c. over one-half
d. two-thirds
e. three-quarters
210. What is the basic difference between the problem drinker and the
alcoholic?
a. The alcoholic drinks more frequently than the problem drinker
b. The alcoholic becomes physically addicted to alcohol while the problem
drinker does not
c. The alcoholic suffers impaired interpersonal relationships while
the problem drinker does not
d. The alcoholic drinks hard liquor while the problem drinker’s problem
is with beer and wine.
211. Recent research on alcoholism has developed some evidence that
a. the tendency to become an alcoholic may be an inherited trait
b. one can become habituated, but not addicted, to alcohol
c. the primary cause of alcoholism is moral weakness
d. one must be a problem drinker before one can become an alcoholic
e. had Prohibition continued, problems of alcohol abuse would have
been far less severe.
212. Studies of socio-economic factors in drinking alcoholic beverages
show that the HIGHEST consumption levels are found among __________.
a. farmers
b. blue-collar factory workers
c. business and professional men
d. lower white collar clerical workers
e. unskilled laborers
213. The highest consumption rate of alcoholic beverages by females
are found among __________.
a. farm wives
b. factory assembly workers
c. professional and managerial workers
d. service workers
e. clerical and sales personnel
214. Recent decades have seen a dramatic increase in alcoholism among
___________.
a. adult women
b. teenage mothers
c. pre-teen males
d. adult men
e. elderly males
215. Increases in alcoholism among women seem to be MOST related to
a. the elimination of licensing requirements for liquor sales
b. their entry into the labor force in large numbers
c. the decrease in the birth rate
d. increases in the number of legal abortions
e. recent tendencies toward larger families
216. Investigation of the age and sex factors related to drinking alcoholic
beverages have determined that the HIGHEST rates of heavy drinking occur
among ___________.
a. teenage males
b. men between 21 and 30 years of age
c. women past 65 years of age
d. teenage females
e. men past 65 years of age
217. Investigations of the relationship between religious affiliation
and drinking alcoholic beverages demonstrate all of the following EXCEPT
a. More Catholics than the members of other religious groups are both
drinkers and heavy drinkers
b. Regular churchgoers drink less than nonchurchgoers
c. Jews have a high rate of heavy and problem drinking because of the
ritual use of alcohol
d. Among regular churchgoers, the heaviest drinking is found among
Episcopalians
e. Among regular churchgoers, the lightest drinking is found among
conservative and fundamental Protestants.
218. Which cultural influence is associated with HIGH rates of problem
drinking and alcoholism?
a. drinking alcoholic beverages in moderate amounts at meals
b. drinking outside the home and/or not at meals
c. drinking in a family setting from an early age
d. belonging to a group in which drinking habits are established by
cultural custom
e. drinking frequently in social settings, but rarely to the point
of drunkenness
219. Although rates of alcohol consumption among Americans remain generally
high, there has been a marked decline in drinking behavior among ___________.
a. upwardly mobile members of the middle-class
b. upper-class professional and business executives
c. blue-collar football fans
d. downwardly mobile industrial workers
e. the poor
220. __________ is the most widely used drug among teenage and pre-teen
American youth today.
a. Cocaine
b. Tobacco (nicotine)
c. Marijuana
d. Alcohol
e. Heroin
221. National data show that nearly ______________ percent of Americans
between the ages of 12 and 17 have used alcohol.
a. 10
b. 25
c. 50
d. 90
e. 100
222. Which of the following observations is not true of alcoholic teenagers
in comparison to other adolescent drinkers? Alcoholic teenagers
a. drink more often
b. more likely drink in groups of friends
c. consume greater quantities of alcohol
d. more often drink purposely to get drunk
e. more frequently have severe emotional problems
223. The major influence on whether a young person drinks or not seems
to be
a. the legal age for consumption of alcoholic beverages
b. his or her parents and his or her peers
c. how widely alcoholic beverages are advertised
d. how infiltrated the area is by organized crime
e. how many “hard” drugs are available as alternatives
224. The life expectancy of alcoholics is 10-12 years less than for
nonalcoholics because
a. alcohol has calories, but few vital nutrients
b. long term consumption destroys liver cells and replaces them with
scar tissue
c. alcohol consumption may contribute to cancer
d. all of the above
e. none of the above
225. Alcohol is a factor in about ___________ percent of all traffic
fatalities and those resulting in serious injuries.
a. 10
b. 15
c. 25
d. 40
e. 75
226. In 1994, ___________ percent of all nonserious crimes involved
drunkenness or an offense related to violations of liquor laws.
a. 2.8
b. 5.7
c. 8.1
d. 10.5
e. 29.2
227. Alcohol is an important factor in which of the following crimes?
a. drunkenness and liquor violations
b. homicide
c. sex offenses
d. all of the above
e. none of the above
228. Families that adjust to the presence of an alcoholic husband/father
often find themselves
a. redefining their roles so that many of the functions of the adult
male are assumed by the wife/mother
b. in a position where the children assume dominance
c. recognizes that the only solution is family-based therapy which
includes all family members
d. usually able to adjust without serious strain
e. economically hurt, but able to function socially
229. Which of the following does NOT characterize the homeless alcoholic?
a. a desire to separate themselves from the past
b. a lack of social affiliation
c. a general attitude of laziness and indifference
d. a strong need to escape from the realities of life
e. a desire to drink
230. In a study of homeless male alcoholics in Baltimore, ___________
percent of those interviewed said that their drinking had led them to become
homeless.
a. 29
b. 39
c. 59
d. 69
e. 79
231. Aside from the program’s voluntary nature, which of the following
seems to be the most important factor in the successes of Alcoholics Anonymous?
a. teaching about the harmful affects of alcohol
b. moral preaching about the sinfulness of alcohol
c. the psychotherapy that all undergo
d. the drug therapy that is central to the program
e. the strong peer group supports given the reforming alcoholic
232. ___________ appears to be the most successful large-scale program
for dealing with alcoholism.
a. Alcoholics Anonymous
b. In-patient hospital programs
c. Antabuse programs
d. Individual psychotherapy
e. Out-patient drug therapy programs
233. Central to the Alcoholics Anonymous program is the view of alcoholism
as
a. an obsession
b. a moral character deficiency
c. a crime
d. an infection
e. an allergy
234. ___________ is a prescription drug that sensitizes the patient
in such a way that consuming even a small quantity of alcohol causes strong
and uncomfortable physical symptoms.
a. Methadone
b. Cycladone
c. Zoloft
d. Antabuse
e. Reacticin
235. __________ reflect(s) a relatively new development that has demonstrated
considerable effectiveness in treating problem drinkers in the workplace.
a. Alcoholics Anonymous
b. Rational Recovery
c. Employee assistance programs
d. Secular Organization for Sobriety
e. Alanon
236. The __________ intervention, a technique for intervening in the
lives of alcoholics or drug abusers, is one of many “tough love” strategies
that have emerged in recent years.
a. Johnson
b. Thompson
c. Ford
d. Clinton
e. Nixon
237. Definitions of what is considered an illegal drug change as culture
and customs change. An example of this in your text is that
a. alcohol is sometimes part of religious ceremonies
b. cocaine was once an additive to Coca-Cola
c. some chocolates contain alcoholic substances
d. rum was used by the British Navy as a disease preventative
e. marijuana has medicinal uses
238. The highly addictive substance, “crack” is produced from ___________.
a. cocaine
b. marijuana
c. morphine
d. heroin
e. hallucinogens
239. Recent studies show that cocaine use has become more prevalent
a. than alcohol use
b. among middle-and working-class Americans
c. than marijuana use
d. than smoking tobacco
e. among the well-to-do than among working-class Americans
240. When the heroin user steals, the theft is due to
a. the physiological and psychological effects of the substance, eliciting
criminal tendencies
b. attempts to avoid withdrawal symptoms of the drug
c. subcultural pressures placed upon the heroin user by other thieves
d. the stimulation of the nervous system that results from the intake
of heroin
e. the need to achieve status within one’s group
241. ___________, often legally prescribed by physicians, can be associated
with coma, psychosis, and suicidal depression when they are abused.
a. Hallucinogens
b. Barbiturates
c. Amphetamines
d. Heroin and other opiates
e. Synthetic opiates
242. ___________, which are central nervous system depressants, can
cause a physical dependence believed to be more dangerous than heroin.
a. Amphetamines
b. Hallucinogens
c. Cocaine and crack
d. Barbiturates
e. Marijuana and tobacco (nicotine)
243. Among the most important factors in beginning illicit drug use
is
a. the opportunity to use drugs through acquaintance with a user
b. psychological problems that predispose one to drug use
c. whether one has smoked tobacco
d. the enforcement policy of local law enforcement
e. one’s occupation
244. Data gathered by annual surveys on drug use show that illicit drug
use by young people and adults peaked in the late
a. 1950s
b. 1960s
c. 1970s
d. 1980s
e. 1990s
245. Lloyd D. Johnson is one of the key researchers in the University
of Michigan drug studies. Johnson and other drug researchers have
noted that there is a/an ___________ relationship between teenagers’ disapproval
of drugs and their use of drugs like marijuana.
a. linear
b. inverse (negative)
c. positive
d. curvilinear
e. skewed
246. A survey conducted by Denise Kandel and her associates showed that
a. affluent teenage students are substantially more likely to experiment
with and use illicit drugs than are those from modest and poor backgrounds
b. poverty-stricken youth are much more likely to use illicit drugs
in comparison with their affluent counterparts
c. working class youths are more likely to use illicit drugs than are
affluent teenage students
d. nearly 100 percent of affluent teenage students will use illicit
drugs
e. none of the above
247. Which of the following best explains how drug use spreads?
a. Drug use is learned through influences coming from one’s peers
b. Drug use is spread through the use of contaminated drug paraphernalia
c. Drug use is linked to genetic disposition
d. Drug use involves a sequence that starts with alcohol use, spreads
through marijuana use, and inevitably ends with addiction to the “hard”
drugs
e. Those addicted recruit newcomers in order to sell them “hard” drugs.
248. According to the “stepping stone” interpretation of marijuana use
a. marijuana use inevitably leads to the use of hard drugs, like heroin
b. Marijuana use involves a desire to physically move while “stoned”
c. Using marijuana is a step on the path to crime
d. Marijuana use brings one into contact with criminals
e. Getting stoned is a step on the path to true consciousness
249. Which of the following seems t be the most effective way to diminish
drug use?
a. severe punishments in the criminal justice system
b. exposure to a social milieu that supports nonuse
c. psychotherapy
d. drug avoidance therapies
e. urging the consumption of alternatives, like alcohol
250. ___________ is/are most frequently associated with various kinds
of criminal behavior.
a. Heroin and crack
b. Amphetamines
c. Marijuana
d. Alcohol
e. Barbiturates
251. In 1988, the Dept. of Justice reported that __________ of
the men arrested for serious crimes in 12 major cities tested positive
for recent use of illicit drugs.
a. one-fourth to one-half
b. one-third to one-half
c. one-half to three-fourths
d. two-thirds to three-fourths
e. 100 percent