Type a new keyword(s) and press Enter to search

Theories and Methodoligies of Criminal Behavior

 

            Criminal behavior within humans as a society have effect on certain individuals through biological, psychological, and sociological theories. These ideas interact with certain people in numerous, diverse ways and some not at all. People who commit crime have that drive to do so, they get a powerful feeling before, during, and after the act of criminal behavior. Biological theories deal with studies influenced by families, genetics, the way one was brought up and even regions of development. Psychological ideas about reasons criminals do what they do is based upon the main aspects of personality, id, ego, and super ego. These play a big role in a person's decision making throughout life, which can be influenced by ways of being nurtured and social environments. The sociological section of understanding crime is focused mainly around the boundaries of the norms and values of a certain society. Each idea about human beings thinking consciously or even subconsciously about crime correlate with one another to determine what is a greater stimulus on people developing criminal deviance, nature or nurture. Nature theories assert that the etiology of criminal behavior is biologically based in genetic inheritance and the structure and functions of people's brains and other psychological responses. The nurture theory holds that genetic influence over abstract traits may exist; however, the environmental factors are the real origins of our behavior. Deviance in crime, the ways people escape the norms of a society, connect to the researchers theories of people in development of biological, psychological, and sociological ways through evaluations and disparities of each study. .
             Biological framework for reasons of criminal behavior start with studies regarding family and gene make up. Researches by looking at family history could see if crime is a common tendency we should be wary about. It obviously showed that families had inherited the criminal actions with generations of the identical activities going on.


Essays Related to Theories and Methodoligies of Criminal Behavior