Asquith et al. (2017

1234567891011121314
Across
  1. 3. – Relating to prisons, detention, or broader systems of incarceration.
  2. 9. – A perspective focusing on biological and psychological development in explaining crime.
  3. 11. – A social process that excludes groups, contributing to queer pathways to crime.
  4. 13. – Familial rejection often leading queer youth into survival crimes.
  5. 14. – The assumption that heterosexuality is the norm, shaping laws and policies.
Down
  1. 1. – A process by which states and institutions monitor and regulate queer lives.
  2. 2. – Type of research that studies brain and developmental factors influencing behavior.
  3. 4. – The academic discipline concerned with studying crime and criminal behavior.
  4. 5. – Being shut out of full participation in society, often tied to queer identities.
  5. 6. – The assumption that all people identify with the gender assigned at birth.
  6. 7. – The process of stopping or reducing criminal behavior over time.
  7. 8. – A lens that destabilizes taken-for-granted ideas about offending and desistance.
  8. 10. – Researcher who developed the life-course-persistent vs adolescence-limited offending model.
  9. 12. – Framework considering how class, race, gender, and sexuality intersect in experiences of criminalisation.