Across
- 2. (the theory that compliance with social norms requires strong bonds between individuals and society)
- 4. (deviance in which an individual's life and identity are organized around breaking society's norms)
- 8. (a social condition in which norms are weak, conflicting, or absent)
- 9. (job-related crimes committed by high-status people)
- 11. (the theory that individuals learn deviance in proportion to the number of deviant acts and norms in which they are exposed)
- 13. (a method of protecting society from criminals by keeping them in prison)
- 17. (the process of reducing the seriousness of the crimes that injure people of lower status)
- 19. (an act committed in violation of the law)
- 20. (the theory that deviance is more likely to occur when a gap exists between cultural goals and the ability to achieve them)
- 21. (a person who breaks significant societal or group norms)
- 24. (a system comprising institutions and processes responsible for enforcing criminal statutes)
Down
- 1. (an undesirable label that is used to deny a deviant social acceptance)
- 3. (ways to encourage conformity to society's norms)
- 5. (the process of changing or reforming a criminal through socialization)
- 6. (rewards or punishments that encourage conformity to social norms)
- 7. (discouraging criminal acts by threatening punishment)
- 10. (punishment intended to make criminals pay compensation for their acts)
- 12. (a repetition of, or return to, criminal behavior)
- 14. (behavior that departs from societal or group norms)
- 15. (the theory that society creates deviance by identifying particular members as deviant)
- 16. (punishment intended to make criminals pay monetary compensation to make up for the financial damage caused by their acts)
- 18. (behavior that under-conforms to accepted norms)
- 22. (behavior that overconforms to social expectations)
- 23. (deviance involving occasional breaking of norms that is not a part of a person's lifestyle or self-concept)