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    Criminological Theories

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    Student Study Guide for Ronald L. Akers and Christine S. Sellers’ Criminological Theories: Introduction‚ Evaluation‚ and Applications Fourth Edition Prepared by Eric See Youngstown State University Roxbury Publishing Company Los Angeles‚ California 1 Student Study Guide by Eric See for Criminological Theories: Introduction‚ Evaluation‚ and Application ‚ 4th Edition by Ronald L. Akers and Christine S. Sellers Copyright © 2004 Roxbury Publishing Company‚ Los Angeles‚ California

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    The Case Study of Ted Bundy Theresa Matson PSY410 November 7‚ 2011 Nichelle J. Gause‚ LPC‚ NCC The Case Study of Ted Bundy Ted Bundy was a charismatic‚ handsome person‚ while at the same time he was a pathological liar and one of the country’s worst serial killers. His life was headed for trouble from very early on‚ an unstable home life‚ interest in crimes‚ killing and sexual assault‚ and feeling alone and forgotten. His low socioeconomic status was cause for concern for him and his

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    Criminological Theory

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    INTRODUCTION Criminological theories have rarely been concerned with the analysis of female criminality. Typically criminologists have either been content to subsume discussion of women offenders under ‘general’ theories‚ that is to say they have implicitly assumed the female is dealt with in discussing the male‚ or they have dealt with them exceptionally briefly in the way that other ‘marginal’ or ‘special’ categories are treated. The reason offered for this overwhelming lack of interest is that

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    Serial Killers: Ted Bundy

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    educational purposes rather than for personal entertainment. I started to drift off as the narrator began describing a man named Theodore Robert Bundy as an intelligent‚ articulate‚ and charming member of society‚ but what woke me up and held my attention for the duration of the film was the narrator’s abrupt change in tone and the coldly stated fact that “Ted Bundy raped and murdered scores of women by strangling and mutilating his victims.” This seemingly perfect man is one of the most infamous serial

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    Criminological Theory

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    Personal Criminological Theory: What Causes Crime? April Cox CJA/540 Criminological Theory October 3‚ 2011 Angela Williams Personal Criminological Theory: What Causes Crime? Over the centuries of time various scientists have tried to explain the reasons behind the causes associated with crime and criminal behavior. Dozens of theories have been argued both for and against one another to address the question as to what causes individuals to commit crime. The goal of this paper

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    psychological perspectives the actions of the serial killer‚ Ted Bundy‚ can be analysed and an incentive for his crimes can be inferred. Through the behavioral perspective‚ motives for Ted Bundy’s murders can be observed and linked to anything that he was exposed to. Ted Bundy’s mother‚ Louise Cowell‚ was unmarried when she had Bundy. To avoid the humiliation that was usually associated with birth out of wedlock‚ Bundy’s maternal

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    Ted Bundy: Serial Killer

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    Ted bundy was a natural born serial killer and rapist during the 1970’s‚ and claimed to be involved in over 100 killings throughout 7 states in the u.s. With the devious mind he had possessed throughout his famous career as a serial killer‚ he often had no reason for suspicion and lived a happy life alone. Soon after his first killings‚ ted had developed a specific pattern of victims‚ and way of killing them. The fun bundy had been experiencing was about to be over‚ while sexually assaulting his

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    Criminological Theory

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    Title Throughout the course of criminological study‚ scholars have relied heavily on three different theoretical perspectives‚ with each perspective budding its own attitude in understanding crime‚ thus leading to the development of distinctive approaches to preventing and limiting both crime and deviance. Working in harmony with the three different criminological perspectives‚ scholars and philosophers alike have utilized film in an attempt to draw on widespread attitudes toward crime‚ victims

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    Short Biography: Ted Bundy

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    Ted Bundy was born at the Elizabeth Lund Home for Unwed Mothers which is now known as the Lund Family Center in Burlington‚ Vermont on November 24th 1946 to Eleanor Louise Cowell. His father’s identity was never fully determined but his birth certificate says his dad is was a salesman and an Air Force veteran named Lloyd Marshall‚ but Elizabeth later claimed that she was seduced by a sailor who she says she thinks his name was Jack Worthington. Years later they would come to discover that there was

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    Ted Bundy Case Study

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    1. Holmes and De Burger identify 4 types of serial killers. Which type do you consider the most dangerous to society and why? Identify a serial killer of that type and explain why he fits into that particular category. The type of serial killer I find to be the most dangerous to society is the hedonistic type‚ because I have noticed that they are in the category of killers most likely to kill slowly‚ and to drag out the pain their victims feel. John Wayne Gacy was one such serial killer‚ as a

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