Decriminalisation - Study guides, Revision notes & Summaries
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WJEC CRIMINOLOGY UNIT 1 AC1.3 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS A+ GRADED. Buy Quality Materials!
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WJEC CRIMINOLOGY UNIT 1 AC1.3 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS A+ GRADED. Buy Quality Materials! 
 
Ripple Effect 
This describes how the impact of a crime can spread beyond the primary victim throughout their family, friends or community. 
Cultural 
This can cause from a criminal action to become illegal in one country but still remain legal in another as it is not known that it is an issue. On top of this if in a culture a crime is thought to be fine to commit like honour killings then as they don͛t con...
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Criminology Unit 1: AC 1.3 write up model answer
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These are my answers that I used to achieve a near perfect 98/100 marks on the Year 12 Unit 1 Criminology controlled assessment. Of course, I changed it as needed during the exam, but these were the backbones of my answers. This resource covers AC 1.3. This detailed answer is well-developed after the feedback of my teachers! 
• decriminalisation 
• police prioritisation 
• the 'dark figure of crime' 
• the 'ripple effect'
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UK politics essay plans 100% PASSED
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Evaluate the view pressure groups enhance democracy - ANS For: 
- Counter balance the tyranny of the majority e.g. Stonewall and the legalisation of gay marriage 
- Act as a limit to government power e.g. extinction rebellion, committing to zero carbon emissions by 
2025 
- Bring expert knowledge to governments attention e.g. CBI 
Counter arguments: 
- Leads to tyranny of minority e.g. opposition to HS2 
- Undermines parliaments sovereignty e.g. private healthcare companies helping draft health ...
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unit 1 wjec criminology Exam Questions and Answers
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reasons for not reporting a crime (9) - Answer- fear, shame, disinterest, loyalty, love, not affected, lack of knowledge, lack of current public concern, culture-bound crime 
 
consequences of unreported crime [8] - Answer- ripple effect, 
cultural, 
decriminalisation, 
police prioritisation, 
unrecorded crime, 
cultural change, 
legal change, 
procedural change 
 
media used to represent crime [6] - Answer- newspaper, 
tv, 
films, 
electronic gaming, 
social media, 
music, 
 
impact ...
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WJEC Criminology Unit 1-Questions and Answers
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Organised Crime - Answer- criminal activities that are planned and controlled by powerful groups and carried out on a large scale. 
 
White Collar Crime - Answer- Nonviolent crime committed by individuals or corporations to obtain a personal or business advantage. 
 
Moral Crimes - Answer- Crimes against the normal standards of morality in society 
 
State Crimes - Answer- Crimes perpetrated by governments 
 
Technological Crimes - Answer- Also known as cybercrimes 
 
Adam Pearson - Answer- A vi...
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WJEC Criminology Applied Diploma Unit 2: AC1.2
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How can laws change by place? Based on criminal offenses in different countries - answer-the same criminal offenses are not necessarily in place throughout the whole world or even policed the same way as in england and wales 
 
How can laws change by time? Based on views/opinions/campaigns/medical knowledge - answer-views/opinions can change overtime, campaigns can promote change or for change to occur, can be change as medical knowledge advances 
 
How did homosexuality laws change by time in t...
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WJEC Criminology Unit 1 questions and answers 2023
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WJEC Criminology Unit 1 questions and answers 2023Organised Crime 
criminal activities that are planned and controlled by powerful groups and carried out on a large scale. 
 
 
 
White Collar Crime 
Nonviolent crime committed by individuals or corporations to obtain a personal or business advantage. 
 
 
 
Moral Crimes 
Crimes against the normal standards of morality in society 
 
 
 
State Crimes 
Crimes perpetrated by governments 
 
 
 
Technological Crimes 
Also known as cybercrimes 
 
 
 
Ad...
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CMY3702 - TUT 101 /Updated 2024 All Questions and Answers
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An example of white-collar crime includes: - Money laundering activities 
 
The organisation WHISPER works for the decriminalisation of prostitution and can be categorised as: - Radicalist Feminists 
 
From a criminological perspective, Siegel (2004) defines a public order crime as a: - Crime which involves acts that interfere with the operations of society and the ability of people to function efficiently 
 
The theoretical explanation of conservation crime employs a combin...
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WJEC Criminology UNIT 1: AC1.3
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The exact notes that helped me achieve 97/100 on the assessment, I hope they're helpful. 
Please do not copy as it could harm your own set of work.
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AC.1.3 Explain the consequences of unreported crime(A+ graded 100% verified)
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AC.1.3 Explain the consequences of unreported crime(A+ graded 100% verifiedRipple effect - Describes how the impact of crime can spread be on the immediate affect him throughout his or her family friends and community 
Cultural consequences - Make criminal actions in one country illegal or legal and not another 
Decriminalisation - Something stops being illegal and becomes illegal. Laws are frequently altered cause they cannot be imposed or enforced 
Police prioritisation - Police priori...
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