How does deviant behavior differ from one cultural context to another? Provide examples Deviant behavior could be relative (limited) to place and time, as what is considered deviant in one context may not be so in another (e.g. kissing the boy or girl in an open space is deviant in my context, but may not be deviant somewhere else). Killing another human being is considered wrong, but when governments allow it during a war or in self-defense, then it is okay. What do we mean when we say that “crime is a social construction”? Crime is socially constructed. The reason is that its existence would not be explained as independent but, instead, is constructed by a certain society and depends on the "when and where" research applies. There is no intrinsically criminal behavior without a collective entity that formulates it thus. What I understood from the readings, criminal acts are not static but constantly change over time, as vibrant as the perspective fluctuations within society.4. Complete the review exercise on page. 17 by Bradley and Walter
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