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Crime & Deviance
Theories
Interactionist
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Cards (50)
What do labelling/interactionist theorists reject about official statistics on crime?
They claim they are a social
construction
and underestimate crime.
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What do labelling/interactionist theorists focus
on
instead of
structural
causal
explanations
of
crime
?
They
focus
on
how
crime
and
deviance
are
socially
constructed.
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What qualitative approaches do labelling/interactionist theorists prefer to study crime and deviance?
They prefer
informal interviews
,
observation
, and
personal documents
.
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Who maintains that crime and deviance are based on subjective decisions made by moral entrepreneurs?
Becker
(
1963
).
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How do powerful agencies of social control influence deviance according to Becker?
They
label
certain behaviors as
deviant.
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What example does Becker provide to illustrate the social construction of mental illness?
Psychiatrists have 'created' mental illnesses such as
nightmare disorder
.
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Who argues that the idea of 'juvenile delinquency' was created by upper-class Victorian moral entrepreneurs?
Platt
(
1969
).
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According to Becker, how does crime and deviance vary?
It
varies
over
time
and
between
cultures.
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Give an example of how deviance is viewed differently in various countries.
Prostitution is illegal in the
UK
but legal in Germany and the
Netherlands
.
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What do ethnomethodologists argue about deviance?
They argue that 'deviance is in the eye of the
beholder
.'
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How do art critics illustrate the subjective nature of deviance?
Some see
conceptual artists'
work as deviant, while others celebrate it.
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What does Becker claim about the extent and distribution of crime and deviance?
It is shaped by
selective law enforcement
.
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According to
Becker
, what factors influence whether a
deviant
is labelled?
It depends on who
committed
the act and the
negotiations
between
social
actors.
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Who is more likely to be labelled as deviant according to Becker?
Powerless
groups, including the young.
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What do official statistics reveal about the likelihood of being stopped and searched by police?
Blacks
are
seven times
more likely to be stopped and searched than whites.
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What does Circourel (
1968
) suggest about the use of
official statistics
?
They should be used as a
'topic'
to
investigate
further.
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What did Piliavin & Briar (1964) find regarding police decisions to arrest youth?
Arrests were based on
physical cues
such as manner and dress.
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How can labelling by powerful agencies affect deviance according to
Becker
?
It can
amplify deviance
through
societal reactions.
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What is a 'master status' in the context of labelling theory?
It is a label that dominates how others perceive an individual.
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What is a self-fulfilling prophecy in relation to labelling theory?
It occurs when the labelled individual accepts the
deviant
label and acts accordingly.
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How does Goffman (1968) support Becker's claims about labelling?
He highlights how
societal reactions
lead to mortification and stigma.
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What criticism does
Fuller
(1984) make about
labelling
theory?
She argues that it is too
deterministic
and does not account for
resistance
to
labels.
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How did the 'non-conformist' girls in Fuller's study respond to negative teacher labelling?
They
rejected
the
labelling
and used it as
motivation
for
success.
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What distinction does Lemert (1951) make regarding deviance?
He distinguishes between
primary
and
secondary
deviance.
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What is primary deviance according to Lemert?
It is deviance that has not been labelled and has few consequences.
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What happens once deviance is labelled according to Lemert?
It becomes
secondary deviance
and affects the individual significantly.
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How does societal reaction through the media amplify deviance?
It creates
moral panics
that increase social control and deviance.
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What empirical support does Young (1971) provide
regarding
labelling and
deviant
subcultures
?
Hippies
in
Notting
Hill
developed a deviant subculture after being labelled.
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What social policy solutions does labelling theory suggest regarding laws?
Agencies
should make and enforce fewer laws, such as
decriminalizing
'soft' drugs.
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What does Braithwaite (1989) argue about crime rates and shaming methods?
Crime rates tend to be lower in societies with
reintegrative shaming
.
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What do interactionists criticize about Durkheim's study of suicide?
They criticize his reliance on
official statistics
.
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What qualitative methods do interactionists like Douglas advocate for studying suicide?
They advocate for analyzing suicide notes and conducting
unstructured interviews
.
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What do interactionists aim to uncover by analyzing suicide notes?
They aim to discover the true meaning behind the
labels
attached to deaths.
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Why do interactionists reject official statistics on mental illness?
They regard them as
social constructs
.
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What do interactionists argue about the nature of crime, suicide, and mental illness statistics?
They argue these statistics are
artefacts
created by humans, not objective facts.
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What does Lemert's (1962) study of paranoia illustrate about labelling?
It shows how
primary deviance
leads to
secondary deviance
through
social exclusion
.
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What do other sociological approaches accuse interactionists of regarding
official
statistics?
They
accuse
interactionists
of
too
readily
dismissing
them.
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What do realists argue about the usefulness of official statistics?
They argue that while
biased
, they show the
basic reality
of
crime.
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What do Marxists argue about the power dynamics in labelling theory?
They argue it has a weak view of power and
social control
.
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How do Marxists view the relationship between law creation and social control?
They argue it protects the interests of the
ruling class
.
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