Differential association theory

Cards (10)

    • Differential association theory: An explanation for offending which proposes that, through interactions with others, individuals learn values, attitudes, techniques and motives for offending behaviour
    • Sutherland set himself the task of developing a set of scientific principles that could explain all types of offending
    • 'the conditions that cause crime should be present when crime is present, and absent when crime is absent'
    • His theory was designed to discriminate between individuals who become offenders and those who don't, whatever their social class or ethnic background
  • Offending as learned behaviour
    • This learning occurs through interactions with significant others who the child values most and spends most time with, such as family or friend group
    • Differential association suggests that it should be mathematically possible to predict how likely it is an individual will commit an offence,
    • To do this we need to know the frequency, intensity and duration of exposure to deviant and non-deviant norms and values
    • Offending arises from 2 factors
    • Learned attitudes towards offending
    • Learning of specific offending acts/techniques
  • Learning attitudes
    • When a person is socialised into a group they will be exposed to values and attitudes towards the law
    • Some of these attitudes will be pro-crime, some anti-crime
    • Sutherland says if the number of pro-criminal attitudes outweighs the number of anti-criminal attitudes the person acquires, they will go on to offend
  • Learning techniques
    • In addition to being exposed to pro-crime attitudes, the would be offender may also learn particular techniques for committing crime
    • These might include how to break into someone's locked window, how to steal a car etc.
  • Socialisation in prison
    • Sutherlands theory can also explain why so many convicts released from prison reoffend
    • Whilst in prison inmates will learn specific techniques of offending from each other or from more experienced offenders, they can then put this into practice upon release
    • This learning may occur through observational learning and imitation, or direct tuition from peers
  • A03: changed shift of focus of offending explanations
    • Sutherland was successful in moving the emphasis away from early biological accounts of offending , such as Lombroso's atavistic theory
    • Differential association theory draws attention to the fact that deviant social circumstances and environment may be to blame for offending
    • This approach is more desirable as it offers a more realistic solution to the problem of offending instead of eugenics (biological)
  • CC: Differential association does run the risk of stereotyping people who come from crime-ridden backgrounds
    • Even though Sutherland took great care to consider offending in an individual case-by-case basis, the theory suggests that exposure to pro-crime values is sufficient to produce offending behaviour
    • This therefore ignores people who choose not to offend despite being exposed to it, as not everyone who is exposed to pro-crime attitudes goes on to offend.
  • A03: theory can account for all sectors of offending
    • Whilst Sutherland recognised some types of offence, such as burglary, may be clustered to certain inner-city working-class areas, it is also the case that some offences cluster amongst more affluent groups
    • Sutherland was particularly interested in 'white-collar' crime , and how this is a feature if middle class social groups who share the same deviant norms and values
    • This shows it is not just 'lower' classes that commit crimes, and that differential association theory can be used to explain all offences
  • A03: (-) it is difficult to test the predictions of differential association theory
    • Sutherland aimed to provide a scientific, mathematical framework within which future offending can be predicted, prediction must be testable
    • Problem is many of the concepts are not testable- not operationalised.
    • For example it is hard to see how many pro-crime attitudes a person has can be measured, or how much a person has been exposed to pro-crime attitudes
    • Without being able to measure these how can we know if the number of pro-crime values outnumbers the anti-crime values
    • no scientific credibility