Labelling

Cards (10)

  • Piliavin and Briar
    police decisions to arrest were based on stereotypical ideas about a person's manner, dress, gender, class and ethnicity and the time and place
  • Howard Becker said that crime is socially constructed
    1. People commit deviant acts
    2. labelled as deviant
    3. the person themselves and society sees themselves as deviant
    4. self-fulfilling prophecy (they become the label)
    5. Once you have been labelled by the police, a individual accepts the label, internalises it and then acts it out
  • Lemert -
    • Rather than looking at the causes of deviance, he was more interested In looking at the reactions to deviant behaviour
    • Those committing crimes were likely to be influenced by the reactions of others to their acts
    • Initial primary acts of deviance could lead to secondary acts of deviance
  • Lemert stated that Societal reaction is the main cause of crime
  • Primary deviance -
    • Deviant acts that have not been publicly labelled as criminal
    • Something that many of us have engaged in e.g. stealing
    • Often not noticed by others
    • Only minor effects on their personal status
  • Secondary deviance -
    As a result of being labelled, the person internalises the label and acts accordingly by commit more deviant acts (self-fulfilling prophecy)
  • Master status - the person labelled themselves as deviant will ultimately come to see themselves as bad
    • All other qualities become unimportant
    • As a result of secondary deviance, a convict may find it hard to get a job and turn to deviant subculture.
  • Strengths
    • Raises the issue of skewed official crime stats - working class people are the most likely to commit crime and are more likely to be labelled negatively.
    • Crime data reflects labelling rather than actual criminality
    • Helps showcase how controlling deviance can spiral and create further deviance which suggests different methods are needed such as less controlling and challenging methods
  • Limitations
    • Explains why crime may spiral when controlled but not why crime occurs in the first place
    • Assumes that we are determined by our labels but there are people who resist them and does not affect everyone the same