Right realism

    Cards (21)

    • Realist approaches to crime arose
      1970's/1980's
    • Realist approaches to crime
      • Left realism
      • Right realism
    • Realists
      • They accept the 'typical criminal' as portrayed in the OCS and believe these do reflect real crimes
      • They challenge some of the traditional theories for being too idealist and romanticising crime
      • They share a concern that crime has a corrosive impact on communities and victims
      • They aim to provide practical solutions to the problem of crime
    • Right Realists
      • Conservatives who see the causes of crime as partly biological and partly social
      • They see it as a rational choice based on calculating risks, therefore deterrence is the answer
    • Left Realists
      • Reformist socialists who identify relative deprivation, subculture and marginalisation as the causes, which are increasing in late modern societies
      • The solution is to reduce inequality and improve policing
    • Crime destroys communities and undermines social cohesion
    • Right Realism
      Control of crime through control and punishment rather than rehabilitation or tackling other causes such as poverty
    • Key thinker
      James Wilson
    • Key Term
      Zero Tolerance
    • Right Realism has been VERY influential in UK and USA and is closely linked to the NEW RIGHT and the Conservative governments of the 1980s and 1990's
    • Right realist theories
      • They criticise other theories for failing to provide practical solutions to the problem of raising crime rates
      • They see other theories as too sympathetic to the criminal and too hostile towards the forces of law
      • Significant shift in thinking from the search for the cause of crime to a search for practical solutions and crime control measures
    • Although solution focused they do offer some explanations for the causes of crime
    • They reject the Marxist interpretation that poverty and inequality cause crime (many poor people do not commit crime)
    • Socialisation and the Underclass
      • Effective socialisation reduces the risk of offending – self-control, right from wrong. The best agency to do this is the FAMILY
      • The underclass is growing in the UK and USA due to the culture of welfare dependency
    • Bennett, Dilulio and Walters (1996): 'Crime is rising due to 'growing up surrounded by deviant, delinquent and criminal adults in a practically criminogenic environment – that is (one) that seems almost consciously designed to produce vicious, predatory unrepentant street criminals''
    • Biological Differences
      • Crime is an activity disproportionately committed by young men living in large cities
      • Biological differences make some more predisposed to crime – aggression, extroversion, risk taking (in young men)
      • Low intelligence is seen as biologically determined and the main cause of crime
    • Rational Choice Theory
      • Individuals have free will and the power of reason
      • Committing crime is a CHOICE based on a rational calculation of the likely consequences/risk
      • If the rewards outweigh the risk then people will be more likely to offend
    • If the supply and value of legitimate opportunities (i.e. jobs) was declining at the very time that the cost of illegitimate opportunities (i.e. fines and jail terms) was also declining, a rational teenager might well conclude that it made more sense to steal cars than to wash them
    • Routine Activity Theory
      • Crime needs a motivated offender, a suitable target and the absence of a capable guardian
      • Offenders are assumed to act rationally – the presence of a guardian is likely to deter offences
      • Informal guardians (community) are more effective than formal ones
    • Florida 1982 – patrols by citizens to protect private property after Hurricane Andrew prevented looting and crime rates reduced
    • Right Realist Solutions to Crime
      • They do not focus on treating the underlying causes of crime (biosocial or socialisation) as they believe these cannot be changed
      • They seek practical measures to make crime less ATTRACTIVE
      • Their focus – control, containment and punishment of offenders rather than eliminating an underlying cause
      • Examples – Zero Tolerance, Broken Windows Theory and Target Hardening
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