Differential Association

    Cards (10)

    • Differential Association
      Learn the behaviours, values, attitudes and techniques from association and interaction with others, as a cultural tradition
    • Socialisation
      Process of which individuals learn norms and values
    • Sutherland (1924)

      Theory of scientific principles that could explain all types of offending
      • Learned rather than inherited
      • Vary in frequency
      • Association learning through personal groups
      • Favourable attitudes outweight unfavourable, becoming criminal
    • Frequency + Intensity + Duration = Likelihood of Offending
    • Pro-Criminal Attitudes
      Different deviant norms and values
    • Reinforcement
      Behaviours are reinforced through reward, expectation and approval from other people
    • Offending techniques are passed through generations, kept in the family
    • (+) A03: Social Groups
      Explains why certain crimes are committed by certain social groups e.g. white collar crimes, as they are learnt through association
    • (+) A03: Rejects Racism
      Went against other explanations supporting the eugenics movement like Atavistic form as an explanation for crime, moved psychology away from that idea
    • (-) A03: Correlational
      Differential association is hard to prove, the amount of socialisation cannot be operationalised, creating a correlational link rather than causal, it may be that offenders seek out others rather than being around them initially