differential association theory

    Cards (5)

    • theory proposes individuals learn values, attitudes, techniques and motives for criminal behaviour through association and interaction with different people
    • scientific basis
      • Sutherland set himself the task of developing a set of scientific principles that could explain all types of offending - 'conditions said to cause crime should be present when crime is present, and absent when crime is absent'
    • crime as a learned behaviour
      • offending behaviour may be acquired through interactions with significant others that the child associates with
      • two factors: learned attitudes towards crime, and the learning of specific criminal acts
    • pro-criminal attitudes
      • when person is socialised into group, they are exposed to values and attitudes towards law, some pro, some anti-crime
      • Sutherland argues if the pro outweighs the ani, they will go on to offend
      • suggests it should be mathematically possible to predict how likely an individual is to commit, based on frequency, intensity and duration of which they are exposed to deviant and non-deviant norms and values
    • learning criminal acts
      • may learn particular techniques for committing crime
      • accounts for how crime may breed amongst specific social groups and communities
      • also accounts for why so many convicts released from prison go on to reoffend - learn techniques from other inmates and more experienced criminals - eager to put into practise upon release - may be through direct tuition or through observing and imitating