Crime & Deviance

    Cards (118)

    • Crime as a social construction:
      HISTORICALLY
      • Behaviour changes over time - what once was accepted may not be now and vice versa
      • EG. Cocaine in medicine, homosexuality being illegal
    • Crime as a social construction
      CONTEXTUALLY
      • Behaviours accepted in certain situations would not be in others
      • EG. Bikini on a beach vs school
    • Crime as a social construction
      AGE
      • Some behaviours are/are not accepted in some ages
      • EG. 8 year old gambling
    • Functionalist View
      DURKHEIM
      4 Functions of crime:
      • Boundary Maintenance - crime in society reinforces what is acceptable by showing punishments
      • Social Change - some deviance is necessary to allow society to progress (Sarah's Law)
      • Warning Device - an increase in a certain crime can be an indication that society is not functioning properly
      • Safety Valve - minor crimes can prevent larger crimes from happening
    • A03 Of Durkheim's View
      Marx - Ignores the role the powerful have in shaping what is criminal
      • Also doesn't quantify how much crime is beneficial.
    • Functionalist View
      MERTON
      Strain Theory:
      • Based on the 'American dream' - crime is a response to the strain placed on people to achieve the goals of society
      TYPES OF STRAIN:
      • Conformity - accepting goals and means
      • Innovation - accepting goals, using a different set of means
      • Ritualism - following means to achieve goals, but giving up
      • Rebellion - rejecting the goals of society, using your own means to reach your own goals
      • Retreatism - reject goals and means completely
    • A03 Of Merton's Theory
      • Overexaggerate the importance of monetary success
      • Doesn't explain why the groups choose the different responses
      • Fails to explain non-utilitarian crime
    • Functionalist View
      HIRSCHI
      • Asks why people do NOT commit crime, those with strong bonds in society are less likely to commit crime
      4 BONDS:
      • Belief
      • Attatchment
      • Involvement
      • Commitment
    • A03 Of Hirschi's View
      • Doesn't explain why the bonds are weak or strong, or how they become so
    • Functionalist View
      COHEN (1971)
      • Working class youths believe in the success goals of mainstream culture, their experiences strip them of the opportunity to. They experience status frustration and form a delinquent subculture
      LINK TO WILLIS - 'THE LADS'
    • Subcultural Theories

      COHEN:
      • Argues that individuals want status, respect and to feel valued. If this is not achieved it leads to status frustration.
      A03 - Only focused on youth crime, ignores female delinquency.
      A03 - Willis - W/C Boys do not share the same ideas of status as M/C.
    • Subcultural Theories
      CLOWARD & OHLIN:
      • Illegitimate opportunity structures - joining a gang and working up the hierarchy.
      3 TYPES:
      • Criminal - characterised by crimes like theft, provides a structure for young criminals
      • Conflict - usually in socially disorganised areas, engage in violence due to status over power
      • Retreatist - emerges amongst the lower classes, failed in crime and legality
      A03: South - 3 subcultures are too distinct, one subculture often emerges into another
    • Subcultural Theories
      MILLER:
      • Identified 6 types of 'focal concerns' of the working class.
      • Smartness, trouble, excitement, toughness, autonomy, fate
      A03 - Not all w/c are criminals
    • Marxist View
      GORDON:
      • Capitalism is criminogenic - by its very nature it leads to crime as it is exploitation of the W/C. The poor may turn to crime to afford necessities.
      • Crime is a rational response to capitalist focus. It is found in all classes despite what official statistics say
      A03 - Not all crime is rational, MAINLY found amongst w/c
    • Marxist View
      REIMAN:
      Selective law enforcement
      • The ruling class are more likely to commit crime and get away with it - EG. PartyGate
      • The CJS system applies the law to classes in different ways. 'One law for one, one for another'
    • Marxist View
      CHAMBLISS:
      Selective law making
      • Laws to protect private property are the cornerstone to a capitalist society
      • Organised crime is a major operation in western capitalist society
      • The ruling class do not introduce laws that will affect them
    • Marxist View
      SNIDER:
      Selective law making
      • Governments are reluctant to pass laws that will affect profitability
    • Marxist View

      BOX:
      • The rich engage in activities that result in death/injury. They are protected with health/safety laws
    • Marxist View

      PEARCE:
      Ideological functions
      • Laws are passed to look like they are a benefit to the W/C. 'Caring face of capitalism'.
    • A03 Of Marxism
      • Ignores other causes of crime - only focus on class, ignores other inequalities eg. gender & ethnicity
      • Crime in communist states - if crime was a sign of capitalism, then communist states would be crime free, not true in EG Russia
      • Ignores victims of crime - most victims are w/c and poor, if Marx's views were accurate then ruling class would be victims
    • Neo-Marxist View

      Agrees with traditional Marxism:
      • Capitalism is based on exploitation and class conflict, understanding this is key to understanding crime
      • The state enforces laws beneficial to the ruling class
      • Capitalism should be replaced with a classless society to reduce crime
    • Neo-Marxist View
      Crime considered voluntarist:
      • Criminals are rational
      • Political motives behind crime
      • Free will
      • Criminals are not passive puppets of capitalism
    • Labelling/Interactionist View

      LEMERT:
      • Primary Deviance: an individual commits an act they know is deviant, no one else knows so no label is attatched
      • Secondary: the act is witnessed so a label is attatched
    • Labelling/Interactionist View
      CICOUREL:
      • Labelling is what leads to selective law enforcement
      • 'Typifications' - police stereotypes of what is a typical criminal
    • Consequences of labelling
      • Self-fulfilling prophecy: Once a person has been labelled, they take on the label and begin to act in that way
      • Deviancy Amplification: An attempt to control crime and deviance leads to more deviance - EG. Mods & rockers (Cohen)
      • Master Status: An individual is identified by a particular aspect of themselves - EG. being arrested once so seen as a criminal
    • Labelling/Interactionist View

      'Moral Entrepreneurs'
      • Those who decide what is morally acceptable in society.
      • Ruling class, governments
    • Labelling/Interactionist View
      Agencies of social control:
      • Informal - Family, friends
      • Formal - Police, CJS, courts
    • A03 Of Labelling/Interactionism

      STRENGTHS:
      • Emphasises the social construction of crime
      • Identifies the roles of the powerful in crime & deviance
      LIMITATIONS:
      • Doesn't explain where the stereotypes came from
      • Doesn't explain why people commit the original deviance
    • Left Realism View
      • Follow the Marxist view that society is unequal - this is what causes crime and deviance.
      • Believe that gradual change is necessary
    • Left Realism View - Causes
      Relative Deprivation
      Lea & Young:
      • Deprivation is the root of crime, not poverty. Living standards rising -> more feelings of deprivation and resentment
    • Left Realism View - Causes
      Marginalisation
      • Leads to frustration and resentment which can turn to crime which they believe will improve their situation
    • Left Realism View - Causes
      Subcultures
      • A subculture is a collective response to relative deprivation
      • Cloward & Ohlin, Cohen
    • Left Realism View - Tackling Crime
      • Need to tackle social inequality and issues that lead to crime - eg. SureStart
      • Should focus on better relationships between police and communities
      • Restorative justice - encouraging offenders to take responsibility
    • A03 Of Left Realism
      STRENGTHS:
      • Has been praised for recognising crime is a real problem, not just people being labelled
      • Has attempted to suggest ways crime might be reduced - practical not theoretical
      • Does not appear as sympathetic to criminals as Marxists
      LIMITATIONS:
      • Marxists criticise them for ignoring really serious crimes of the powerful
      • Some of their solutions to crime appear to be either very long term or expensive
    • Right Realist View
      • Less concerned with causes, more concerned with solutions
      • Street crime destroys communities
    • Right Realist View - Causes
      Biological Differences
      Wilson & Herrnstein:
      • Some people are more predisposed to crime through personality traits such as aggressiveness
    • Right Realist View - Causes
      Socialisation & The underclass
      • Underclass fail to adequately socialise their children.
      • Increasing crime - U/C being dependent on the welfare state
    • Right Realist View - Causes

      Rational Choice
      Clarke:
      • Individuals have free will, criminals have the choice to commit crime.
      • 'Benefit outweighs the cost'
    • Right Realist View - Causes
      Broken Windows Thesis
      Wilson & Kelling:
      • Unless anti-social behaviour is kept to a minimum, there will be gradual deterioration of neighbourhoods.
      • EG. If a criminal sees a smashed window/graffiti, it is an excuse to create more
    • Right Realist View - Tackling Crime
      • 'Zero Tolerance Policing' - Wilson & Kelling - Low level crime should not be tolerated
      • Target hardening - shutters, windows, locks, anti-climb paint
      • CCTV - Individuals should be constantly monitored in public places
      • Deterrence Sentencing - punishing the individual to discourage them from future offending
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