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The Chicago School. Emphasis on “ecology of crime” The root of control / social learning Social Disorganization Theory. Chicago School. University of Chicago Department of Sociology (but others also) Social Context Chicago as a microcosm of change in America
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The Chicago School Emphasis on “ecology of crime” The root of control / social learning Social Disorganization Theory
Chicago School • University of Chicago • Department of Sociology (but others also) • Social Context • Chicago as a microcosm of change in America • “Individual (especially biological) explanations seemed foolish
Earnest Burgess • How does a city growth and develop? • Concentric Zones Industrial zone Zone in transition Residential zones
Clifford Shaw and Henry McKay • Juvenile Delinquency in Urban Areas • Mapped addresses of delinquents (court records) • Zone in transition stable and high delinquency rates • Even through occupied by different waves of immigrants!! • Therefore, not “feeble minded” immigrants • Something about this area causes delinquency
Social Disorganization • What were the characteristics of the zone in transition that may cause high delinquency rates? • Population Heterogeneity • Transient Population • Physical Decay • Poverty/Inequality • Why might these ecological characteristics lead to high crime rates? • Shaw and McKay not clear on this point…delinquent values…lack of control?
Shaw and McKay II • Why are the crime rates stable in the zone of transition? 1. Cultural Transmission of Values • Roots of Sutherland’s Differential Association (micro) and Subculture of violence theories (macro) 2. Lack of Informal Social Control • Roots of control theories (micro) and modern social disorganization (macro)
Social Disorganization 1960-1980 • Fell out of favor in sociology • Individual theories gained popularity • Hirschi (1969); Burgess and Akers (1968)… • Criticisms of Social Disorganization • Are these neighborhoods really “disorganized?” • Cannot measure “intervening variables” • Cannot get neighborhood level variables • “Chicago Specific”
Modern S.D. Theory • Interest rekindled in the 1980s (continues today). • Sampson and Groves (1989) • Social disorganization as a social control theory • Ecological characteristics social control Population turnover Street supervision Poverty / inequality Collective efficacy Divorce rates / single parents Friendship networks
Sampson and Groves • Brittish Crime Survey Data (BCS) • Survey done based on neighborhood, so neighborhood measures of: • Poverty, Family disruption, Residential Mobility AND • Supervision of street corners, friendship networks,participation in community organizations
Sampson (1997) • Replicated results in Chicago • In areas with “concentrated poverty,” communities lack “collective efficacy” • Lack of collective efficacy increases crime rates • How cities grow not that important • Racial barriers disrupted “natural flow” • Rekindle “delinquent culture” ideas
Macro (Ecological) level Theory • Neighborhood level theory • Explains why certain neighborhoods have high crime rates • NOT an individual level theory • Avoid “Ecological Fallacy”
Policy Implications? • Build neighborhood “collective efficacy” • How do you do this? • Address ecological characteristics that ruin collective efficacy • Family disruption, concentrated poverty, residential mobility
Note the “Control Theory Assumption” in S.D. • Unless controlled, delinquency will fester in neighborhoods • Similar to individual level control theory • Different from Anomie theory