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Definition Crime and Deviance? . Deviance- is defined as variation from the norm and society's reaction to it. . Labels. To label someone deviant is related to our notions of social convention?.the normal society?entrenched with laws,rules and norms.. Crime and Deviance . A major area i
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1. Crime and Deviance
2. DefinitionCrime and Deviance Deviance- is defined as variation from the norm and societys reaction to it.
3. Labels To label someone deviant is related to our notions of social convention
.the normal society
entrenched with laws,rules and norms.
4. Crime and Deviance A major area in sociological research:
We are all interested in the deviant :
Crime TV
.Law and Order, Cops etc..
Hero mystique-Robin Hood
PEOPLE -OUTSIDE THE NORM
5. The Social Self The `deviant are reflections of ourselves and our sense of otherness
Self and society connected but not the same. We are not automatons.
6. Symbolic Interactionists Symbolic Interactionists-G. H Mead, C. Cooley
We all can identify with criminals.
See Chicago School studies:
Street Corner Society
Social Order of the Slum
The Professional Thief
7. Sociological Approaches Theorization follows other empirical topics and draws upon paradigms
Conflict,
Symbolic Interactionist
Structural functional
8. Comparative differences between Canada and the US Illustration of differences in political culture, levels of racism etc..
Canada is more conservative, elitist, less individualistic
than US
Our law: Burkean
American Law: Lockean
9. Frontier thesis, US 50% of all homicide involved handguns whereas in Canada this figure was only 10%
Frontier thesis, Canadian have firmer control in monarchial system than in the American Republic..
Our policing is more peaceful.
Frontier Thesis
The Frontier Thesis or Turner Thesis is the conclusion of Frederick Jackson Turner that the wellsprings of American exceptionalism and vitality have always been the American frontier, the region between urbanized, civilized society and the untamed wilderness.
Turner Thesis
In the thesis, the frontier created freedom, constantly named as civilization, "breaking the bonds of custom, offering new experiences, [and] calling out new institutions and activities."
Frontier Thesis
The Frontier Thesis or Turner Thesis is the conclusion of Frederick Jackson Turner that the wellsprings of American exceptionalism and vitality have always been the American frontier, the region between urbanized, civilized society and the untamed wilderness.
Turner Thesis
In the thesis, the frontier created freedom, constantly named as civilization, "breaking the bonds of custom, offering new experiences, [and] calling out new institutions and activities."
10. Canada vs. US US=Overt Racism-American are blatantly racist whereas Canadians are polite racists.
Canada= Covert Racism (Kallen, 1974; McCauley, 1990)
This evident in the culture of American vs. Canadian cities, hiring practices, social segregation etc.
11. Policing-Cops vs To serve and protect Canadians have firmer control in monarchial system than in the American Republic, policing is more peaceful
Canadian system is Burkean in nature as opposed to Lockean
Burke-social control
Locke individual rights and freedoms
12. . Burke . Burke maintained the crime control model which held that personal freedom can only be achieved through social control According to Rod Preece(1980) Canadian Journal of Political Science /According to Rod Preece(1980) Canadian Journal of Political Science /
13. John Locke Locke, on the other hand, advocated the due-process model-due process seeks to ensure useful safeguard in favour of the individual over the system
14. Although both systems reflect classic liberalism, there are qualitative differences in the perception and treatment of deviance.
RCMP vs. State Troopers
Margret Atwood claims, Canadians are the only society that includes the police as a National symbol I.e. Dudley Do-Right
Peace Order Good Government (CAN)
Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness (US)
RCMP vs. State Troopers
Margret Atwood claims, Canadians are the only society that includes the police as a National symbol I.e. Dudley Do-Right
Peace Order Good Government (CAN)
Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness (US)
15. Qualitative Deviance Concepts Measures of Deviance Include:
SEVERITY
PERCEPTION
DEGREE OF AGREEMENT
LABELLING
16. Qualitative Deviance Concepts Measures of Deviance Include:
1. Severity- capital punishment-the more serious the crime the more we take freedom away
17. Perception- 2. While society speaks with a collective conscience on certain matters of crime such as murder.
On other matters there may be a continuum of responses from extremely harmful to inconsequential
2. Perception-
Marijuana use is a good example- some see it as extremely harmful-a gateway drug-my child will never be the same
Government have spent millions of dollars assessing the presumed harmfulness of the drug
.yet the forces in favour of it decriminalization continue to be powerful.
2. Perception-
Marijuana use is a good example- some see it as extremely harmful-a gateway drug-my child will never be the same
Government have spent millions of dollars assessing the presumed harmfulness of the drug
.yet the forces in favour of it decriminalization continue to be powerful.
18. 3. Degree of agreement- . Degree of agreement- across nations there are some behaviours that are agreed upon as seriously, deviant and against the codes of social order-collective conscience extends to all human life.
19. Examples.. Armed robbery,
Sexual assault,
Incest,
Murder-
Anthropologists tell us that the incest taboo is almost universal as is aversion to cannibalism.
20. Severity and Degree of Agreement Conflict crimes- are those crimes in which there exists conflicting opinions about their nature. (severity and degree of agreement do not match)
21. 1. Ie. drug use and sexual activity- we know that these things are bad for us
but are they deviant? or simply immoral? Streaking?
22. 4. Labelling Labeling theory (or social reaction theory) is concerned with how the self-identity and behavior of an individual is influenced (or created) by how that individual is categorized and described by others in their society.
23. Negative Labels The theory focuses on the linguistic tendency of majorities to negatively label minorities or those seen as deviant from norms, and is associated with the concept of a self-fulfilling prophecy and stereotyping
24. Labelling Labeling theory (or social reaction theory) is concerned with how self-identity is influenced
25. Self Fulfilling Prophecy? (or created) by how that individual is categorized and described by others in their society.
Labels can lead to self-fulfilling prophecies.
26. Sanity Insanity: A Social Construct E. Goffman Asylums, for which he gathered information at the National Institute of Mental Health in Washington, D.C
27. Rosenthan (1973) Rosenthan (1973) and his team had themselves committed
they complained of hearing voices and they were labeled schizophrenic
.
.
28. Theories of DevianceI. Structural Functionalism Structural Functionalism- structural strain, dysfunction-the school, family, religion and the polity are supposed to produce order,
DEVIANCE=dis-equilibrium and non-conformity.
29. Function and Dysfunction
There is some suggestion that deviance is not dysfunctional but functional
30. Functionalist solution:Individualistic a. Change Values- Commitment and control
the system teaches us control; some do not buy into it;
31. Delinquent Subculture Subcultural Theories-delinquent subculture-socialization theories
Also a functionalist approach-socialization paradigm
Culture of poverty O. Lewis..
32. Ie. Merton (1957)-structural strain Anomie-absence of social regulation, normlessness- deviance results from problem of strain or disequalibrium
33. Merton (1957)-
between culturally defined goals (money, power, success) and the socially accepted means of achieving them
(education)
34. Functional/Disfunctional Adjustment Four way individuals adjust to a conflicting society include:
innovation,
ritualism,
retreatism
and rebellion
35. II. Symbolic Interactionism
SI is less concerned with values, attitudes and behaviours (Anomie) than with the meanings that people attached to situation
Definitions of context
.
36. Edward Sutherland (1924) Edward Sutherland (1924) one of the fathers of criminology developed the concept differential association to refer to not only association between individuals but also between ideas.
Sutherland = Learning Theory and symbolic interactionism.
37. Sutherland crime in context Deviance and criminal behaviour develops among those who define the behaviour favourably.
In any given situation or context, an individual if the weight of the favourable definition of crime exceeds the unfavourable definition, then criminal activity will result.
38. Street vs Suite Crime White collar crime, for example, is rationalized along these lines
Sutherland proves this through a study of 100 imprisoned embezzlers
. Each felt they were helping `the company and its operation.
39. Ethnicity, Class and Addiction IRISH: `Paddy Wagon-
2. ITALIAN `MOBSTER
3.. BLACK `DRUG DEALER
paddy wagon A police van (also known as a paddywagon
70 up, 5 down I nickname given to a vehicle police use to transport prisoners. The name came from the New York Draft riots of 1863. The Irish at the time were the poorest people in the city. When the draft was implemented it had a provision for wealthier people to buy a waiver. The Irish rioted, and the term Paddy wagon was coinedpaddy wagon A police van (also known as a paddywagon
70 up, 5 down I nickname given to a vehicle police use to transport prisoners. The name came from the New York Draft riots of 1863. The Irish at the time were the poorest people in the city. When the draft was implemented it had a provision for wealthier people to buy a waiver. The Irish rioted, and the term Paddy wagon was coined
40. SI CONCEPTS SELF IDENTITY
LABEL
SELF FULFILLING PROPHECY
41. To Symbolic Interactionists IDENTITY IS SOCIAL CONSTRUCTED
MEANINGS ARE DEVELOPED THROUGH RELATIONSHIP WITH OTHERS
INTERACTION-LOOKING GLASS SELF
42. Self-fulfilling prophecy A self-fulfilling prophecy is a prediction that directly or indirectly causes itself to become true. by the very terms of the prophecy itself, due to positive feedback between belief and behavior.
by the very terms of the prophecy itself, due to positive feedback between belief and behavior.
43. Sutherland crime in context Deviance and criminal behaviour develops among those who define the behaviour favourably.
.
In any given situation or context, an individual if the weight of the favourable definition of crime exceeds the unfavourable definition, then criminal activity will result In any given situation or context, an individual if the weight of the favourable definition of crime exceeds the unfavourable definition, then criminal activity will result
44. Criminal as `Professional/ crime as work . Another interesting aspect of symbolic interactionist approach is the notion of crime as work. Peter Letkemann (1973) showed that crime is a form of work with all the elements of a Profession
Chicago School- `The Professional Thief
Peter Letkemann (1973) showed that crime is a form of work with all the elements of a Profession
Chicago School- `The Professional Thief
45. Crime School highly skilled Prisons are like schools,,.
Mechanical skills-burglary, safe cracking explosive
Social skills- fraud embezzlement
prisons provide a unique form of socializationprisons provide a unique form of socialization
46. III. Conflict Theory/ Focus on dominant societal groups
..
These groups impose labels upon members of subordinate societal groups.
47. Conflict theorist and Crime Conflict theorists evaluate sub-culture on the level of class analysis. I.e. Labels
Subcultures form in reaction to class consciousness and ideology.
Crime is about scarcity!!!!
48. Spitzer (1975) Criminals challenge the social relations of production
.
The oppressed threaten existing social relations and therefore must be controlled.
who functionalist Oscar Lewis would claim have a culture of poverty,who functionalist Oscar Lewis would claim have a culture of poverty,
49. Class and Deviance Schmidt, Smart and Moss (1968) found that lower class alcoholics were more likely to receive drug intervention therapy whereas upper class alcoholic were more likely to receive talk therapies.
50. Crime and Political Economy Conflict Theory
Commitment to a psychiatric ward is often not much different from jail.
Jail is more likely in neo-liberal societies
Todays emphasis on capitalism vs. state intervention.
51. Criminals challenge capitalism Criminals challenge bourgeois ideology
a. Notions of production,
Social conditions of production
c. Patterns of distribution and consumption
d. Socialization processes
e. Dominant ideologies.
52. Conflict Theory and Crime
a. When the poor steals from the rich he/she challenges are notion of appropriate human labour
53. b. When the poor person collect welfare or refuses to work in the way we feel is best-the system is undermined?
54. Conflict Theory and Crime c. When the drug user escapes or transcends culture rather than uses drugs for sociability, he/she de-legitimizes our notions of adequate social adjustment
55. d. When juvenile delinquents fail to attend school they challenge our notions of adequate socialization into our on-going legitimate social order
56. e. When organizations (underworld) develop they undermine the ideology that supports capitalistic society
57. Summary Crime is a societal indicator of the relationship of individuals to the larger social system
Crime is relativistic
Crime is related to factors such as race, class and gender
Understanding crime helps understand other aspects of society and socialization
58. Learning to Labour: Paul Willis : How working class kids get working class jobs.
Willis combines Marxist and symbolic interactionist forms of analysis
Looks at education and youth, deviance
British school system vs. `The Lads