Chapter 7. Deviance, Crime, and Social Control

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81 Terms

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Psychopathy and sociopathy

both refer to personality disorders that involve anti-social behaviour, diminished empathy, and lack of inhibitions

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Psychopathy

often used to emphasize that the source of the disorder is internal, based on psychological, biological, or genetic factors

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Sociopathy

used to emphasize predominant social factors - familial sources of its development and the inability to be social or abide by societal rules

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Contemporary approaches to psychopathy and sociopathy

focused on biological and genetic causes

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Cesare Lombroso

Italian professor of legal psychiatry - isolated specific physiological characteristics of “degeneracy” that could distinguish “born criminals” from normal individuals

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James Fallon

    • His research involved analyzing brain scans of serial killers

    • found that areas of the frontal and temporal lobes associated with empathy, morality - self-control are “shut off” in serial killers

    • Claims these are genetic markers to suggest that psychopathy or sociopathy was passed down genetically

    • While studying Alzheimer’s - discovered a brain scan from a control subject that indicated the symptoms of psychopathy - same as seen in brain scans of serial killers

    • He was related to a serial killer - acknowledged environment played a significant role in the expression of genetic tendencies

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Deviance

a violation of established contextual, cultural, or social norms, whether folkways, mores, or codified law

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Folkways

norms based on everyday cultural customs concerning practical matters

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Mores

more serious moral injunctions or taboos that are broadly recognized in a society

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Laws

norms that are specified in explicit codes and enforced by government bodies

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Consensus crimes

most serious acts - about which there is near-unanimous public agreement

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Conflict crimes

may be illegal but about which there is considerable public disagreement concerning their seriousness

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Social deviations

not illegal in themselves but are widely regarded as serious or harmful

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Social diversions

violate norms in a provocative way but are generally regarded as distasteful, or for some cool, but harmless

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Whether an act is deviant

depends on society’s definition of that act

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Howard Becker

defined moral entrepreneurs as individuals or groups who publicize and problematize “wrongdoing” - have power to create and enforce rules to penalize wrongdoing

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“Looping effect”

once a category of deviance has been established and applied to a person they identify in the category and behave accordingly

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Interactionist labelling theory

individuals become criminalized through contact with the criminal justice system

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Social control

defined broadly as an organized action intended to change people’s behaviour

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Social order

arrangement of practices and behaviours on which society’s members base their daily lives

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Sanctions

can be positive as well as negative - play a role in social control

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Positive sanctions

are rewards given for conforming to norms

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Negative sanctions

are punishments for violating norms

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Informal sanctions

emerge in face-to-face social interactions

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Formal sanctions

are ways to officially recognize and enforce norm violations

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Donald Black - identified four key styles of social control

Penal social control, Compensatory social control, Therapeutic social control, Conciliatory social control

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Penal social control

prohibiting certain social behaviours and responding to violations with punishment

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Compensatory social control

obliges an offender to pay a victim to compensate for a harm committed

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Therapeutic social control

involves the use of therapy to return individuals to a normal state

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Conciliatory social control

aims to reconcile the parties of a dispute and mutually restore harmony to a social relationship that has been damaged

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Government

refers to the strategies by which one seeks to direct or guide the conduct of another or others

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19th century

invention of modern institutions like the prison, public school, modern army, asylum, hospital, and factory - means for extending government and social control etc

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Foucault describes these modern forms of government

disciplinary social control because they each rely on the detailed continuous training, control, and observation of individuals to improve their capabilities

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Surveillance

refers to the various means used to make the lives and activities of individuals visible to authorities

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Jeremy Bentham

  • Published a book on the ideal prison - the panopticon or “seeing machine”

  • Prisoners’ cells would be arranged in a circle around a central observation tower where they could be both separated from each other and continually exposed to the view of prison guards

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Normalization

refers to the way in which norms are first established and then used to assess, differentiate, and rank individuals according to their abilities

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Foucault describes disciplinary social control

key mechanism in creating a normalizing society

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Society

controlled through normalization and disciplinary procedures

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Social control

adopted a model of risk management in a variety of areas of problematic behaviour

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Risk management

refers to interventions designed to reduce the likelihood of undesirable events occurring based on an assessment of probabilities of risk

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New penology strategies of social control

concerned with techniques to identify, classify, and manage groupings of offenders sorted by the degree of dangerousness they represent to the general public

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Three functionalist perspectives on deviance in society

Social disorganization theory, strain theory, and cultural deviance theory

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Émile Durkheim

believed that deviance is a necessary part of a successful society

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Social disorganization theory

crime is most likely to occur in communities with weak social ties and the absence of social control - opposite of Durkheim’s thesis

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Zones of transition

between established working class neighbourhoods and the manufacturing district

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Control theory

According to Hirschi - social control is directly affected by the strength of social bonds

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Hirschi identified four types of social bonds that connect people to society

  • Attachment - measures our connections to others

  • Commitment - refers to the investments we make in conforming to conventional behaviour

  • Involvement - in socially legitimate activities, lessen a person’s likelihood of deviance

  • Belief - an agreement on common values in society

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Robert Merton

agreed that deviance is a normal behaviour in a functioning society - expanded on Durkheim’s ideas by developing strain theory

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Strain Theory

access to socially acceptable goals plays a part in determining whether a person conforms or deviates

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Merton defined five ways that people adapt to this gap between having a socially accepted goal but no socially accepted way to pursue it

  • Conformity - The majority of people in society choose to conform and not to deviate

  • Innovation - Those who innovate pursue goals they cannot reach through legitimate means by instead using criminal or deviant means

  • Ritualism - People who ritualize lower their goals until they can reach them through socially acceptable ways

  • Retreatism - Others retreat from the role strain and reject both society’s goals and accepted means

  • Rebellion - A handful of people rebel, replacing a society’s goals and means with their own

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Critical sociology

Social and economic factors as the causes of crime and deviance

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Many crimes

understood as crimes of accommodation or ways in which individuals cope with conditions of oppression - due to inequality

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Personal crimes

murder, assault, and sexual assault - products of the stresses and strains of living under stressful conditions of scarcity and deprivation

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Defensive crimes

economic sabotage, illegal strikes, civil disobedience, and ecoterrorism - direct challenges to social injustice

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C. Wright Mills

named the power elite - a small group of wealthy and influential people at the top of society who hold the power and resources

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White-collar or corporate crime

refers to crimes committed by corporate employees or owners in the pursuit of profit or other organization goals

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Feminist analysis

focuses on the way gender inequality influences the opportunities to commit crime and the definition, detection, and prosecution of crime

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1970s

women worked to change the criminal justice system - establish rape crisis centres, battered women’s shelters, bringing attention to domestic violence

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Feminists challenged the twin myths of rape - often the subtext of criminal justice proceedings presided over largely by men

  • First myth - women are untrustworthy and tend to lie about assault out of malice toward me - as a way of getting back at them for personal grievances

  • Second myth - women will say no to sexual relations when they really mean yes

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Symbolic interactionism

theoretical approach that can be used to explain how societies and/or social groups come to view behaviours as deviant or conventional

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Edwin Sutherland

  • Sought to understand how deviant behaviour developed among people

  • He found that individuals learn deviant behaviour from those close to them who provide models of and opportunities for deviance - deviance is less a personal choice and more a result of differential socialization processes

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Labelling theory

labelling a deviant behaviour to another person by members of society

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Edwin Lemert

expanded on the concepts of labelling theory - two types of deviance - primary and secondary

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Primary deviance

a violation of norms that does not result in any long-term effects on the individual’s self-image or interactions with others

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Secondary deviance

occurs when a person’s self-concept and behaviour change after their actions are labelled as deviant by members of society - can give a master status

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Master status

a label that describes the chief characteristic of an individual

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The sociological study of crime, deviance, and social control

important with respect to public policy debates

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Government policy

represented a shift toward a punitive approach to crime control and away from preventive strategies such as drug rehabilitation, prison diversion, and social reintegration programs

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Deviance

violation of social norms - not always punishable and not necessarily bad

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Crime

a behaviour that violates official law and is punishable through formal sanction

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Violent crimes

based on the use of force or the threat of force - Ex. rape, murder, and armed robbery

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Nonviolent crimes

destruction or theft of property, but do not use force or the threat of force - also called “property crimes”

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Victimless crime

perpetrator is not explicitly harming another person - debated type of crime

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A self-report study

collection of data acquired using voluntary response methods - able to collect crime stats based on this

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The corrections system

or the prison system, is tasked with supervising individuals who have been arrested, convicted, and sentenced for a criminal offence

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Hartnagel summarised the literature - why Aboriginal people are overrepresented in the criminal justice system

  • Aboriginal people are disproportionately poor and poverty is associated with higher arrest and incarceration rates.

  • Aboriginal lawbreakers tend to commit more detectable street crimes than the less detectable white collar crimes

  • Criminal justice system disproportionately profiles and discriminates against Aboriginal people

  • The legacy of colonization has disrupted and weakened traditional sources of social control in Aboriginal communities

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Aboriginal sentencing circles

involve victims, Aboriginal community, Aboriginal elders - determine the best way to find healing for the harm done to victims and communities together

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Racial profiling

occurs when police single out a particular racial group for extra policing, including a disproportionate use of stop-and-search practices - affects everyone who isn’t white

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Serving prison time

does not reduce the propensity to re-offend after the sentence has been completed - may make it more likely to re-offend

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Penal-welfare complex

creation of inter-generational criminalized populations excluded from participating in society or holding regular jobs on a semi-permanent basis

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Community-based sentencing

offenders serve a conditional sentence in the community, usually by performing some sort of community service