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Major Principles of Sociological Theories. Social groups, social institutions, the arrangement of society, and social roles are the focus of criminological studyGroup dynamics, group organization, and subgroup relationships form the causal nexus from which crime develops. Major Principles of Socio
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1. Chapter 7Social Structure Theories Frank Schmalleger
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Ellen G. Cohn, Ph.D.
2. Major Principles of Sociological Theories Social groups, social institutions, the arrangement of society, and social roles are the focus of criminological study
Group dynamics, group organization, and subgroup relationships form the causal nexus from which crime develops
3. Major Principles of Sociological Theories The structure of society and its relative degree of organization or disorganization are important factors contributing to the prevalence of crime
The probability that a member of a given group will engage in a specific type of crime can be estimated
4. Major Principles of Sociological Theories Sociological theories:
Examine institutional arrangements within society (social structure) and the interaction between and among social institutions, individuals, and groups (social processes) as they affect socialization and have an impact on social behavior (social life)
5. Key Sociological Explanations of Crime Social structure theories: crime is the result of an individual’s location within the structure of society
Social process/social development theories: crime is the end product of various social processes.
Conflict theories: crime is the product of class struggle
6. Social Structure Theories Defined Social structure theories
Explain crime by reference to economic and social arrangements of society
See the various formal and informal arrangements between social groups as the root causes of crime and delinquency
Highlight arrangements within society that contribute to low SES of identifiable groups as significant causes of crime
7. Types of Social Structure Theories Social disorganization theory (ecological approach
Strain theory
Culture conflict theory (cultural deviance theory)
8. Theory in Perspective Social disorganization
Depicts social change, social conflict, and lack of social consensus as the root causes of crime and deviance
Social ecology sees crime and deviance as a disease or social pathology
Period: 1920s – 1930s
Concepts: Social ecology, ecological theories, social pathology, social disorganization, Chicago School, Chicago Area Project, demographics, concentric zones, delinquency areas cultural transmission
9. Social Disorganization Theory W.I. Thomas and Florian Znaniecki
The Polish Peasant in Europe and America (1920)
Found crime rates rose among displaced persons
Suggested cause was social disorganization resulting from immigrants’ inability to successfully transplant norms and values from home cultures into the new one
10. Park and Burgess Social ecology movement
Focused on how the structure of society adapts to the quality of natural resources and to the existence of other human groups
Social pathology
Aspects of society may be somehow pathological, or sick, and may produce deviant behavior among individuals and groups who live under or are exposed to such conditions
11. Concentric Zones
12. Shaw and McKay Applied the concentric zone model to the study of juvenile delinquency
Found offending rates remained constant over time within zones of transition
Cultural transmission:
Traditions of delinquency are transmitted through successive generations of the same zone
13. The Criminology of Place Environmental criminology
Emphasizes the importance of geographic location and architectural features as they are associated with the prevalence of victimization
“Hot spots” of crime
Broken windows thesis (Wilson and Kelling)
Physical deterioration and unrepaired buildings lead to increased concerns for safety among area residents
14. The Criminology of Place Defensible space
A surrogate term for the range of mechanisms that combine to bring an environment under the control of its residents
Architectural changes that enhance barriers, define boundaries, and remove criminal opportunity can reduce the risk of crime
15. Theory in Perspective Strain Theory
Points to a lack of fit between socially approved success goals and socially approved means to achieve those goals
Individuals unable to succeed through legitimate means turn to other avenues
Period: 1930s – present
Concepts: anomie, goals, means, innovation, retreatism, ritualism, rebellion, differential opportunity, relative deprivation, distributive justice, general strain theory (GST)
16. Strain Theory Strain:
The pressure that individuals feel to reach socially determined goals
Anomie (Robert K. Merton)
A disjunction between socially approved means to success and legitimate goals
Crime results from attempts to achieve legitimate goals through illegitimate means
17. Goals and Means Disjuncture
18. Relative Deprivation Messner and Rosenfeld blame crime on inconsistencies in the American Dream
Relative deprivation:
The economic and social gap that exists between rich and the poor who live in close proximity
Distributive justice:
An individual’s perception of his or her rightful place in the reward structure of society
19. Types of Relative Deprivation Personal relative deprivation
Characteristic of individuals who feel deprived compared with other people
Results in feelings of stress and social isolation
Group relative deprivation
A communal sense of injustice shared by members of a group
Results in participation in social movements and active attempts to change the system
20. General Strain Theory Robert Agnew (1992)
Reformulated strain theory
GST sees lawbreaking as a coping mechanism that enables those who engage in it to deal with the socioemotional problems generated by negative social relations
21. General Strain Theory Strain occurs when others:
Prevent or threaten to prevent an individual from achieving positively valued goals
Remove or threaten to remove positively valued stimuli that a person possesses
Present or threaten to present someone with noxious or negatively valued stimuli
22. Central Propositions of GST Strain refers to events and conditions that are disliked by individuals
Strains increase the likelihood of particular crimes primarily through their impact on a range of negative emotional states
23. Central Propositions of GST Those strains most likely to cause crime (a) are perceived as high in magnitude or (b) as unjust; (c) are associated with low self-control; and (d) create some pressure or incentive to engage in criminal coping
The likelihood that individuals will react to strains with criminal behavior depends on a range of factors
24. Central Propositions of GST Patterns of offending over the life course, group differences in crime, and community and societal differences in crime can be partly explained in terms of differences in the exposure to strains conducive to crime
Crime can be reduced by reducing individuals exposure to strains that are conducive to crime and reducing their likelihood of responding to strains with crime
25. Theory in Perspective Culture Conflict Theory
Sees the root cause of crime in a class of values between various socialized groups over what is acceptable or proper behavior
Period: 1920s – present
Concepts: subculture, violent subcultures, socialization, focal concerns, drift, techniques of neutralization, illegitimate opportunity structures, reaction formation, conduct norms
26. Culture Conflict Theory Thorsten Sellin (1938)
Culture Conflict and Crime
Root cause of crime found in different values about what is acceptable or proper behavior
Conduct norms
Provide the valuative basis for human behavior and are acquired early in life through childhood socialization
Clash of norms between variously socialized groups results in crime
27. Types of Culture Conflict Primary conflict:
Results from a fundamental clash of cultures
Secondary conflict:
Arises when smaller cultures within the primary one clash
28. Subcultural Theory Subculture:
A collection of values and preferences communicated to participants through a process of socialization
Subcultural theory:
Sociological perspective emphasizing the contribution made by variously socialized cultural groups to the phenomenon of crime
29. Focal Concerns Walter Miller (1858)
Lower class culture:
A long established, distinctively patterned tradition with an integrity of its own
Behavior that upholds lower class norms may be seen by the middle class as deliberately nonconforming
30. Focal Concerns Trouble
Getting in, staying out, dealing with trouble
Toughness
Concern with masculinity
Smartness
Ability to outsmart or con others and avoid being duped Excitement
Search for thrills
Fate
The concept of luck, being lucky
Autonomy
Taking care of oneself, not getting pushed around
31. Delinquency and Drift Sykes and Matza (1957)
Members of delinquent subcultures also participate in the larger culture
Offenders use neutralizing self-talk to mitigate shame and guilt associated with violating social norms
32. Techniques of Neutralization Denying responsibility
“It’s not my fault”
Denying injury
“Everyone does it”; the victim can afford it
Denying the victim
Deny or justify the harm done; the victim “deserves it” Condemning the condemners
Authorities are corrupt; “They’re all on the take”
Appealing to higher loyalties
Defense of family honor, gang, neighborhood
33. Delinquency and Drift Delinquents tend to drift between crime and conventional action – choose the most expedient
Use techniques of neutralization to keep from being alienated from larger society
34. Violent Subcultures Ferracuti and Wolfgang (1967)
Violence is a learned form of adaptation to problematic life circumstances
Learning to be violent takes place within the context of a subculture emphasizing violence over other forms of adaptation
For participants in violent subcultures, violence can be a way of life
35. Violent Subcultures Southern subculture of violence
Southerner, violence and weaponry
Certain violent crimes may be more acceptable in the South than other parts of the US
Black subculture of violence
Created by generations of white-on-black violence
Seek status through ability to harm, intimidate, dominate others
36. Differential Opportunity Theory Cloward and Ohlin (1960)
Blended subcultural thesis with strain theory
Two types of socially structured opportunities for success
Legitimate
Illegitimate
Members of lower-class subcultures may be denied access to legitimate opportunities
37. Differential Opportunity Theory Illegitimate opportunity structure
Pre-existing subcultural paths to success not approved of by the wider culture
Delinquent behavior results from
Ready availability of illegitimate opportunities
Replacement of cultural norms with expedient subcultural rules
38. Delinquent Subcultures Criminal subcultures:
Criminal role models readily available
Conflict subcultures:
Status through violence
Retreatist subcultures:
Drug use and withdrawal from wider society
39. Types of Lower Class Youth Type I:
Desire entry into middle class by improving their economic position
Type II:
Desire entry to middle class but not improvement in economic position Type III:
Desire wealth without entry to middle class
Type IV:
Dropouts who retreat from mainstream through drug and alcohol use
40. Reaction Formation Albert Cohen
Youth held accountable to norms of wider society through “middle class measuring rod” of expectations
Not everyone is prepared to effectively meet such expectations
Reaction formation:
The process in which a person openly rejects that which he wants, or aspires to, but cannot obtain or achieve
41. The Code of the Street Elijah Anderson
Contemporary street code stresses a hyperinflated notion of manhood resting on the idea of respect
Street culture’s violent nature means a man cannot back down from threats
Decent vs. street families
42. Gangs Today Modern gangs are involved in serious and violent crimes
Members identify with a name, clothing style, symbols, tattoos, jewelry, haircuts, and hand symbols
Gangs are big business
Distinctions between gangs and violence
43. Policy Implications of Social Structure Theories Social structure theories emphasize social action as a panacea
Chicago Area Project attempted to reduce social disorganization in slum neighborhoods by creating community committees
Mobilization for Youth provided new opportunities and tried to change the fundamental arrangements of society, addressing the root causes of crime
War on Poverty tried to reduce crime rates by redistributing wealth in American society
44. Critique of Social Structure Theories Some argue the inverse of the “root causes” argument – suggest poverty and social injustices are produced by crime
If so, addressing poverty and social inequity as the root causes of crime is and ineffective crime prevention strategy
45. Critique of Ecological Theories May give too much credence to the notion that spatial location determines crime
Seems unable to differentiate between social disorganization and the things it is said to cause
Many crimes occur outside of socially disorganized areas
46. Critique of Strain Theories Original formulation less applicable to modern society
Delinquents do not report being more distressed than other youth
47. Critique of Subcultural Theories Seen as lacking in explanatory power
Seen as tautological (circular)
Racist
48. Other Critiques of Social Structure Theories Social structure theories link low SES to high delinquency – not supported by empirical studies
Overemphasis on environments creates bias against looking elsewhere for possible causes
Cannot predict which individuals, or which proportion of given population, will turn to crime