Crime and Deviance 1
- Created by: AimeeLouiseB
- Created on: 16-03-21 17:44
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CRIME, DEVIANCE, SOCIAL ORDER AND SOCIAL CONTROL
Functionalism
- Durkheim
- Crime is inevitable, and integral part of healthy societies.
- Crime is only dysfunctional to society when rates are excessivly high. Criminal behaviour is functional as it can help to sustain conformity and stability.
- Crime is essential to the continuation of society as it gives communities to reassert standards.
- Crime is necessary to create change.
- Criticisms: Taylor, Walton and Young- crime could not be functional for society, it was only the publication of crimes which united societies. Vague in identifying which crimes beneficial to society.
- Merton- Strain Theory
- Stability in society is based on a consensus of values- however not everyone is in a position to share these and this can lead to deviance.
- We have culturally defined goals- such as material success, but more importance is placed on achieving them than the ways in which they are achieved.
- This may lead to innovators adapting illegitimate ways to reach sucess
- Critiscms: Taylor (Marxist) these cultural goals benefit the ruling class alone, as people become so obsessed with sucess that they fail to question the capitalist system.
Subcultural theories
- Albert Cohen (functionalist)
- Gang cultures with strong normas and rules of behaviour. High value placed on behaviour which offers instant gratification, rather than any overall financial gain.
- In WC males failure in school leads to the formation of gang cultures.
- WC members suffer 'status frustration' and develop values opposing society, therfore they may commit devient acts to have 'revenge' on a society which does not value them.
- Miller (functionalist)
- WC males have a lack of role models who are able to show them economic power or earning potential. Therefore they find masculity and fun in law breaking activities.
- Fatalistic belief that nothing can be done to alter their situation justifies criminal behaviour.
- Direct conflict with MC culture.
- Cloward and Ohlin (functionalists)
- There is an illigitamate oppurtunity structure which presents itself within crime- allowing the achievement of societies goals.
- Three types of subculture:
- Criminalisation of subcultures- petty crime to aquire goods
- Conflict subcultures- status from fighting, may involve gang territorial conflicts
- Retreatist subcultures- centre on drugs
- Brake (marxist)
- Resistance to capitalism in WC subcultures- aware of their position in capitalist society.
- Subcultures are an illusion which appear to solve problems. Eg Phil Cohan 'skinhead' study which was a magical recreation of WC culture.
- Murray (new right)
- Attributes growth in crime to the existance of an underclass- who possess criminal values.
- Believes this group is growing as a result of single parenthood, and an overgenerous welfare system.
- Nightingale
- Studied young black WC males in Philadelphia.
- Subculture arises from a desire to be a part of a mainstream society which marginalises them.
- Therefore response is to identify themselves with wider cultures- eg by aquiring popular goods, without worry of how these goods may be obtained.
- Winlow (masculinity)
- Badfellas study of bouncers and criminal activity in the Sunderland area
- Links criminal values to the ever-changing economy and the feeling that lower WC jobs have disappeared meaning that young…
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