Chapter 2- Practices Of Governance And Control: Theoretical Underpinnings Flashcards
Reformable young offender
One who required intervention and could be rehabilitated
Today’s discourse on youth crime
4 groups Violent youth Squeegee kids Aboriginal youth (Increasingly) female offenders
Punishable young offender
Requires punishment first and foremost leaving reform and rehabilitative interventions as secondary measures
Intrusive punishment discourse
Holds young people accountable for their criminal actions and applies more punitive sanctions
“If we are tough on crime, if we punish crime, then (youth) get the message”
Theoretical underpinnings
Assumptions, discourses, concepts, and implications of various responses to youth crime.
2 discourses of youth and crime
- Youth are vulnerable and in need of assistance and protection
- Youth in need of discipline and punishment
Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
Interested in social facts ie the effect of social structure on behaviour
Normlessness (anomie)
Found that suicide increases during industrialization
Anomie
Society of Saints
- norms still exist
- deviance is built into society
Humans are egoistic
- society needs social control to regulate their wants and behaviours
Anomie
- conditions of normlessness
- results from rapid social change ex: war, industrialization, natural disaster
- rapid social change causes an increase in crime
Robert Merton and Anomie
Anomie:
Rejection of deviance as human nature
Cultural goals versus legitimate means
Dissonance between culturally specified goals and culturally available means to achieve goals
Access to means is stratified but goals are universal
Lower class experience strain between goals and means…choose illegitimate means
Merton’s Typology of Adaptation to Anomie
Conformists Innovator Ritualist Retreatist Rebel
Cohen’s Delinquent Subcultures (1955)
Status frustration: delinquent boys engage in non utilitarian behaviour For example Can't measure up in middle class school so they get attention by breaking rules and develop r own rules
Differential Opportunity
Coward and Ohlin (1960)
Illegitimate opportunities are not equally available to all
Stable criminal subculture
- established illegal activity
- they have the want and ability
Conflict subculture
- violent youth gangs, status in gang or violence
- they have the want but no ability
Retreatist Subculture (double failures) - drugs, alcohol, skid row
Social control theories
All people are tempted to be deviant
Why do they NOT commit deviant acts
Emphasizes self concept and self esteem
Hirschi’s Social Bond (1969)
Attachment: to your community
Commitment: to your community
Involvement : after school involvement
Belief: belief structure
Those who have these four bonds do not commit crime
Contemporary social control theories
Braithwaite: reintegrative shaming (1989o
- disintegrative vs reintegrative
- highly influential in restorative justice
- works well with minor delinquency
Ulrich Beck: risk society (1992)
- risk is the central organizing principle in society
- influence on criminology and criminal justice
- crime prevention