Crime - sociological theories - Flashcards
What is the functionalist view on crime? 2
Believe that crime is inevitable for 2 reasons:
- Not everyone is equally socialised
- Diversity of lifestyles and values (no shared norms and values)
What are Durkheim’s 4 functions of crime?
Functionalist
Neither high or low level if crime is desirable
Rise in crime means an institution is failing
- Boundary maintenance (reinforces commitment to shared norms and values through punishments)
- Adaptation and change (all change starts with act of deviance)
- Social cohesion (social solidarity)
- Safety valve (provides stress relief)
None of this would work without media
Evaluation of Durkheim?
- Ignores the way power is a significant variable in relation to the way laws are created and maintained.
- Does not explain why certain people are more likely to commit crimes.
- Accepts and rationalises social inequalities e.g slavery, genocide.
- Erikson (Wayward Puritans 1966)
What did Travis Hirschi say about crime?
Functionalist
Asked WHY don’t people commit crime? Criminal activity occurs when individuals attachment to society is weakened.
4 reasons why people don’t commit crime:
- Attachment (the extent to which we care about others opinions)
- Commitment (Personal investments that each of us make)
- Involvement (Persons level of activity)
- Belief (Persons conviction they should obey the rules of society)
Evaluation of Hirschi?
- Does not explain all crime (e.g Involvement may not explain white collar crime)
- Over simplistic solution to problems generated by delinquency (He suggested to provide youth with ping pong tables or public pools and crime will lower)
What is Mertons subcultural strain theory?
Functionalist
There is strain between the goals and society and the accepted means of achieving them.
5 different responses to strain:
- Conformity (accepts goals and means of achieving them)
- Ritualism (accepts means but scales down goals)
- Innovation (accepts goals but rejects means, most criminal group)
- Retreatism (rejects goals and means, withdraws from society)
- Rebellion (rejects goals and means but replaces with their own e.g terrorists)
What does is Cohen’s status frustration theory?
Functionalist In schools, lower class children invert m/c values. This way they succeed but in opposite ways.
What is Cloward and Ohlin’s ‘illegitimate opportunity structure’?
Functionalist
hierarchy within crimes (illegitimate e.g gangs, Mafia) and people can work their way up subcultures.
What are Millers focal concerns of w/c? 6
Functionalist
- Excitement
- Smartness
- Trouble
- Fatalism
- Toughness
- Autonomy
What did Stan Cohen study?
Interactionalist
Mods and Rockers - Folk Devils (shown as worse than it was through media)
Moral Panics
What did Jock Young study?
Interactionalist
Social reaction to drugs
Using drugs was part of hippies lifestyle (primary deviance)
Arrests lead to them feeling withdrawn and drug use became centralised activity (deviance amplification spiral)
Therefore what was thought about them became true (self - fulfilling prophecy)
Evaluation of Merton?
- Takes official statistics at face value (appears w/c crime is higher when they don’t include white collar crime).
- Ignores power structures
- Not all w/c groups resort to crime (doesn’t explain how some feel strain and others don’t)
- Assumes value consensus on goals and means
- Only accounts for money crimes
- Ignores group crimes.
Evaluation of Cohen?
- Assumes all start with m/c values
- Assumes they know how to recognise and invert values.
What is Howard Beckers theory of crime?
Interactionalist
Labelling theory
Interested in how and why acts become deviant.
“A deviant is someone to which a label has been successfully applied”.
Says a ‘moral entrepreneurs’ lead a ‘moral crusade’ to change the law.
New law has 2 effects:
- Creation of a new group of ‘outsiders’
- Expansion of social control agencies.
What did Cicourel say about crime?
Interactionalist
Typifications (police have certain stereotype on who commits crime e.g ethnic minorities)
Police will target these typifications so they will get more arrests (self fulfilling prophecy)
Justice is negotiable, not fixed (m/c can negotiate way out of arrest) leads to social construction of crime statistics.