Interactionalism and Labelling Theory Flashcards
What is labelling?
- A form of social control.
What is a moral panic?
- The process of arousing social change over an issue.
Who are moral entrepreneurs?
- A person or group with the power to create or enforce rules and impose their morals, views and attitudes on others.
Give at least two examples of moral entrepreneurs.
At least two from:
- Politicians
- Teachers
- Parents
- Religious leaders
What is a folk devil?
- An over-simplified, ill-informed generalization of a particular person or social group who moral entrepreneurs want to demonise.
Give at least two examples of folk devils.
At least two from:
- Mods and Rockers
- Hoodies
- Lone parent families
- Immigrants
What are moral entrepreneurs able to do by labelling groups as folk devils?
- Create moral panics within society.
How can the idea of moral panics be applied to knife crime?
- People may become worried and start carrying a knife. - People are more likely to be stabbed or stab someone else if you get into an argument if you are carrying a knife yourself.
What are labelling theorists interested in?
- How and why certain acts become defined or labelled as criminal.
What do labelling theorists argue?
- No act is inherently criminal or deviant in itself, in all situations and at all times. Instead, it only comes to be so when others label it as such.
What factors influence whether a person is arrested, charged and convicted?
- Their interactions with agencies of social control.
- Their appearance, background and personal biography.
- The situation and circumstances of the offence.
What do interactionalists argue about official statistics for crime?
- They are social constructed.
What evidence is there to suggest that crime is socially constructed?
Give at least one example.
- At each stage of the criminal justice system, agents of social control make decisions about whether or not to proceed to the next stage. The outcome depends on the label they attach to the individual suspect or defendant In the course of their interactions. This label is likely to be affected by the stereotypes they hold.
- Statistics produced by the criminal justice system only tell us about the activities of the police and prosecutors, rather than the amount of crime in society or who commits it.
What is the ‘dark figure’ for crime and why is it called the ‘dark figure’?
- The difference between official statistics and the ‘real’ rate of crime.
- Often called the dark figure because we do not know for certain how much crime goes undetected, and unreported and unrecorded.
How do some sociologists go about getting a more accurate view of the amount of crime?
- By using victim surveys or self-report studies.