Interactionism and Labelling Theory Flashcards
What are labelling theorists interested in?
How and why certain acts come to be defined or labelled as criminal in the first place.
According to labelling theorists, what makes an act deviant?
Its not the nature of the act that makes it deviant, but the nature of society’s reaction to the act.
Define moral entrepreneurs.
People who lead a moral ‘crusade’ to change the law.
According to Becker, what are two effects of a new law?
- The creation of a new group of ‘outsiders’: outlaws or deviants who break the new rule.
- The creation or expansion of a social control agency (such as police, courts, probation officers etc) to enforce the rule and impose labels on offenders.
Briefly describe one example of the creation and impact of a new law.
Platt: ‘Juvenile delinquency’ - created as result of campaign by upper-class Victorian entrepreneurs, to protect young people at risk.
- Enabled state to extend powers beyond criminal offenses involving young, into so-called ‘status offenses’ (where behaviour is only an offense bc of age)
- E.g: truancy + sexual promiscuity
Briefly outline the factors that determine whether a person is arrested, charged and convicted.
- Their interaction with agencies of social control
- Their appearance, background and personal biography.
- The situation and circumstances of the offense.
According to Pilkiavin and Briar, what affects police decisions to arrest a youth?
- Mainly based on physical cues (e.g manner + dress)
- Gender, class and ethnicity
- Time and place
- E.g those stopped late at night in high crime areas ran a greater risk of arrest.
Briefly explain what Cicourel means by typifications.
Officers common sense theories or stereotypes of what the typical delinquent is led them to concentrate on certain ‘types’.
Why do officers’ typifications result in a class bias?
- People in w/c areas fit typification’s more accurately.
- Led to police patrolling w/c areas more intensively, resulting in more arrests + confirming their stereotypes.
Give an example of how bias is reinforced by other agents of social control.
- Probation officers held commonsense theory that juvenile delinquency was caused by broken homes, poverty + lax parenting.
- Tended to see youths from such backgrounds as likely to offend and were likely to support non-custodial sentences for them.
Briefly explain why Cicourel claims that justice is negotiated.
- When a m/c youth was arrested, he was less likely to be charged as he didn’t fit police’s ‘typical delinquent’.
- Also parents were more likely to negotiate successfully on his behalf, convincing control agencies he was sorry, they would monitor him + ensure he stays out of trouble.
- Result: ‘counselled, warned and released’ rather than prosecuted.
According to Cicourel, why should we use official crime statistics as a topic rather than as a resource?
- They don’t give us a valid picture of crime patterns and cannot be used as a resource. Therefore, they should be treated as topics.
- We shouldn’t take crime stats at face value; instead, we should investigate processes that created them.
- This will shed light on activities of control agencies and how they process + label certain types of people as criminal.
Briefly explain why interactionists see official crime statistics as socially constructed.
- At each stage of the criminal justice system, agents of social control make decisions about whether or not to proceed to the next stage.
- Outcome depends on label attached to individual suspect or defendant in the course of their interactions.
- Labels affected by typification’s or stereotypes.
Explain what is meant by the dark figure of crime.
The difference between the official statistics and the ‘real ‘ rate of crime. We don’t know for certain how much crime goes undetected, unreported and unrecorded.
Which other two types of statistics do sociologists use to study crime?
Victim surveys: where they’re asked what crimes they’ve been victim of.
Self-report studies: Where they’re asked what crimes they have committed.
What does Lemert mean by a primary deviance?
Deviant acts that haven’t been publicly labelled.
Briefly explain what is meant by ‘master status’.
- Once an individual is labelled, others may come to see him only in terms of the label. This becomes his master status or controlling identity, overriding all others.
- In the eyes of the world, he’s no longer a colleague, father or neighbour; he’s now a thief, junkie or pedophile - an outsider.
Briefly explain what is meant by ‘self-concept’.
The individual’s belief about himself or herself, including the person’s attributes and who and what the self is.