Sociology-crime-interactionism and labelling theory Flashcards
What are labelling theorists interested in, in relation to crime?
They are interested in how and why certain acts come to be defined as criminal in the first place, as they argue that 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 does Becker say about crime and deviance?
Social groups create deviance by creating the rules whose infraction constitutes deviance, and by applying those rules to particular people and labelling them as outsiders
What is a deviant, according to Becker?
Someone to whom the label has been successfully applied, and deviant behaviour is simply behaviour that people so label
What interests labelling theorists about rules/laws?
They look at how and why rules and laws get made. They are particularly interested in the role of what Becker calls moral entrepreneurs
What are moral entrepreneurs?
These are people who lead a moral ‘crusade’ to change the law
What does two effects does Bercker argue that this new law invariably has?
The creation of a new group of ‘outsiders’-outlaws or deviants who break the new rule. Also the creation or expansion of a social control agency (such as the police, courts, probation officers etc) to enforce the rules and impose labels on offenders
What does Platt argue?
Argues that the idea of ‘juvenile delinquency’ was originally created as a result of a campaign by upper-class Victorian moral entrepreneurs, aimed at protecting young people. This established ‘juveniles’ as a separate category of offender with their own courts, and it enabled the state to extend its powers beyond criminal offences involving the young, into so called ‘status offences’
What is a status offence?
Where their behaviour is only an offence because of their age, such as truancy and sexual promiscuity
What does Becker note about social control agencies?
They themselves may also campaign for a change in the law to increase their own power. For example, the US Federal Bureau of Narcotics successfully campaigned for passing of the Marijuana Tax Act 1937 to outlaw marijuana use. Supposedly this was on the grounds of its ill effects on young people but Becker argues it was to extend the Bureau’s sphere of influence
What does the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and the Marijuana Tax Act show?
It is not the inherent harmfulness of a particular behaviour that leads to new laws being created, but rather the efforts of powerful individuals and groups to redefine the behaviour as unacceptable
Why does not everyone that commits an offence get punished for it?
Whether a person is arrested, charged and convicted depends on factors such as, their interactions with agencies of social control, their appearance/background/personal biography, and the situation/circumstances of the offence
What do labelling theorists look at, regarding who gets labelled?
They look at how the laws are applied and enforced. Their studies show that agencies of social control are more likely to label certain groups of people as deviant or criminal
What did Piliavin and Briar find?
Police decision to arrest a youth were mainly based on physical cues, such as manner and dress, from which they made judgements about the youth’s character. Officers’ decisions were also influenced by the suspect’s gender, class and ethnicity, as well as by time and place, eg those stopped late at night in high crime areas ran a greater risk of arrest. Similarly, studies of anti-social behaviour found they were disproportionately used against ethnic minorities
What did Cicourel find, linked to the fact that officers’ decisions to arrest are influenced by their stereotypes about offenders?
Officers’ typifications (commonsense theories or stereotypes of what the typical delinquent is like) led them to concentrate on certain ‘types’. This resulted in law enforcement showing a class bias, in that working class areas and people fitted the police typifications most closely, and so they patrol working class areas more intensively, resulting in more arrests, confirming their stereotypes
What did cicourel also find about agencies of social control?
Other agents of social control within the criminal justice system reinforced this bias, eg probation officers held the commonsense theory that juvenile delinquency was caused by broken homes, poverty and lax parenting. They tended to see youths from such backgrounds as likely to offend in future and were less likely to support non-custodial sentences for them
What does cicourel say about justice?
It is not fixed, it is negotiable. Eg when a middle class youth is arrested, he is less likely to be charged-partly due to not fitting the police’s ‘typical delinquent’ and partly as his parents are more likely to be able to negotiate successfully on his behalf, convincing agencies that he was sorry and they would monitor him so he would not get in trouble again. As a result he was typically ‘counselled, warned and released’
What does cicourel’s study have implications for?
It has implications for the use we make of official crime statistics recorded by the police. He argues that these statistics don’t give a valid picture of the patterns of crime and cannot be used as a resource (as facts about crime). Instead they should be treated as a topic for sociologists to investigate
How should crime statistics be studied?
They shouldn’t be taken at face value, and instead, the process on how they are created should be investigated, to shed light on the activities of the control agencies and how they process and label certain types of people as criminal
How do interactionists see official crime statistics?
They see them 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. 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 typifications or stereotypes they hold about him or her
If crime statistics or socially constructed, what do they tell us?
Statistics produced by the criminal justice system only tell us about the activities of the police and prosecutors rather than about the amount of crime in society or who commits it. The statistics are really just counts of the decisions made by control agents at the different ‘decision gates’ of the justice system
What is the dark figure of crime?
The difference between the official statistics and the ‘real’ rate of crime is sometimes called the dark figure as we don’t know for certain how much crime goes undetected, unreported or unrecorded
What are alternative statistics?
Some sociologists use victim surveys or self report studies to gain a more accurate view of the amount of crime. These can add to our picture of crime, but they still have several limitations, eg people may forget, conceal or exaggerate when asked if they have committed or been a victim to crime. Also such surveys usually only include a selection of (generally less serious) offences
What does Lemert distinguish between?
Primary and secondary deviance
What is primary deviance?
It refers to deviant acts that have not been publicly labelled. Lemert argues that it’s pointless to seek causes of primary deviance as it is so widespread that it’s unlikely to have a single cause and in any case is often trivial eg fare dodging, and goes uncaught. These acts are not part of an organised deviant way of life, so offenders can easily rationalise them away, eg as a moment of madness, and they have little significance for their status or self concept (they don’t see themselves as deviant)
What is secondary deviance?
Some deviance is labelled. Secondary deviance is the result of society reaction (labelling). Being caught and publicly labelled as a criminal can involve being stigmatised, shamed, humiliated, shunned or excluded from normal society. After this, others may only see them in terms of their label-this becomes their master status
What is master status?
Someones master status is their controlling identity, overriding all others. In the eyes of the world, they are no longer a colleague, parent, or neighbour; they are now a thief or murderer etc- an outsider