Unit 4- AC2.1 Flashcards
Forms of social control
What are the three types of social control?
- Internal social control
- External social control
- Control theory
What is social control?
Persuading people to conform to societies norms, laws and expectations.
What is internal social control?
Control of behaviour from within
What is part of Freud’s tripartite principle?
- Id (pleasure principle)
- Superego (morality principle)
- Ego (reality principle)
How does superego maintain social control?
Provides morals within our norms, laws and expectations. When broken, we feel guilty .
How does tradition and culture maintain social control?
When we belong to a culture, it becomes internal through socialisation. We accepts its norms, traditions and values as part of our identity. As they are now our own views, we will not break them.
What is an example of social control in tradition and cultures?
’ You shall not kill’ and ‘you shall not steal’.
Part of the ten commandments
How does internalisation of social rules and morality maintain social control?
Base what is wrong and right off social values, internalising our own social rules.
Forms part of our conscience so we feel guilty if we break them. This rational ideology
What is an example of internalisation of social rules and morality maintaining social control?
Being punished for hurting someone
What is external social control?
Agencies that ensure we conform to its expectations. They impose rules that are followed due to positive and negative sanctions
What is skinners operant conditioning?
Part of external social control
States punishments deter undesired behaviour and rewards encourage acceptable behaviour.
What is coercion and what social control is it under?
External social control.
Use of threat or force to make someone do something. Maintains social control as the threat of punishment makes individuals follow the rules.
Physical- Imprisonment
Non-physical- Strike
What is the control theory?
Travis Hirschi states people conform because they are controlled by their bonds to society. Delinquent acts occur when an individuals bonds are weakened
What are the four bonds to society?
- Attachment
- Belief
- Commitment
- Parental involvement
Explain attachment as a bond to society
If you commit a crime, it could stand in the way of achieving goals