Unit 4- AC2.1 Flashcards

Forms of social control

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1
Q

What are the three types of social control?

A
  • Internal social control
  • External social control
  • Control theory
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2
Q

What is social control?

A

Persuading people to conform to societies norms, laws and expectations.

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3
Q

What is internal social control?

A

Control of behaviour from within

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4
Q

What is part of Freud’s tripartite principle?

A
  • Id (pleasure principle)
  • Superego (morality principle)
  • Ego (reality principle)
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5
Q

How does superego maintain social control?

A

Provides morals within our norms, laws and expectations. When broken, we feel guilty .

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6
Q

How does tradition and culture maintain social control?

A

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.

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7
Q

What is an example of social control in tradition and cultures?

A

’ You shall not kill’ and ‘you shall not steal’.
Part of the ten commandments

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8
Q

How does internalisation of social rules and morality maintain social control?

A

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

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9
Q

What is an example of internalisation of social rules and morality maintaining social control?

A

Being punished for hurting someone

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10
Q

What is external social control?

A

Agencies that ensure we conform to its expectations. They impose rules that are followed due to positive and negative sanctions

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11
Q

What is skinners operant conditioning?

A

Part of external social control
States punishments deter undesired behaviour and rewards encourage acceptable behaviour.

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12
Q

What is coercion and what social control is it under?

A

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

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13
Q

What is the control theory?

A

Travis Hirschi states people conform because they are controlled by their bonds to society. Delinquent acts occur when an individuals bonds are weakened

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14
Q

What are the four bonds to society?

A
  • Attachment
  • Belief
  • Commitment
  • Parental involvement
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15
Q

Explain attachment as a bond to society

A

If you commit a crime, it could stand in the way of achieving goals

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16
Q

Explain belief as a bond to society

A

If a person is socialised into a community with shared values, they will be committed to the norms and beliefs of that community. Common belief crime is wrong.

17
Q

Explain commitment as a bond to society.

A

Less opportunity to commit crime if they are involved in their local community.

18
Q

Explain parental involvement as a bond to society

A

Gottfredson and Hirschi argued poor socialisation and absent parent discipline increase chances of delinquency.
Riley and Shaw found lack of parental supervision is a factor in delinquency.