Violent Offending - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Violent Offending

Description:

No standard, fixed definition of violence. It varies across time, culture ... of the orbits, handle-shaped or sensile ears found in criminals, savages and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:160
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: g00w
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Violent Offending


1
Violent Offending
  • Kate Whitfield
  • Email K.Whitfield_at_liverpool.ac.uk

2
Defining Violence
  • No standard, fixed definition of violence.
  • It varies across time, culture from one
    situation to the next.
  • The definitions of violent behaviour is often
    constructed by society.

3
Violent Crime
  • Not only the infliction of physical harm, but
    also the threat of physical harm.
  • Can be divided into 4 categories
  • 1.) Domestic violence
  • 2.) Mugging
  • 3.) Stranger violence
  • 4.) Acquaintance violence

4
Explanations of Violent Offending
  • Biological explanations
  • Psychological explanations
  • Mental disorders
  • Social explanations

5
Biological Explanations
  • Explain both the acquisition maintenance of
    violent behaviour through an individuals
    physiological functioning.
  • Simply, they suggest that criminals are born, not
    made.

6
Biological Explanations
  • Cesare Lombroso
  • At the sight of that skull, I seemed to see all
    of a sudden, lighted up as a vast plain under a
    flaming sky, the problem of the nature of the
    criminal an atavistic being who reproduces in
    his person the ferocious instincts of primitive
    humanity and the inferior animals. Thus were
    explained anatomically the enormous jaws, high
    cheek bones, prominent superciliary arches,
    solitary lines in the palms, extreme size of the
    orbits, handle-shaped or sensile ears found in
    criminals, savages and apes, insensibility to
    pain, extremely acute sight, tattooing, excessive
    idleness, love of orgies, and the irresistible
    craving of evil for its own sake.

7
Biological Explanations
  • Twin studies Test if monozygotic twins are more
    similar in their behaviour than dizygotic twins.
  • Adoption studies Looked at children separated
    from their biological parents compared their
    behaviour with both their adoptive biological
    parents.

8
Psychological Explanations
  • No criminal personality
  • Aggression violence
  • - Low tolerance for frustrating situations
  • - Sport
  • Impulsivity violence
  • - Lack of self-control
  • - No consideration of negative
  • consequences
  • Eysencks theory of criminal behaviour

9
Eysencks theory
  • 3 separate dimensions of personality
  • 1.) Extroversion (E)
  • 2.) Neuroticism (N)
  • 3.) Psychopathy (P)
  • Offenders tend to score high on P, fairly high on
    N mixed findings regarding E.
  • Criticism Dimensions have been studied in
    isolation from each other, rather than as
    combinations.

10
Mental Disorders
  • Schizophrenia
  • - Relationship between paranoid ideas
  • violence, where the victims have featured
  • in the offenders delusions.
  • - eg. Peter Sutcliffe Yorkshire Ripper
  • - However, the majority of people with
  • schizophrenia are NOT violent.

11
Mental Disorders
  • Psychopathic Disorder
  • - Psychopathy Checklist (PCL-R)
  • - Two factors
  • 1.) Personality traits
  • 2.) Chronic antisocial criminal
    behaviour

12
Psychopathy Checklist
  • Some of the items on the PCL-R
  • - Delinquent as a juvenile
  • - Lack of remorse or guilt
  • - Early behaviour problems
  • - Manipulative
  • - Versatile as a criminal
  • - Pathological lying
  • - No emotional depth

13
Mental Disorders
  • However, it is important to note
  • - Not all people with mental disorders
  • commit crimes.
  • - Not all offenders have mental
  • disorders.
  • - Those individuals who exhibit criminal
  • behaviour AND have been diagnosed with
  • a mental disorder are a rarity, rather than
  • the norm.

14
Social Explanations
  • Differential association theory
  • Social learning theory
  • Television violence
  • Family discipline supervision

15
Differential Association Theory (Sutherland)
  • Criminal behaviour is learned.
  • The learning is through association with other
    people.
  • The learning not only includes techniques to
    carry out certain crimes but also specific
    attitudes motives conducive towards committing
    crime.
  • Attitudes favourable to crime must outweigh those
    that promote non-criminal behaviour.
  • The process of learning criminal behaviour is no
    different from the learning of any other
    behaviour.

16
Strengths Criticisms
  • Neglects personality traits
  • Delinquents select delinquent friends (Matthews,
    1968)
  • Explains acquisition of tendencies BUT doesnt
    account for the maintenance of criminal behaviours
  • Explains the presence of crime in all elements of
    social structure
  • Explains onset of criminality

17
Social learning theory (Bandura)
  • Behaviours of any sort (non-criminal / criminal)
    may be learned by observing others.
  • The individuals observed are known as models.
  • Model selection depends on age, status and
    ability to provide social reinforcement.

18
Bobo doll study (1977)
19
Social learning theory cont
  • Models behaviour imitated depends on consequences
    of their actions (observational learning)
  • Reward
    Imitated
  • Observed act
  • Punishment Not
    Imitated

  • Criminal behaviour maintained through operant
    conditioning (direct learning)

20
Strengths Criticisms
  • Concedes that different people may commit the
    same crimes for different reasons
  • Individuals motivations and expectations are
    based on their unique learning experiences
  • Largely based on lab studies

21
Can watching TV make individuals violent?
YES
NO
22
TV and violence cont
  • NOT just simple imitation
  • James Bulger murder case 1993
  • Mr. Justice Morland I suspect that the
    offenders exposure to violent video films may in
    part be an explanation (Childs Play 3)
  • Mixed research findings
  • Already violent individuals may seek out violent
    television programmes.

23
Punishment Discipline Style
  • Hoffman (1977)- Delinquent families more likely
    to use power assertion techniques
  • Farrington (1989)- Harsh physical punishment
    predicts violent offending
  • Patterson (1982)- Inconsistent punishment
    predicts violent offending

24
Parental Supervision
  • Monitoring of childs activities
  • McCord (1979) Cambridge-Somerville Study. Where
    parental supervision was low delinquency was
    high.
  • Wilson (1980) Parental supervision more important
    than parental criminal record in predicting
    delinquency.

25
Strengths Criticisms
  • Support from studies using cross-sectional and
    longitudinal methods
  • Support from studies using both self-report and
    official measures of crime
  • Failure to control for variables such as age, sex
    and SES
  • Impossible to disentangle genetic and
    environmental factors

26
Conclusion
  • Each of us inherits a biological system that
    responds in a certain way to the environment.
    However, this response is influenced by the
    environment itself the individuals
    psychological development.
  • Thus, any behaviour must be understood in terms
    of biological, psychological environmental
    factors.

27
Selected Readings
  • Blackburn, R. (1995). The Psychology of Criminal
    Conduct Theory, Research and Practice. London
    Wiley.
  • Feldman, P. (1993). The Psychology of Crime.
    Cambridge Cambridge University Press.
  • Hollin, C.R. (1992). Criminal Behaviour A
    Psychological approach to Explanation and
    Prevention. London The Falmer Press.
  • Hopkins-Burke, R. (2003). An Introduction to
    Criminological Theory. London Willan.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com