Social Process Theories of Crime - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Social Process Theories of Crime

Description:

Typically do not approach crime and delinquency as primarily a lower-class problem. ... Criminogenic forces may be contained or controlled by two mechanisms: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:312
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: Verh152
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Social Process Theories of Crime


1
Social Process Theories of Crime
  • Chapter 8

2
Social Process Theories of Crime
  • Attempt to explain how individuals become law
    violators.
  • Micro-level theories
  • Typically do not approach crime and delinquency
    as primarily a lower-class problem.
  • Socializing influences are key to explaining
    behavior (e.g., family, education, peers)
  • Three forms of social process theories
  • Learning
  • Culture Conflict
  • Social Control

3
Learning Criminal Behavior
  • Criminal behavior is learned in a social context.
  • Law-breaking values, norms, and motives are
    acquired through interaction with others.
  • The skills and techniques are learned, although
    their content varies widely with the complexity
    of the crime.
  • Crime is considered to be normal.

4
Edwin H. Sutherland - Differential Association
  • Theories thought to have substantial influence on
    Sutherlands Differential Association
  • Symbolic Interactionism
  • Culture Transmission
  • Culture Conflict
  • Differential association suggests that person
    socialized in disorganized neighborhoods are
    likely to have associations that will encourage
    criminal adaptations.
  • Wrote Criminology (1924), Principles of
    Criminology (1934), and the Professional Thief
    (1937).
  • White Collar Crime

5
Sutherlands Nine Principlesof Differential
Association
  • 1. Criminal behavior is learned.
  • 2. Criminal behavior is learned in interaction
    with other persons in a process of communication.
  • 3. The principal part of the learning of criminal
    behavior occurs within intimate personal groups.
  • 4. When criminal behavior is learned, the
    learning includes
  • a. techniques of committing the crime, which are
    sometimes very complicated, sometimes very simple
  • b. the specific direction of motives, drives,
    rationalization, and attitudes.
  • 5. The specific direction of motives and drives
    is learned from definitions of the legal codes as
    favorable or unfavorable.

6
Sutherlands Nine Principlesof Differential
Association, cont.
  • 6. A person becomes delinquent because of an
    excess of definitions favorable to violation of
    law over definitions unfavorable to violation of
    law.
  • 7. Differential associations may vary in
    frequency, duration, priority, and intensity.
  • 8. The process of learning criminal behavior by
    association with criminal and anti-criminal
    patterns involves all of the mechanisms that are
    involved in any other learning.
  • 9. While criminal behavior is an expression of
    general needs and values, it is not explained by
    those general needs and values, because
    noncriminal behavior is an expression of the same
    needs a values.

7
Criticisms of Differential Association
  • Major criticisms have focused on the theories
    testability, causal framework, and breadth.
  • Concepts incorporated in the theory were vaguely
    and imprecisely explained, leaving researchers to
    generate their own operational definitions.
  • Differential association presumes that
    definitions acquired in association with others
    lead to behavioral patterns.
  • Differential association is so broad that, in
    attempting to explain all criminal behavior, the
    theory succeeds in explaining none.
  • Testing Differential Association.

8
Ronald Akers - Social Learning Theory
  • Expanded Sutherlands Differential Association
    theory by adding components of operant (voluntary
    response) and respondent (involuntary response)
    conditioning.
  • Identified four key elements that help shape
    behavior
  • Differential Associations - the learning of
    definitions favorable or unfavorable to the law
    through processes of social interaction.
  • Definitions - apply to ones own attitudes
    including orientations, rationalizations,
    definitions of the situation, and other
    evaluative aspects of right and wrong.
  • Differential Reinforcement - the actual or
    anticipated consequences of engaging in specific
    behavior.
  • Imitation
  • Criticisms of Social Learning Theory
  • The reinforcement proposition is tautological
    which first?
  • The temporal sequencing of peer association and
    delinquency is poorly specified.

9
  • Techniques of Neutralization -
  • Gresham M. Sykes and David Matza
  • To allow violation of laws in which one
    essentially believes, while preserving
    self-image, neutralization must precede the
    offense.

10
Sykes and Matzas Techniquesof Neutralization
  • Technique Definition
  • Denial of Responsibility disclaiming person
    accountability for
  • law violation
  • Denial of Injury claiming that the prohibited
    behavior
  • is absent the element of harm
  • Denial of the Victim transforming the victim of
    illegal
  • behavior into a justifiable target
  • Condemnation of the denouncing the persons that
    allege Condemners law violation
  • Appeal to Higher Loyalties justifying law
    violation by conforming
  • to the moral demands of another
  • group affiliation

11
Culture Conflict and Crime
  • Closely allied with versions of learning theory.
  • Focuses on how members of a group are trained
    through the learning process.
  • Culture Conflict Theories locate the cause of
    crime and delinquency in subcultural features.
  • Views deviance as conformity to norms of a
    subculture that runs counter to those of the
    dominant group.

12
Thorsten Sellin - Conflict of Conduct Norms
  • Wrote Culture Conflict and Crime (1938)
  • Argued that the task of criminology was to
    explain violation of conduct norms.
  • The catch-22 is that conformity to the norms of
    many subcultures may contradict norms of the
    dominant culture, placing members of those
    subcultures in the position of violating the
    norms of some social group no matter how the
    members conduct themselves.
  • Primary Culture Conflict - the collision of norms
    from distinct cultural systems.
  • Secondary Culture Conflict - occurs with the
    evolution of subcultures in a heterogenous
    society.
  • Focused on immigration

13
Walter Miller - Lower-Class Focal Concerns
  • Focuses on features of lower-class culture.
  • The stage is set for culture conflict because the
    norms learned in lower-class settings depart from
    those of the dominant middle-class culture.

14
Walter Millers Lower-Class Focal Concerns
  • Trouble - Interference from official social
    control agents of the dominant culture.
  • Toughness - Distorted image of masculinity.
  • Smartness - Skill and ability to dominate verbal
    exchanges pertinent to the lower-class
    environment.
  • Excitement - Relieving the monotonous routine of
    lower-class existence through
    emotion-arousing entertainment that often
    violates norms of the dominant culture.
  • Fate - Belief in little control over the forces
    shaping ones life.
  • Autonomy - Ambivalence regarding freedom from
    external control reflected in overt resentment
    of control, but covert pursuit of control.

15
Social Control and Crime
  • Revolves around the process of socializing
    people.
  • Rests on the premise that, if left alone, people
    will pursue self-interests rather than those of
    society.
  • Views crime as predictable behavior that society
    has failed to bridle.
  • Depicts choice as relevant to behavior.
  • Value consensus lies at the basis of control
    theory.

16
Control Theories
  • Containment Theory - Walter Reckless
  • Very broad perspective that provides a general
    framework for the control perspective.
  • Criminogenic forces may be contained or
    controlled by two mechanisms
  • Outer Containments - controls external to the
    individual that take the form of social sanctions
  • Inner Containments - self-control. Similar to
    the concept of conscious and is facilitated by a
    strong self-concept.

17
Travis Hirschi - Social Bond Theory
  • Assumes that a person is free to commit
    delinquent acts because his ties to the
    conventional order have somehow been broken
    (19693).
  • Weakened or broken social bonds reduce a persons
    stakes in conformity.
  • Four interrelated elements of the social bond
  • Attachment (most important)
  • Commitment
  • Involvement
  • Belief

18
Michael Gottfredson and Travis Hirschi - A
General Theory of Crime
  • Rooted in low self-control, as opposed to
    inadequate social controls.
  • Crime is the result of individuals with low
    self-control encountering situations or
    opportunities in which crime will produce
    immediate gratification with relatively low
    levels of risk.
  • Argue that the cause of all crime is low-self
    control and that this characteristic is stable
    across the life course and set by age eight.
  • Theory is rooted in the classical hedonistic view
    of human nature.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com