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Title: Crime and Criminology


1
Crime and Criminology
  • What is crime?
  • Durkheim on crime
  • What is deviance?

2
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3
Carol Carr
  • The woman, Carol Carr, 64, killed her sons,
    Michael R. Scott, 42, and Andy B. Scott, 41, in a
    nursing home
  • Both men were in the advanced stages of
    Huntington's disease and were bedridden and
    unable to communicate.
  • The disease, a degenerative nerve disorder that
    causes involuntary body movement, dementia and
    death, killed their father, Ms. Carr's first
    husband.
  • ''What she did was illegal, but also what she did
    was moral she stopped the suffering of these
    children,'' her lawyer, Lee Sexton, said.

4
Lorena Bobbitt (1970 - )
  • Perpetrator of domestic abuse
  • Lorena Bobbitt married John Wayne Bobbitt on June
    18, 1989
  • Five years later, on the night of June 23, 1993,
    she severed her husband's penis with a kitchen
    knife while he was sleeping
  • She then got in her car and flung the penis out
    the window while driving
  • It was later found and surgically reattached.

5
Lorena Bobbitt (1970 - )
  • According to police reports, Lorena pleaded
    self-defense, saying that John had continuously
    raped her
  • John adamantly denied her accusations
  • John was acquitted of charges of assault against
    Lorena in 1993.
  • In 1994, Lorena was found not guilty based on
    expert testimony stating that her husbands abuse
    had caused her to suffer from post-traumatic
    stress disorder, or temporary insanity, at the
    time of the crime
  • She was ordered to spend 45 days in a psychiatric
    hospital.

6
Lorena Bobbitt (1970 - )
  • Lorena and John Bobbitt divorced in 1995
  • She currently works as a hair stylist in Asburn,
    Virginia.

7
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8
Clifton Eames
  • Clifton Eames was a law school graduate who found
    it difficult to pass the bar
  • But apparently his wife was much more successful
    in her dental (student/school) career
  • After a stormy marriage the couple eventually
    divorced
  • Police say on Monday Eames shot and killed his
    ex-wife Mina Rosenthal-Eames
  • He was later shot and killed after a gunfight
    with police

9
Crime can be defined
  • Form of normal behavior
  • Violation of behavioral norms
  • Form of deviant behavior
  • Legally defined behavior
  • Violation of human rights
  • Social harm/injury
  • Form of inequality

10
Emile Durkheim (1895)
  • Made three specific claims about the nature of
    crime
  • Crime is normal
  • Crime is inevitable
  • Crime is useful

11
Crime is normal
  • There he argued that crime, in itself, is a
    normal social phenomenon and should not be
    considered morbid or pathological.
  • Crimes occur in all societies
  • They are closely tied to the facts of collective
    life
  • Crime rates tend to increase as societies evolve
    from lower to higher phases

12
In primitive society
  • Punishment was more severe
  • Criminal act offends the strong, well-defined
    common consciousness
  • A crime against another personcrime against the
    entire society
  • Rejection was the most terrible punishment

13
In industrialized society
  • A crime against another personcrime against
    another person
  • Punishmentisolation

14
Crime is inevitable
  • No society can ever get entirely rid of crime
  • Imagine a community of saints in a perfect and
    exemplary monastery
  • Faults that appear venial to the ordinary person
    will arouse the same scandal as does normal crime
  • Absolute conformity to rules is impossible
  • Each member in society faces variation in
    background, education, heredity, social
    influences

15
Crime is inevitable
  • It seems impossible for everyone to share
    precisely the same strong sentiments
  • Since we are subject to different hereditary
    antecedents and are located in different physical
    and social environments, each of us will have
    somewhat different experiences and will perceive
    the world from a somewhat different viewpoint
  • We may expect people who have had similar
    experiences to perceive things in similar ways,
    and those who have had very different experiences
    to perceive at least some things in very
    different ways

16
Crime is inevitable
  • Given that some of us are bound to have very
    different experiences, the development of
    conflicting sentiments, and the translation of
    these sentiments into violent arguments, seems to
    be an unavoidable consequence of social life

17
Crime is useful
  • Crime is functional for society
  • By punishing criminals, society reaffirms it own
    values
  • If crimes were not committed, then the values of
    society would become blurred
  • If there is no punishment, then there would be no
    way of reestablishing the values that the crime
    offends

18
Crime is useful
  • Crime is indispensable to the
  • normal evolution of law and morality
  • Crime often is a symptom of individual
    originality and a preparation for changes in
    society
  • Rosa Parks (was a criminal) is a hero now
  • Her simple act of protest galvanized America's
    civil rights revolution

19
Three perspectives on crime
  • The Consensus View of Crime
  • The Conflict View of Crime
  • The Interactionist View of Crime

20
The Consensus View of Crime
  • Consensus agreement
  • Crimes are behaviors believed to be repugnant
    (repulsive) to all elements of society
  • Substantive criminal law written code that
    defines crimes and their punishments
  • This code reflects the values, beliefs, and
    opinions of societys mainstream
  • Concept of ideal legal system Everybody's Equal
    Under The Law

21
Legalistic definition
  • Crime is human conduct in violation of the
    criminal laws of state, the federal government,
    or a local jurisdiction that has the power to
    make such laws
  • Some activities are not crimes even though they
    are immoral (watching pornography, torturing
    animals, creating poor working conditions)

22
Domestic Violence
  • Twenty-five years ago, police, prosecutors, and
    judges did not view domestic abuse (rape and
    battering) as real crime but rather as private
    matter where the woman to blame
  • No law no crime

23
Federal Domestic Violence Laws in the United
States
  • The Violence Against Women Act of 1994 (VAWA) .
  • "Domestic abuse" means the following, if
    committed against a family or household member by
    a family or household member
  • (1) physical harm, bodily injury, or assault
  • (2) the infliction of fear of imminent physical
    harm, bodily injury, or assault.

24
Family or household members
  • spouses and former spouses
  • persons related by blood
  • persons who are presently residing together or
    who have resided together in the past
  • persons who have a child in common regardless of
    whether they have been married or have lived
    together at any time
  • a man and woman if the woman is pregnant and the
    man is alleged to be the father, regardless of
    whether they have been married or have lived
    together at any time and

25
Conflict View of Crime
  • Powerful groups of people label selected
    undesirable forms of behavior as illegal
  • Powerful individuals use their power to establish
    laws and sanctions against less powerful persons
    and groups
  • Official statistics indicate that crime rates in
    inner-city, high-poverty areas are higher than
    those in suburban areas
  • Self-reports of prison inmates show that
    prisoners are members of the lower class

26
Conflict View of Crime
  • Powerful individuals are able to influence the
    making laws
  • Powerful individuals may escape the label
    criminal

27
Eliot Spitzer, 48
  • Had a reputation as a hard-nosed "Mr. Clean" who
    had built his career as a relentless and
    moralistic foe of organized crime, corruption and
    alleged unethical Wall Street behavior
  • New York's North Fork Bank informed the U.S.
    Treasury Department about suspicious transfers of
    money from Spitzer's accounts
  • Spitzer had spent up to 80,000 dollars on call
    girls going back 10 years to his time as New York
    state attorney general

28
Conflict View of Crime
  • Crime of inequality includes a lot of behaviors
    that are omitted by legalistic definition
  • Crime is a political concept used to protect
    powerful people
  • Crimes of power (price fixing, economic crimes,
    unsafe working conditions, nuclear waste
    products, war-making, domestic violence, etc)

29
Child labor - Crime?
  • For many years, human rights groups have attacked
    Nike for the low pay and terrible working
    conditions, and for the use of child labor
  • Nike admitted employing children in Third World
    countries but added that ending the practice
    might be difficult

30
Child Labor
  • About half of the world's soccer balls are made
    in Pakistan, and each one of them passes through
    a process of production where child labor is
    involved
  • About 7,000 children between the ages of 5 and 14
    have no time for school because they work
    full-time manufacturing soccer balls, earning
    about 50 cents for each ball they produce
  • Majority of these children work in Asia, India,
    Pakistan, Bangladesh and Indonesia

31
Eleven-year-old Imtyaz from Pakistan
Imtyaz stiches a soccer ball
32
Child Labor
  • So what happens when you question Nike about
    child labor practices?
  • An answer comes that it is not they who are
    involved in child labor practices but  it is the
    local subcontracter who is doing so

33
Poor working conditions
  • Up to fifty percent of workers
  • cannot drink water or go to the toilet
  • when they want
  • A quarter of workers receive less than the legal
    minimum wage (less than 2.00 per day), even
    though Nike makes huge profits
  • Abusive treatment", physical and verbal, is
    exercised in more than a quarter of its plants

34
Gap
  • The clothing company Gap
  • Report revealed terrible working conditions in
    its factories in Mexico, China, and India
  • Report disclosed details of child labor, the
    virtual slavery of workers and working weeks in
    excess of 80 hours.

35
'Eco-mafia''
  • The developing South (particularly African
    countries like Somalia, Sudan, Eritrea, Algeria
    and Mozambique) has become the dump for hundreds
    of thousands of tones of radioactive waste from
    the world's rich countries
  • A colossal business which is linked to money
    laundering and gunrunning

36
Nuclear waste dumps found by Greenpeace
  • Illegal dumps - among the largest in the world -
    in Somalia, where workers handle the radioactive
    waste without any kind of safeguard or protective
    gear - not even gloves
  • The workers do not know what they are handling,
    and if one of them dies, the family is persuaded
    to keep quiet with a small bit of cash

37
Interactionist View of Crime
  • This view takes a smaller scale view of society
    and social order and analyses small or medium
    scale social interactions
  • The main idea behind the interactionist approach
    to crime is that the definition of what is
    criminal/deviant is socially negotiated
  • It also differs according to where you are and
    with whom at any given moment

38
Example
  • Imagine that a young male of 18 is walking home
    late one night through the city streets singing
    at the top of his lungs and weaving about in the
    road
  • The police are called and the young man is taken
    to the police station
  • When he gets there he explains that earlier that
    day he has been accepted at Cambridge University
    and he had been out with his friends to celebrate

39
Example
  • He has no previous police record. His father is
    the local GP (General Practitioner)
  • The police call his father who arrives looking
    rather embarrassed. He apologizes to the police
    and they have a little joke together about young
    men and boys will be boys
  • The young man is sent home with a mild warning
    and the suggestion that he won't feel very well
    in the morning.

40
Another Scenario
  • A young male of 18 is walking home late one night
    through the city streets singing at the top of
    his lungs
  • The police are called and the young man is taken
    to the police station
  • When he gets there he explains that earlier that
    day he has been out with his friends to celebrate
    birthday
  • When asked for his address and telephone number
    the police realize that he lives in a notorious
    housing estate that has a high rate of criminal
    activity.
  • The police call his father who arrives looking
    not very embarrassed. He apologizes to the
    police but they are unimpressed
  • The boy is charged with breach of the peace

41
Howard Becker (1966)
  • It is not act itself, but the reactions to the
    act, that make something deviant
  • People in different social groups/societies
    react differently to the same behavior
  • Moreover, within the same society at a given time
    the perception of deviance varies by class,
    gender, race, and age (subculture,
    counterculture)

42
Relativity of crime
  • Space
  • Time
  • Social context

43
Adultery is crime
  • Saudi Arabia, the
  • United Arab Emirates,
  • the Sudan, and some of
  • the northern states of Nigeria practice a very
    strict form of Sharia law
  • Sharia law requires that married or divorced
    persons found guilty of Zina (adultery) be
    executed by stoning

44
Sati tradition
  • Within the Indian culture there is a custom in
    which a woman burns herself either on the funeral
    pyre of her deceased husband or by herself
    shortly after his death
  • Proof of her loyalty to husband

45
Prostitution
  • Prostitution legalized in Netherlands from
    October 1, 2000
  • Prostitutes have the right to hygienic working
    conditions and security in the workplace
  • They must pay taxes
  • Can have social insurance, be paid sick leave,
    and receive a pension if they work for a brothel
    or own a company
  • According to estimates published by the de Graaf
    Foundation, some 25,000 people work as
    prostitutes in the Netherlands

46
Prostitutions in the USA
  • A federal law against prostitution concentrate on
    the prohibition of crossing state or
    international boundaries for the purpose of
    engaging in sex for pay
  • In selected counties in Nevada prostitution is
    not criminalized

47
Prostitution in Canada
  • Law does not criminalize prostitution
  • It instead criminalizes communication with the
    intent to arrange for prostitution (Street
    prostitution was a problem in Toronto and
    Vancouver)
  • The law was to be enforced equally against people
    working as prostitutes and against customers
  • Results concentration of police apprehension on
    less-advantaged prostitutes (homeless or addicted
    to drugs)

48
Alternative conceptualization of prostitution
  • Does criminalization punish people for making
    reasonable choices when trading sex for money is
    the only way, or the best way, they can survive
  • Alternative view of the culpability of people who
    sell sex versus the culpability of customers,
    entrepreneurs, and network that support
    prostitution
  • Prostitute as victim or prostitute as a sex worker

49
Social Context of crime
  • Crime is socially constructed (Burger, 1968)
  • Do you agree with Burger?
  • An criminal act can be the same but the
    interpretation of it can be different

50
The vocabulary of Homicide
  • Murder is the name for legally unjustified,
    intentional homicide (legal and moral meanings)
  • Execution is the name for justified homicide
    (when terrorists kill their enemies)
  • Journalist Ambrose Bierce Homicide is the
    slaying of one human being by another. There are
    four kinds of homicide felonious, excusable,
    justifiable, and praiseworthy, but it makes no
    great difference slain whether he fell by one
    kind or another-the classification is for the
    purposes of the lawyers.

51
Vocabulary of homicide
  • Debate about abortion
  • Those who oppose call it murder
  • Those who favor legal access to abortion speak of
    terminating pregnancy or removing tissue
  • Different moralities-different vocabularies
  • Is Crime socially constructed?

52
Palestinian Suicide Bombers
  • Claim that it is merely a tactic of war in
    defense of their land and homes
  • They see it as a heroic act of martyrdom, not
    suicide

53
What is deviance?
  • Deviance involves the violation of group norms
    which may or may not be formalized into law
  • Some examples criminals, alcoholics, people
    with tattoos, compulsive gamblers, and the
    mentally ill

54
Deviance is commonplace
  • We are all deviant from time to time
  • Each of us violates common social norms in
    certain situations
  • Being late for class is categorized as deviant
    act
  • Dressing too casually for a formal wedding

55
Deviance
  • Deviation from norm is not always negative
  • A member of an exclusive club who speaks out
    against its traditional policy of excluding
    women, or poor people
  • Police officer who speaks against corruption
    within the department

56
Deviance
  • Deviant behavior is human activity that is
    statistically different from the average
  • Deviance and crime are concepts that do not
    always easily mesh
  • Some forms of deviance are not violations of the
    criminal law and the reverse is true as well

57
Relationship between crime and deviance
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