CHAPTER 8 Deviance and Social Control - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 50
About This Presentation
Title:

CHAPTER 8 Deviance and Social Control

Description:

CHAPTER 8 Deviance and Social Control Section 1: Deviance Section 2: Crime * * Principal Types of Crime in the U.S. White Collar Crime committed by high-status ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:269
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 51
Provided by: MC155
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CHAPTER 8 Deviance and Social Control


1
CHAPTER 8Deviance and Social Control
  • Section 1 Deviance
  • Section 2 Crime

2
Objectives
Section 1 Deviance
  • Explain the nature and social functions of
    deviance.
  • Compare the theories that have been proposed to
    explain deviance.

3
  • If asked, would you label yourself
  • as a deviant person?

4
What is deviant behavior?
  • With a partner, list at least 10 deviant acts.
  • Are all acts of deviance bad?

5
Conformity
  • Behavior that matches group expectations
  • Its taking those social norms we learned about
    actually abiding by them!
  • Ex Come to work or school on time
  • Use a fork to eat peas
  • Dont steal other peoples things

6
Deviance
  • Behavior that violates significant social norms.
  • Continuously talking to oneself in public
  • Drag racing on a street or highway
  • Using illegal drugs
  • A man wearing womens clothing
  • Attacking another person with a weapon

7
Deviance
  • Some examples are clear cutmurder, robbery
  • Others acts vary from group to group and/or
    change over time
  • e.g. Tattoos body piercing are now common but
    25 years ago it would have been deviant to have a
    tattoo or for a man to have pierced ears

8
Nature of Deviance
Section 1 Deviance
  • Because there are so many norms governing
    behavior, occasional violations are unavoidable
  • What is considered deviant varies from society to
    society
  • Every society has countless norms which govern
    behavior.
  • NOT all norm violations are considered deviant.

9
  • What is considered deviant can vary from society
    to society.
  • Divorce is legal in the US
  • Divorce is illegal in the Philippines
  • Typically repeating an offense can label you as
    deviant.
  • Two components required to label you as deviant.
  • You must be committing a deviant act
  • You must be stigmatized by society.

10
Stigma
  • The mark of social disgrace that sets the deviant
    apart from the rest of society.
  • Stigmas have been used as a form of social
    control throughout history.
  • Example Ancient Greeks would burn symbols into
    the bodies of criminals to warn others.
  • Example Prison inmates wear uniformed
  • clothing and are assigned a number.
  • (Visual Stigma)

11
  • When sociologists talk about stigmas they are
    usually referring to the negative social
    reactions that result from being labeled deviant.
  • That person is no longer seen as being normal or
    whole by society.

12
What do you think??
  • Is there a stigma of obesity??

13
Social Functions of Deviance
Section 1 Deviance
  • Clarifying Norms defines the boundaries of
    acceptable behavior
  • EX Harsh prison sentences are intended to
    discourage crime.
  • Unifying the Group serves to draw the line
    between conforming members of society and
    outsiders the nonconforming members.
  • EX Reinforces the sense of community and belief
    in shared values.

14
  • Diffusing Tension acts that allow individuals
    to relieve tension without disrupting the basic
    fabric of society.
  • EX Picketing

15
Section 1 Deviance
  • Promoting Social Change can help prompt social
    change by identifying problem areas. EX When
    large numbers of people violate a particular
    norm, then action must be taken to correct
    situation.
  • Providing Jobs provides legitimate jobs for a
    wide range of people.
  • EX Judges, lawyers, police officers, prison
    personnel, parole officers, etc.
  • Criminologists- social scientists who study
    criminal behavior.

16
  • Pg. 178
  • American Youth Gangs
  • Read answer 1 2

17
  • Why are people deviant?
  • 3 sociological perspectives explaining deviance
  • Functionalist perspective
  • Conflict perspective
  • Interactionalist perspective

18
  • Functionalist
  • Theory

19
Functionalist Perspective
  • The major functionalist explanation, strain
    theory was developed by sociologist Robert K.
    Merton.
  • Strain Theory views deviance is a natural part
    of society and is the natural outgrowth of the
    values, norms, and structure of society.
  • Example Individuals may be prevented from
    finding a job b/c of social conditions or b/c of
    lack of education. They are expected, however,
    to meet the goal of finding a job-society judges
    them according to how well they do so they act
    out.

20
Anomie
  • Under the strain of incompatible goals and means,
    these individuals fall victim to anomie.
  • Anomie the situation that arises when the norms
    of society are unclear and no longer applicable.

21
Mode of Adaptation Definition Stand on Cultural Goals Stand on Cultural Norms
Conformity accept culturally approved goals and means of achieving these goals Accept Accept
Innovation accept cultural goals, but do not accept the approved means to reaching these goals, devise new means for achieving goals (become deviants) Accept Reject
Ritualism find it impossible to achieve cultural goals by acceptable means, they abandon the goals while continuing expected rules of behavior Reject Accept
Retreatism reject both cultural goals and acceptable means of attaining them, may drop out of society Reject Reject
Rebellion want to substitute a new set of goals and means for the approved set Reject and Replace Reject and Replace
22
  • Conflict Theory

23
Conflict Perspective
  • Competition and social inequality lead to
    deviance.
  • There are those with power (Ruling Class) and
    those without (Lower Classes)
  • Ruling Class commits acts of deviance to maintain
    their power.
  • Lower Class commits acts of deviance to gain
    economic means or b/c of feelings of
    powerlessness.

24
  • to protect their power, ruling class establishes
    ideologies to explain deviance as a problem among
    lower class
  • law enforcement are directed toward the types of
    crimes committed by lower classes (results in
    higher arrest rates)
  • people without power do not necessarily commit
    more crimes than others, but are the types of
    crimes that are most likely to be detected and
    punished

25
Interactionist Perspective
  • Interactionists offer three major explanations of
    deviance
  • Control Theory
  • Cultural Transmission Theory
  • Labeling Theory
  • Remember Interactionists are more interested in
    the individual and the thoughts and feelings of
    that individual.

26
Control Theory
  • Control Theorists are more interested in why the
    person conforms rather than the causes of
    deviance.
  • Looks at the social ties that are integrated into
    a community.
  • Strong Communities have less acts of deviance.
  • Weaker Communities have more acts of deviance.

27
Cultural Transmission Theory
  • This theory explains that deviance is a learned
    behavior through socialization.
  • The interaction of deviant individuals and others
    is more likely to cause deviant behavior.
  • The norms being taught are deviant.

28
Labeling Theory
  • Instead of focusing on why people perform deviant
    acts, labeling theory focuses on how individuals
    come to be identified as deviant.
  • Deviance is labeled in two ways
  • Primary Deviance
  • Nonconformity goes undetected in society. Or
    occasional acts. Considered not deviant
  • Secondary Deviance
  • Results in the individual being labeled as
    Deviantand accepting the label as true.

29
Degradation Ceremony
  • The process of labeling an individual as deviant.
  • Public Setting The individual is denounced,
    found guilty, and given the new identity of
    deviant.
  • People begin to judge practically all of his or
    her actions in light of the deviant label.
  • Deviant becomes the persons master status.

30
Theories of Deviance
Section 1 Deviance
  • Functionalists as the natural outgrowth of the
    values, norms, and structures of society
  • Conflict Theorists as a result of competition
    and social inequality
  • Interactionists as either natural in people
    with weak ties to the community (control theory),
    as a learned behavior (cultural transmission
    theory), or as a label (labeling theory)

31
SECTION 1
Deviance
32
Objectives
Section 2 Crime
  • Identify the principal types of crime in the
    United States.
  • Explain the characteristics of the American
    criminal-justice system.

33
Principal Types of Crime in the U.S.
Section 2 Crime
  • Violent Crime includes murder, robbery most
    victims are African Americans
  • Robbery- larceny from the person or presence of
    another by violence or threat.
  • Crime Against Property includes burglary,
    larceny, vehicle theft more common than violent
    crimes.
  • Burglary- the act of breaking and entering a
    dwelling at night to commit a felony
  • Felony- a crime for which the punishment in
    federal law may be death or imprisonment for mote
    than one year.
  • Larceny- the unlawful taking and removal of
    another person's property.
  • Victimless Crime includes prostitution,
    gambling, illegal drug use offender is the only
    victim

34
Principal Types of Crime in the U.S.
Section 2 Crime
(continued)
  • White Collar Crime committed by high-status
    individuals in the course of their professions
    includes fraud, tax evasion, embezzlement
  • Organized Crime the pursuit of crime as a big
    business

Bernie Madoff
35
The Criminal-Justice System
  • Once a crime has been committed and reported, it
    falls under the jurisdiction of this.

36
SECTION 2
Crime
Police
  1. Have the most control over who is arrested for
    crimes.
  2. The use of police discretion, has raised the
    controversial issue of racial profiling

37
SECTION 2
Crime
Courts
  1. Determines the accuseds guilt or innocence in a
    court trial.
  2. The court assigns a punishment.
  3. 90 percent of cases are actually settled through
    plea bargaining.

38
SECTION 2
Crime
Corrections
  • Includes probation, imprisonment, and parole,
    which serves four functions
  • Retribution- Revenge for the victims and for
    society.
  • Deterrence- Discourage offenders and non
    offenders from committing future crimes.
  • Rehabilitation- Serves to reform criminals so
    that they can return to society as law abiding
    citizens.
  • Social protection- Limit the freedom of criminals
    so
  • they cannot commit additional crimes.

39
SECTION 2
Crime
Juvenile-Justice System
  1. Applies to offenders younger than 18.
  2. Guarantees juvenile defendants the same legal
    rights and privileges as adults.
  3. Often provides more services.

40
Gender Crime
  • Throughout history, men have traditionally
    committed more crime than women.
  • In fact, 77 of people arrested are men.
  • This is a significant statistic because men make
    up less than 50 of the population.

41
Race Crime
  • Although gender differences in crime statistics
    are fairly easy to distinguish, discussing a link
    between race and crime is controversial.
  • The major problem is the long history of racism
    in the United States.
  • African Americans make up about 12 of the
    population, but represent 30.4 of those arrested
    in the United States.

42
  • Some argue that different enforcement practices
    of police are responsible for these data.
  • Racial profiling is a controversial practice of
    targeting based on their race.
  • Sociologist Simon A. Cole shows that traffic
    police disproportionately stop people of color.
  • Jeffrey Reiman suggests that the police seek out
    the poor for arrest because the poor are easier
    to catch and easier to convict.

43
  • Reiman shows that the upper classes crimes are
    not prosecuted at the same rates.
  • For example, for more than 20 years, getting
    caught with 5 grams of crack cocaine gave you the
    same sentence as someone caught with 500 grams of
    powder cocaine
  • Conflict theorists might ask what social class
    used crack cocaine versus powder?

44
Age and Crime
  • Essentially, crime is a young persons game.
  • This idea is supported by the relationship
    between age and crime.
  • It indicates that the majority of arrests peak
    between the ages of 15 to 25.
  • According to Darrell Steffensmeier and Miles
    Harer, a 60 decrease in crime rates in the 1980s
    attributable to a decrease in the total number of
    15-24 year olds.

45
Crime Victimization - An International Perspective
Crime US Canada England France Germany Japan
Sexual Assault of women 1.4 0.8 0.9 0.3 0.4 0.8
Assault 4.3 3.0 5.8 2.1 2.7 0.8
Robbery 0.6 0.8 1.4 0.6 0.4 0.2
Burglary 2.5 2.0 3.5 1.6 0.9 0.9
Car Theft 1.1 0.8 1.8 0.6 0.2 0.1
of pop. Feeling unsafe 19 17 32 21 30 35
46
  • Prisoners
  • The highest rates are in the South, while the
    lowest rates are in the North.
  • Some evidence shows that Southern states have
    higher incarceration rates because they are
    tougher on crime and assign longer sentences
    for offenders, whereas Northern states are
    somewhat more lenient in sentencing.

47
Prisons in America
  • Departments of corrections directs most states
    prison systems.
  • The title infers that prisons are supposed to
    correct the offender and assist in successful
    reintegration into society.

48
  • Unfortunately, the most likely outcome for
    inmates released from prison is to return to
    prison.
  • More than 50 of all inmates return to prison
    within three years of release.

49
Costs of Incarceration
  • The actual costs to incarcerate an individual are
    difficult to determine.
  • Although all states report a dollar amount, there
    are hidden costs associated with the
    incarceratedthe children left behind in the
    foster care system or families who must use the
    welfare system to survive.

50
  • These social costs cant be factored in the
    prison budget, so the reported cost of
    incarceration never includes them.
  • Nevertheless, taxpayers are left to pay for the
    whole broken system.
  • Criminologists James Austin and John Irwin
    calculated these hidden costs and determined that
    it actually costs 30,000 a year to incarcerate a
    single inmate.
  • Using this estimate, Alabama taxpayers paid
    roughly 360,000 for the 12-year incarceration of
    Jerald Sanders (who stole a 60 bike)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com