Title: Brief History of Criminology
1Brief History of Criminology
- 1. Criminology
- 2. Brief History of Criminology
- 3. Quiz 1
2Social Science
- Not too long ago, criminology separated from its
mother discipline, sociology - It has since developed habits and methods of
thinking about crime and criminal behavior that
are uniquely its own
3Criminology is
- The scientific approach to studying criminal
behavior - Interdisciplinary discipline political science,
psychology, economics, natural sciences, and
biology
4Edwin Sutherland and Donald Gressey
- Scope of criminology includes
- Processes of making laws
- Processes of breaking laws
- Processes of reacting toward the breaking the
laws
5The main question
CAUSE
CRIME
6Brief History of Criminology
- Demonic Perspective (Middle Ages, 1200-1600)
- Classical School (the late 1700s and the early
1800s ) - Neo-classical school (emerged between 1880 and
1920 and is still with us today) - Positivism (the mid 1800s and early 1900s)
- Sociological Criminology (mid 1800s till now)
7Demonic Perspective
- It is not surprising that any discussion of the
existence of evil behavior in the world would
begin with religious explanations
8Demonic Perspective
- Temptation Model
- Possession Model
9Temptation Model
- Mat 2641 (NIV) "Watch and pray so that you will
not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing,
but the body is weak."
10Temptation Model
- People are weak
- temptations to sin are impossible to avoid.
(Matt. 187) - No matter how tempting the devil's offers might
be, the individual always retains the ability to
refuse to sin - "good force" offers rewards and frequently
promises spiritual aid to help the beleaguered
individual resist the devil's temptations
11Temptation Model
- This model has a deterrent
- component
- The threat of hellfire or other eternal
punishment for those who chose to do evil
12Temptation Model-how to treat criminals? Other
Punishment
- Public humiliation and banishment were frequently
used by religious societies as ways of
controlling their deviant populations - For serious deviants, capital punishment
wouldbe a final solution
13Possession Model
- Once possessed by an evil spirit the person is no
longer responsible for his/her actions - The devil now has taken control of the
individual's mind and body resulting in evil
behavior
14Possession Model-how to treat criminals?
- One way of "curing" the individual is through
exorcism-a religious ritual aimed at jettisoning
the unclean spirit from the body
15Exorcism today
- Mario Garcia ended up in jail on charges of
puncturing his mother-in-law's esophagus with a
pair of crucifixes - Prior prior to the incident, the mother-in-law
display of erratic behavior. The hospital had
suggested psychiatric treatment for her
16Exorcism today
- Garcia had the woman lie down on a bed, while the
woman's son, her husband, Garcia's wife, and
three young children contributed prayers for
support Garcia shoved not one but two 8-inch
steel crucifixes into his mother-in-law's mouth - The crosses went deep enough down her throat to
pierce her esophagus - Police who were called to the scene found the
woman bleeding profusely from the mouth on
Garcia's front porch, with Garcia shouting, "The
devil is inside her!" - Garcia was arrested for assault with a dangerous
weapon and taken under psychiatric observation. - Police are in agreement with Garcia's family that
he did not act with intent to harm I've seen
suspects who thought they had psychic powers, but
never one that had a family who believed it,
too.
17(No Transcript)
18Is There a Place for a Demonic Perspective in
Contemporary Criminology?
- Surprisingly religious models are adhered to by
many - Criminal justice officials in the U.S. have paid
satanism little mind until the mid-1980s - This was the case in the 1980s and 1990s as a
satanic panic swept the US
19Satanists
- At that point the country was swept by an
epidemic of allegations that murders, sexual or
ritual abuse of children, and ritual sacrifice of
animals were commonplace activities among
satanists
20The origin of classical school
- Started in Europe (the late 1700s and the early
1800s) - Criminal justice needed to be updated
- Throughout Europe the use of torture to secure
confessions and force self-incriminating
testimony had been widespread - Classical school was against tortures
21Physical Torture
- Infliction of bodily pain to extort evidence or
confession - Torture employed devices such as the rack (to
stretch the victim's joints to breaking point),
the thumbscrew, the boot (which crushed the
foot), heavy weights that crushed the whole body,
the iron maiden (cage shaped like a human being
with interior spikes to spear the occupant)
22Classical School
- The Classical School was not interested in
studying criminals, but rather law-making and
legal processing - Crime, they believed, was activity engaged in out
of total free will and that individuals weighed
the consequences of their actions. Punishment is
made in order to deter people from committing
crime and it should be greater than the pleasure
of criminal gains.
23Classical School
- The Classical "School" of Criminology is a broad
label for a group of thinkers of crime and
punishment in the 18th and early 19th centuries -
- Two famous writers during this classical period
were Cesare Beccaria (1738-1794) and Jeremy
Bentham (1748-1832)
24Cesare Beccaria (1738-1794)
- People should be presumed innocent until proven
guilty (no torture) - The law should be codified (written) with
punishments prescribed in advance - Punishment should be limited (less harsher) to
only that necessary to deter people from ever
committing it again (no capital punishment)
25Cesare Beccaria (1738-1794)
- Punishment should be severe, certain, and swift
- Severity is the least important, certainty the
next in importance, and celerity, or swiftness,
is about as equal in importance as certainty) - The criminal justice system should be organized
around crime prevention
26Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)
- Believed that individuals weigh the probabilities
of present and future pleasures against those of
present and future pain - People act as human calculators, they put all
factors into a sort of mathematical - equation to decide whether or not
- to commit an illegal act
27Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)
- Punishment should be just a bit in excess of the
pleasures derived from an act and not any higher
than that - Since punishment creates unhappiness it can be
justified if it prevents greater - evil than it produces
28Does punishment deter?
29The Neo-classical School
- A form of revisionism
- Neo-classical criminologists recognized that the
free will approach had a number of shortcomings - Leading proponents were Gabriel Tarde (1843-1904)
and his student Raymond Saleilles (1898)
30The Neo-classical School
- Some behaviors are very irrational
- Self-defense or mistake of fact
- So, not all persons were completely responsible
for their own actions - Positive treatment toward "mental illness" type
explanations
31Categorization of Motives
- Understanding homicide
- The accurate determination of motive in any crime
is highly subjective - Social scientists have used several approaches to
categorize motives - One strategy is to distinguish b/w instrumental
and expressive motivation
32Instrumental Motivation
- Violent acts with instrumental motivations are
directed at some valued goal beyond the act
itself (Menendez brothers may have killed their
parents for the instrumental goal of protecting
themselves or collecting the insurance payment)
33Instrumental Motivation
- Eric and Lyle Menendez were convicted of
first-degree murder for the brutal shotgun
slaying of their parents in Beverly Hills. Their
defense was based on the abuse excuse - The apparent motives ranged from the brothers
fear of their fathers abuse to their desire to
collect 11 million in insurance
34Expressive Motivation
- Expressive actions are those motivated
exclusively by rage, anger, frustration, or more
generally, the heat of passion (self-defense,
accidental homicides)
35UCR Supplementary Homicide Reports classification
of motives
- Arguments (53)
- Participation in other felony crimes, especially
robbery and drug offenses (32) - Youth gang activity (8)
- Brawls under the influence of drugs or alcohol
(4) - Miscellaneous situations such as killings by
babysitters, gangland slaying, and sniper attacks
(1)
36The Victim-Offender Relationship
- Three types of relationships are often
identified - Familial (especially spouses and siblings)(22)
- Acquaintances (including friends, girlfriends,
boyfriends, neighbors, and coworkers)(57) - Strangers (21)
37Positivist School in Criminology
- The demand for facts, for scientific proof
(determinism) - There are body and mind differences between
people - Punishment should fit the individual criminal,
not the crime (indeterminate sentencing,
disparate sentencing, parole) - Criminals can be treated, rehabilitated, or
corrected (if not, then they are incurable and
should be put to death)
38Fundamental assumptions
- The basic determinants of human behavior are
genetically based - Observed gender and racial differences in rates
and types of criminality may be at least
partially the result of biological differences
b/w the sexes and racially distinct groups
39Positivist School in Criminology
- Most people believe the leading figure of
positivist criminology (often called the father
of criminology) was Lombroso (1835-1909). - On Criminal Man, was first put together in 1861,
and made the following points
40The Underlying Logic
Atavism
Inability to Learn and Follow legal rules
Mental and Physical Inferiority
Criminal Behavior
Defective genes
41Sociological Theories of Crime
- Search for factors outside the individual -
socialization, subcultural membership, social
class - Explains crime by reference to the institutional
structure of society