Title: Criminal Justice Organizations: Administration and Management
1Criminal Justice Organizations Administration
and Management
- Chapter Nine Occupational Socialization
2Learning Objectives
- Understand occupational socialization
- Understand the basic precepts of organizational
culture - Understand the socialization process as it
applies to criminal justice agencies - Be able to discuss the problems in the
socialization process in criminal justice
agencies - Understand the basic strategies for socialization
3Occupational Socialization
- The process by which a person acquires the
values, attitudes, and behaviors of an ongoing
occupational social system. - It is a continuous process and may result in both
legal and illegal behaviors. - Habitual behaviors, both good or bad, persist as
long as the attitudes, beliefs, perceptions,
habits and expectations of the members remain
supportive of them.
4Organizational Culture
- A set of assumptions, values, and beliefs shared
by members of an organization. - These create language, symbols, folklore, and
direct the behaviors of the organizational
members. - Organizational cultures are invented, discovered,
or developed by groups in order to cope with
external influences and internal change.
5Organizational CultureKey Terms
- Culture complex whole of society and includes
knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, customs and
other capabilities and routines - Values desirable goals
- Norms specify what people should do
- Folkways standard ways of doing things
- Mores strong views of right and wrong
- Laws codified mores
6Organizational CultureKey Terms
- Social control the process of perpetuating
conformity to the culture - Sanctions rewards and punishments for
conformity. Can be formal or informal. - Subcultures groups that have their own beliefs
and norms while sharing the values of the
dominant culture - Counterculture groups whose shared values
differ substantially from those of the dominant
culture
7Organizational Culture
- Key questions
- How is the culture formed?
- What forces are critical in forming the culture?
- How the cultural arrangements impact the
organizational goals? - How and to what extent administrators can
influence the cultural arrangement of their
agency?
8The Socialization Process
- The socialization process is both formal and
informal. - Stages
- Anticipatory prior to employment prospective
employees adhere to certain behavioral standards - Formal occurs through formal training and
active supervision - Informal occurs though interaction with
significant other peers, managers and even
clients
9The Socialization Process
- A model of influences (Katz and Kahn, 1978)
explains how socializing influences affect the
individual. - Role expectations standards of behavior
- Sent role communication of expectations
- Received role the individuals perception and
understanding of the sent role - Role behavior the individuals response to the
complex information received
10The Socialization Process
11Problems in the Socialization Process
- Most socialization problems are related to role
conflict. - Compliance with one role expectation results in a
lack of compliance to another. - Role conflict results in low job satisfaction,
poor performance, and stress. - In extreme cases corruption and official deviance
can occur. - Behavior that is illegal but encouraged by the
organizations culture
12Socialization and the Police
- No evidence that authoritarian or violence
seeking individuals are attracted to police work. - Police officers are subjected to a rather intense
socialization process. - Structural aspects that connect police officers
- Police work is depersonalizing
- Solidarity in the drive toward professionalism
- The ambiguous nature of police work
13Socialization in Corrections
- Correctional employees are attracted to the
profession because of its regular pay and job
security. - Most new correctional employees know very little
about the job. - Unlike police officers, correctional officers
often delay formal training until after a few
months of on the job training and informal
socialization. - Informal socialization appears to be more
influential than formal socialization.
14Socialization and Community Expectations
- Community expectations affect the socialization
process. - Within the context of community expectations
- Appropriate behaviors are rewarded with public
recognition, and - Inappropriate behaviors are punished by public
criticism. - Well trained and educated practitioners are more
likely to meet community expectations.
15Strategies for SocializationImplications for
Administrators
- The socialization process can be influenced by
effective and deliberate leadership. - Changing the culture begins with changing
recruiting processes and selection criteria. - Formalizing the training process and distancing
it from the actual work improve and objectify the
socialization process.
16Strategies for SocializationImplications for
Administrators
- Collective socialization training new members
as a group (i.e. formal academy training) - Sequential socialization trainees pass through
discrete stages on the way to becoming a fully
accepted member of the group (e.g. post training
probationary periods) - Serial socialization relies on experienced
veterans to develop newcomers (e.g. field
training officer programs - Divestiture strategies attempt to strip away
certain characteristics before an individual is
allowed into the group (e.g. haircuts and special
uniforms)
17Ethical Considerations
- The formal socialization process is a mechanism
for the organization to impose its dominant
belief system and rules upon its members. - Subtle messages from the command staff are
influential in either discouraging or encouraging
unethical behaviors. - Autocratic management styles tend to drive wedges
between employees and the organization which may
result in various forms of unethical behavior.
18Chapter Summary
- Occupational socialization is a process by which
a member of an organization acquires the values,
attitudes, and behaviors of an ongoing
occupational social system. - This process may include formal training and will
include social interactions with work peers. - Organizational culture is a set of assumptions,
values, and beliefs shared by members of an
organization. - Organizational culture includes language,
symbols, and folklore that direct the behavior of
the organizations members. - Anticipatory socialization is often based upon
media, movies, and television program. It is
often inaccurate.
19Chapter Summary
- Formal socialization is often weak and informal
socialization is usually strong. - Criminal justice practitioners face role
conflict, role ambiguity, conflicting
expectations, and contradictory goals. Hence,
the socialization process presents conflicting
stimuli. - Managers continuously influence the socialization
process. - Organizational socialization begins with
recruiting and selection and is accomplished
though the orientation and training processes. - Supervision provides a continuous impact on
formal socialization.
20Thinking Point and Question
- You have just been elected Sheriff of the Boone
County Sheriffs Department. - Your initial review of the department indicates a
very loosely managed and controlled organization. - Training is haphazard, supervision is nearly
nonexistent, and deputies are allowed to come and
go as they please. - The department recently lost a class action suit
filed by a group of Hispanic inmates who were
repeatedly physically assaulted by a group of ten
jailers.
21Thinking Point and Question
- You have come to the conclusion that the
Departments subculture is corruption prone. - Using the information from this chapter develop a
plan for addressing and changing the Departments
organizational culture so that it becomes more
conducive to the standards of ethical policing
practice.