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Deviance

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Title: Deviance


1
Chapter 8
  • Deviance

2
Chapter Outline
  • Defining Deviance
  • Sociological Theories of Deviance
  • Forms of Deviance
  • Deviance in Global Perspective

3
Defining Deviance
  • Sociologists define deviance as behavior that
    violates expected rules and norms.
  • The sociological definition of deviance
  • Stresses social context, not individual behavior.
  • Recognizes that not all behaviors are judged
    similarly by all groups.
  • Recognizes that established rules and norms are
    socially created, not just morally decreed or
    individually imposed.

4
Functionalist Theories of Deviance
  • Deviance occurs when people's attachment to
    social bonds is diminished.
  • Norms are meaningless unless there is deviance
    from the norms.
  • Group coherence comes from a common definition of
    deviant behavior.

5
Durkheim The Study of Suicide
  •  Three types of suicide
  • Anomic - disintegrating forces in society make an
    individual feel lost and alone.
  • Altruistic - for the sake of a higher cause.
  • Egoistic - occurs when people feel totally
    detached from society.

6
Merton Structural Strain Theory
  • Categories of adaptation to social systems
  • Conformists accept society's goals and the means
    to achieve them.
  • Innovators develop creative means to achieve
    goals set by society.
  • Ritualists accept the means to the goals, but not
    the goals.

7
Merton Structural Strain Theory
  • Categories of adaptation to social systems
  • Retreatists accept neither the goals nor the
    means of the society.
  • Politically rebellious reject the goals and the
    means of society and substitute other goals and
    means.

8
Functionalism Weaknesses
  • Does not explain
  • How norms of deviance are first established.
  • Why some behaviors are defined as normative and
    others as illegitimate.
  • How the inequities in society are reflected in
    patterns of deviance.

9
Conflict Theory of Deviance
  • Links deviance to power relationships and social
    inequality.
  • Crime committed among the poorest is the result
    of economic status.
  • Elite deviants can hide their crimes and avoid
    criminal labels.

10
Conflict Theory of Deviance
  • The law protects the dominant class and regulates
    populations that pose a threat to affluent
    interests.
  • The power to define deviance confers a degree of
    social control to be used against less powerful
    people.

11
Conflict Theory Strengths and Weaknesses
  • Provides insight into power relationships in
    definition, identification, and handling of
    deviance.
  • Describes different systems of justice for
    disadvantaged and privileged groups.
  • Less effective in explaining deviance other than
    crime.

12
Symbolic InteractionTheories of Deviance
  • People behave as they do because of the meanings
    attributed to situations.
  • Deviance originates in the interaction between
    groups and is defined by societys reaction to
    certain behaviors.

13
Symbolic InteractionTheories of Deviance
  • W.I. Thomas and the Chicago School
  • Situational analysis deviance is a normal
    response to social conditions in which people
    find themselves.
  • Peoples actions must be understood in social,
    not individualized frameworks.

14
Symbolic InteractionTheories of Deviance
  • Differential Association
  • Deviant behavior is learned through interaction
    with others.
  • People pass on deviant expectations through their
    social groups and networks.

15
Symbolic InteractionTheories of Deviance
  • Labeling Theory
  • Responses of others is most significant in
    deviance.
  • A person may become deviant because of a label,
    even if he/she did not engage in deviant behavior.

16
Forms of Deviance Mental Illness
  • Sociological explanations look to social systems
    that define, identify, and treat mental illness.
  • Functionalists - by recognizing mental illness,
    society upholds values about conforming behavior.
  • Symbolic interactionists the mentally ill are
    victims of societal reactions to their behavior.
  • Labeling and conflict theory - people with fewest
    resources are most likely to be labeled mentally
    ill.

17
Social Stigmas
  • A stigma is an attribute that is socially
    devalued and discredited.
  • People with stigmas are stereotyped and defined
    only in terms of their presumed deviance.
  • They may try to hide their stigma, isolating
    themselves from communities where they can get
    support.
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