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Theories of Deviance

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Title: Theories of Deviance


1
Theories of Deviance
2
Differentiation Deviance
  • differentiation refers to the myriad variations
    among people based on selected social
    characteristics
  • e.g., age, sex, race, educational attainment,
    occupational status, etc.
  • Early sociologists like Durkheim saw social
    differentiation as a master process of
    modernization
  • modernization the transformation from
    traditional to complex, modern society
  • Conditions that promote differentiation also
    promote deviance
  • They also likely boost the degree and range of
    social stratification by increasing the of
    criteria for comparing people

3
Theoretical perspectives on deviance two basic
types
  • Structural theories
  • emphasize the relationship of deviance to certain
    structural conditions within a society
  • focus on epidemiology, or the distribution of
    deviance in time and place
  • are typically macro-level and are considered
    general theories
  • e.g., functionalism and conflict theory
  • Process/Interaction theories
  • describe the processes by which individuals come
    to commit deviant acts
  • focus on etiology, or the origins and development
    of deviance
  • are typically micro-level theories
  • e.g., labeling theory, control theory, and
    learning or socialization theories

4
The Normal and the Pathological
  • Ch. 7, Emile Durkheim

5
Crime is normal
  • Crime is present in all societies of all types
  • Its form changes
  • acts thus characterized are not the same
    everywhere but everywhere and always there have
    been people whose behavior draws punishment
  • Crime is not only inevitable, it is necessary -
    an integral part of all healthy societies

6
What is crime?
  • Crime consists of an act that offends certain
    very strong collective sentiments
  • It is not the intrinsic quality of a given act
    that makes it a crime, but the definition which
    the collective conscience of society gives it

7
Crime plays a useful role in social evolution
  • Where crime exists, collective sentiments are
    sufficiently flexible to take on a new form, and
    crime sometimes helps determine the form they
    will take
  • Socrates crime, independence of thought,
    provided a service not only to humanity but to
    his country, preparing the ground for a new
    morality faith in Athens, since traditions were
    no longer in harmony with current conditions
  • his violation was a crime, but it was useful as a
    prelude to necessary reforms

8
Crime has a social function
  • Crime must no longer be conceived as an evil to
    be suppressed
  • Instead, we should attempt to discern its social
    function, the purpose it serves for society

9
On the Sociology of Deviance
  • Ch. 8, Kai T. Erikson

10
Deviant behavior in communities
  • communities collectivities of people who share a
    common sphere of experience, which gives members
    a sense of belonging to a special kind and
    living in a special place
  • communities are boundary-maintaining each
    community has a specific territory in the world,
    occupying a defined region of geographical and
    cultural space
  • both dimensions of group space geographical
    cultural set the community apart and provide a
    point of reference for members

11
Boundary drawing
  • Q How do people know about boundaries and how do
    they convey it to future generations?
  • A By participating in the confrontations which
    occur when persons venture out to the edges of
    the group are met by policing agents whose job it
    is to guard the cultural integrity of the
    community

12
Confrontations between deviant offenders social
control agents
  • Confrontations - criminal trials, excommunication
    hearings, courts-martial, psychiatric case
    conferences - act as boundary-maintaining devices
    in that they demonstrate where the line is drawn
    b/w behavior that is acceptable in the community
    and behavior that is not
  • Each time the community moves to censure some act
    of deviation and convenes a formal ceremony to
    deal with the responsible offender, it sharpens
    the authority of the violated norm and restates
    group boundaries
  • Still, community boundaries are never fixed but
    are subject to change - as the nature location
    of confrontations change

13
Deviance, in controlled quantities, may help
preserve social stability
  • Deviant behavior, by marking the outer edges of
    group life, provides a framework within which
    members develop a sense of their own cultural
    identity
  • the agencies built by society for preventing
    deviance are often so poorly equipped for the
    task that we might well ask why this is regarded
    as their real function in the first place (98)

14
Commitment ceremonies self-fulfilling
prophecies?
  • The communitys decision to bring deviant
    sanctions against a member is a rite of
    transition, moving the person out of an ordinary
    place in society into a special deviant position
  • commitment ceremonies highly public dramatic
    events set up to judge whether or not someone is
    deviant, mark this change of status
  • the criminal trial is the most obvious example
  • importantly, in our culture, they are almost
    irreversible, and might be called
    self-fulfilling prophecies

15
Conclusion
  • Two separate yet often competing currents are
    found in any society
  • forces which promote a high degree of conformity
    among people of community so they know what to
    expect from one another
  • forces which encourage a certain degree of
    diversity so that people can be deployed across
    the range of group space to survey its potential,
    measure its capacity, and patrol its boundaries
    for deviants
  • Deviance is a natural product of group
    differentiation and contributes to the survival
    of the culture as a whole
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