Theories: Crime and Deviance Flashcards

1
Q

What does Durkheim say about crime?

A

Crime is healthy and inevitable as society will always test boundaries.

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2
Q

What does Durkheim say about the ‘society of saints’?

A

Without crime, even petty deviance would be seen as criminal.

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3
Q

What is social solidarity?

A

A sense of cohesion felt in society when something brings people together.

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4
Q

What does Durkheim say about crime and social solidarity?

A

Crime leads to shared pubic outrage, which makes society more united and docile.

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5
Q

What is boundary maintenance?

A

Punishment of crime being useful as it exemplifies what is and isn’t allowed in society.

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6
Q

What does Davis say about a safety valve?

A

Some crime is functional and harmless, a way for people to let off steam to prevent a more aggressive and harmful crime in the future. (Adultery)

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7
Q

What are the 5 responses to Merton’s strain theory?

A

Conformity (succeeding legally)
Innovation (bending rules to succeed)
Ritualism (people who don’t want to succeed)
Rebellion (succeeding illegally)
Retreatism (dropping out of society all together)

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8
Q

What does postmodernist Katz say about crime?

A

Doesn’t blame gender, ethnicity etc. but says crime is done for personal gain.

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9
Q

What does postmodernist Lyng say about crime?

A

People participate in ‘edgework’ where they test boundaries and ‘master’ the crimes so they continue to do it.

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10
Q

What does postmodernists Katz and Jackson-Jacobs say about crime?

A

Social mobility means people move to better areas and gangs form in places that are left. Only thing available in those areas so ‘gangs are made glorious’.

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11
Q

What does interactionist Becker say about crime?

A

Label —-> Master status —-> Self fulfilling prophecy.

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12
Q

What does interactionist Malinowski say about crime?

A

The reaction to crime is more significant than the crime itself. South pacific islanders.

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13
Q

What does interactionist Matza say about crime?

A

Youth are torn between following the law and wanting to follow deviant ‘subterranean values’. Phrases like ‘not my fault’ allow them to neutralise situations and escape blame.

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14
Q

What does Marxist Box say about crime?

A

‘Avoidable killings’ done by the working class are punished, but those in more professional situations e.g. workplace places no blame on those in power who could have prevented them.

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15
Q

What does Marxist Chambliss say about crime?

A

Capitalism leads to competition which creates greed and therefore theft.

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16
Q

What does Marxist Gordon say about crime?

A

White collar crimes are gone unnoticed.

17
Q

What is the main difference between left and right wing views on crime?

A

Left focus on prevention whilst right focuses on consequences.

18
Q

What does New right thinker Murray say about crime?

A

Blames the single individual, mentioning poor socialisation and lack of dependence on reasons for turning to crime.

19
Q

What does Hirschi say about the control theory?

A

Those who don’t partake in crime have good bonds and morality so can control urges and temptations.

20
Q

What are Hirschi’s 4 types of bonds?

A

Attachment (family and friends)
Commitment (jobs and responsibilities)
Involvement (charitability and community)
Belief (culture and morals)

21
Q

Who wrote ‘The New Criminology’?

A

Taylor et al (Taylor, Walton and Young)

22
Q

What did ‘The New Criminology’ consist of?

A

‘The radical theory of crime’ - Marxism and interactionism must combine theories to fully understand crime. AKA Neo-Marxism

23
Q

What three step process does the full theory of crime focus on?

A

The circumstances, meaning and effects of crimes

24
Q

What did Chambliss’ study of the ‘Saints and Roughnecks’ show about response to crime?

A

The saints and roughnecks commit the same amount of crime but different policing. Shows effects of labelling despite them not being true.

25
Q

What does Hall say about ‘policing the crisis’?

A

Media, moral panic and labelling cause police to crack down on black males who apparently do all the mugging.

26
Q

What is the main ethos of left realism?

A

They acknowledge white collar crime as left wings do but are more realistic in lower classes being the criminal.

27
Q

Explain the four elements in the square of crime.

A
  1. CJS decides what is a crime
  2. Offender experiences inequalities that leads to crime
  3. Victim decides to report or not
  4. Public reacts to crime
28
Q

What does Young say about crime?

A

Discusses the ‘exclusive society’. Relative deprivation proves society excludes people, leading to crime.

29
Q

What is the main ethos of right realism?

A

Blames individuals as new right do, but focuses more on aftermath problems of crime.

30
Q

What does Wilson and Herrnstein say about crime?

A

‘Wicked people exist’, understand biological factors will always play a part.

31
Q

What does Wilson and Kelling say about crime?

A

Policing needs to happen firmly and early on to stop it going too far into criminality.