Functionalist View Flashcards

1
Q

Which functionalists do we look at?

A

Durkheim
Merton

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2
Q

What does Durkheim talk about?

A
  • the inevitability of crime
  • the positive functions of crime : boundary maintenance / adaptation and change
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3
Q

What does Merton talk about?

A

Strain theory

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4
Q

According to Durkheim, what are the 4 key characteristics of crime?

A
  1. Inevitable
  2. Universal
  3. Relative
  4. Functional
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5
Q

What 2 key mechanisms does society have in order to achieve solidarity?

A
  1. Socialisation - instils shared culture so every member has the same norms and values
  2. Social control - rewards for conformity and punishments for deviance to ensure individuals behave in the way society expects.
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6
Q

Why is crime inevitable?

A
  1. Inadequate socialisation
  2. Diversity of lifestyles and cultures
  3. Decline in religious beliefs
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7
Q

Explain how inadequate socialisation leads to crime

A

Not everyone is socialised into the correct norms and values due to poor parenting, so some individuals will be prone to deviate.

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8
Q

Explain how diversity of lifestyles and cultures leads to crime

A

Different groups develop their own subcultures with distinctive norms and values, what the members of the subculture regard as normal may be seen as deviant by mainstream culture.

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9
Q

Explain how decline in religious beliefs leads to crime

A

As people become less religious, integration, social solidarity and collective conscience lose power and crime becomes inevitable.

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10
Q

According to Durkheim, what 2 positive functions does crime perform?

A
  1. Boundary maintenance
  2. Adaptation and change
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11
Q

Explain boundary maintenance

A
  • Crime produces a reaction from society, uniting its members in condemnation of the wrongdoer and reinforcing their commitment to the shared norms and values
  • When a crime is reported it reinforces the difference between us and them (criminals)
  • Crime leads to integration, social solidarity and reinforces the collective conscience
  • Durkheim says the purpose of punishment is to reaffirm society’s shared rules and reinforce social solidarity e.g. the courtroom publicly stigmatises the wrongdoer and discourages others from law breaking.
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12
Q

Explain adaptation and change

A
  • Sometimes criminal behaviour is needed to move society on e.g. the Suffragette and Rosa Parks.
  • Durkheim says all change starts with an act of deviance. People must have the freedom to deviate or else society will never move forward and will stagnate.
  • For Durkheim, neither a very high or a very low level of crime is desirable. Too much = society could fall apart / too little = change can never occur.
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13
Q

Who has developed Durkheim’s idea that deviance can have a positive function?

A

Kingsley and Polsky

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14
Q

What does Kingsley argue?

A

Prostitution acts as a safety valve for the release men’s sexual frustrations without threatening the monogamous nuclear family.

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15
Q

What does Polsky argue?

A

Pornography safely ‘channels’ a variety of sexual desires away from alternatives such as adultery, which would pose a much greater threat to the family.

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16
Q

Give some criticisms of Durkheim

A
  • For Durkheim, society requires a certain amount of deviance to function successfully, but he offers no way of knowing how much is the right amount.
  • Crime doesn’t always promote solidarity - it may have the opposite effect leading people to become more isolated. E.g. forcing women to stay indoors for fear of attack.
  • Functionalists say crime exists to strengthen solidarity but this doesn’t mean society actually creates crime in advance with the intention of strengthening solidarity.
17
Q

Give a criticism of crime as a safety valve argument

A
  • Look at the functions crime performs for society but ignores how it might affect different groups or individuals e.g. prostitution may be functional as a safety valve for male frustration, but isn’t for the illegally trafficked sex worker who has to meet his needs.
18
Q

What do strain theories argue?

A

Strain theories argue people engage in deviant behaviour when they are unable to achieve socially approved goals by legitimate means.

Deviance is a result of a strain between 2 things:
- the goals that a culture encourages individuals to achieve
- what the institutional structure of society allows them to achieve legitimately

19
Q

What did Merton argue?

A

Many types of crime exist because society shares the same American Dream but not everyone can achieve these things lawfully. A strain exists between the goals and ambitions of people and their ability to achieve them.