individualistic theories - evaluation Flashcards

1
Q

FREUD - PSYCHODYNAMIC
strength - theory points to the…

A
  • importance of early childhood and family relationships in understanding criminal behaviour
  • practical
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2
Q

FREUD - PSYCHODYNAMIC
strength - psychoanalytic explanations…

A
  • have had some influence on policies for dealing with crime and deviance
  • real life application
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3
Q

FREUD - PSYCHODYNAMIC
weakness - psychoanalytic explanations are…

A
  • unscientific snd subjective
  • rely on accepting the psychoanalyst’s claim that they see into an individual’s unconscious mind
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4
Q

FREUD - PSYCHODYNAMIC
weakness - psychodynamic theories of offending…

A
  • no longer accredited by psychologists due to difficulty of testing
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5
Q

BOWLBY’S MATERNAL DEPRIVATION THEORY
strength - bowlby’s research showed…

A
  • more of his sample of 44 suffered maternal deprivation (39%) than non-delinquents (5%)
  • credibility
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6
Q

BOWLBY’S MATERNAL DEPRIVATION THEORY
strength - work shows the need…

A
  • to consider the role of parent - child relationships in explaining criminality
  • practical
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7
Q

BOWLBY’S MATERNAL DEPRIVATION THEORY
weakness - it was a…

A
  • retrospective study
  • delinquents and mothers had to accurately recall past events
  • can be emotional, unreliable
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8
Q

BOWLBY’S MATERNAL DEPRIVATION THEORY
weakness - bowlby’s own later study…

A
  • of 60 children who’d been separated from their parents for a long time before 5, found no evidence of ‘affectionless psychopathy’
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9
Q

SUTHERLAND’S DIFFERENTIAL ASSOCIATION (LEARNING)
strength - Farrington (1995)

A
  • investigated antisocial behaviour in 411 men in London
  • approximately 45% went on to commit crime
  • crime in family one of several commom traits
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10
Q

SUTHERLAND’S DIFFERENTIAL ASSOCIATION (LEARNING)
strength - Matthews found that…

A
  • juvenile delinquents more likely to have friends who commit antisocial acts
  • learn behaviour from peer groups
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11
Q

SUTHERLAND’S DIFFERENTIAL ASSOCIATION (LEARNING)
weakness - farrington 1995 also suggested…

A
  • poverty and low educational achievement were key factors in the study and played a part in criminality
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12
Q

SUTHERLAND’S DIFFERENTIAL ASSOCIATION (LEARNING)
weakness - not everyone…

A
  • who is exposed to ‘criminal influences’ becomes a criminal
  • might learn from family and peers how to commit crime, but not practice it
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13
Q

OPERANT LEARNING THEORY - SKINNER
strength - skinner’s studies on…

A
  • animals show that they learn from experience through reinforcement
  • some human learning is also like this
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14
Q

OPERANT LEARNING THEORY - SKINNER
strength - can be applied to offending

A
  • Jeffery (1959) - if crime leads to more rewards than punishments for an individual, they’re more likely to offend
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15
Q

OPERANT LEARNING THEORY - SKINNER
weakness - based on studies of learning in animals

A
  • not an adequate model of how humans learn criminal behaviour
  • generalisability
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16
Q

OPERANT LEARNING THEORY - SKINNER
weakness - ignores…

A
  • internal mental processes (thinking, personal values, and attitudes)
  • explains solely in terms of external rewards and punishments
17
Q

MORAL DEVELOPMENT (KOHLBERG)
strength - some studies

A

show delinquents are more likely to have immature moral development

18
Q

MORAL DEVELOPMENT (KOHLBERG)
strength - thornton and reid

A
  • found theory to be truer for crimes such as theft and robbery (involve reasoning)
  • rather than violent crimes (often impulsive)
19
Q

MORAL DEVELOPMENT (KOHLBERG)
weakness - focuses on

A
  • moral thinking, rather than moral behaviour
  • someone maybe perfectly capable of thinking morally whilst acting immorally