Chapter 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Is crime objective?

A

No it is subjective and the outcome of human interaction.

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2
Q

What era did labelling theory emerge in?

A

1960’s, era of disintegrated social order, youth culture, 2nd wave feminism, civil rights movement, sexual liberation.

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3
Q

What is the definition of crime?

A

Crime is defined by social action and reaction and by those with the power to label.

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4
Q

What is the focus of analysis?

A

Relationship between offender and those with the power to label.

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5
Q

What is the cause of crime?

A

Stigmatization and negative effects of labeling.

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6
Q

What is the nature of offender?

A

Nothing specific just someone identified as criminal by labelling process.

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7
Q

How do you prevent crime?

A

Decriminalize victimless and harmless crimes, practice radical non-intervention.

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8
Q

How are those without power disadvantaged in this theory?

A

They are more vulnerable to being labelled as deviant and then facing the subsequent negative effects.

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9
Q

What are some of the main impacts of labeling of offenders?

A

Stigmatization that can lead to taking on the role of criminal and fulfilling it (self prophecy).

People who have been labelled with seek the company of other criminally labelled people (and then be further immersed in criminality)

Young people who are labelled are very likely to embark on a life of crime.

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10
Q

How does it link to symbolic interactionist perspective in sociology?

A

The concepts of “self” and “symbol”, and how individual people react differently to social situations.

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11
Q

What is “looking glass self”?

A

Your image of yourself is what you see reflected in those around you.

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12
Q

People respond to situations by….?

A

Reading the symbols around them.

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13
Q

What are typifications?

A

The base of interaction.

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14
Q

What is the 1st step in communication? Why is it important?

A

Defining situations through interactions, because if both people don’t share the same definitions there can be miscommunication.

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15
Q

How is deviance subjective in this theory?

A

It depends on the reaction to the action. If it is defined as deviant and involves interaction with the justice system, then it is seen as deviant.

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16
Q

What is primary deviance? What are the causes?

A

It is the initial deviant behaviour that most people engage in at some point. This deviance is a passing event, experiences no formal reaction and does not change the identity of the offender. The causes are not explained with this theory.

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17
Q

What is secondary deviance?

A

When individuals engage in primary deviance but then face a formal reaction with the justice system. Then they are officially labelled and this changes their self-concept.

18
Q

What are some contemporary applications of labelling theory?

A

Restorative justice, reintegrative shaming, and general processes of the juvenile criminal justice system.

19
Q

What is cultural criminology’s view on labelling process? Who is behind it?

A

The labelling process can be part of motivation for people to engage in criminality because it is exciting and thrilling (sometimes because of the risk of being caught). Katz 1988

20
Q

What is the focus of phenomenological theory?

A

Understanding why people do what they do.

21
Q

What is crime according to phenomenological theory?

A

Interrelationship between meaning and emotion experienced by those involved.

21
Q

According to phenomenological theory, how does control of social perspectives occur?

A

Through the media

22
Q

How do cultural criminologists see crime?

A

Located within everyday events of subcultural expression and attempts by the crime control industry to control and manage those expressions.

23
Q

What does loss of control in lives have to do with criminal activity?

A

When people lose control of certain aspects of their lives, they may engage in risky behaviour to try and reclaim some control.

24
Q

How has labelling theory affected policy development?

A

Youth diversion programs, youth criminal justice act, pre court programs.

25
Q

What are the main critiques of labelling theory?

A

Offers no explanation of why people commit primary deviance, does not explain serious crimes, does not explain why some people do not succumb to their labels, does not explain crime with cross-cultural agreement (i.e. murder, rape)

26
Q

How do some activists respond to labelling?

A

They might not be affected by a negative or criminal label because they believe in their hearts they are on the right side.

27
Q

What are some more uncommon responses to labelling?

A

Seeing it as a right of passage in certain communities.

28
Q

What are the three outcomes that negative labels influence perception of?

A

Treatment amenability , dangerousness, legal sanction/sentence.

29
Q

What is the net widening theory of labelling?

A

Diversion from justice system could draw more people into crime, especially if the diversion is very intrusive.

30
Q

What is denser nets in net widening?

A

Diversionary programs as more intrusive in individual lives than the traditional justice system.

31
Q

What is broader nets in net widening?

A

People may be brought into the criminal justice system where previously they would’ve had no contact.

32
Q

What is different nets?

A

The social control/labelling can remain without criminal control other different forms (psychiatric or medical control).

33
Q

What is the response to crime?

A

Diversion from the justice system, no formal labelling unless necessary, no judicial interaction if a small scale offence.

34
Q

What are some of the differences between the youth and adult system?

A

Closed court and publication ban, private criminal record mostly scrubbed when 18, conditional sentences, maximum sentence of 10 years*, incarceration as last resort.

35
Q

What ologies widely influenced labelling perspectives?

A

Social psychology, phenomenology, ethmethodology.

36
Q

What is the general process of self fulfilling prophecy?

A
  1. Negative labelling
  2. Stigmatization
  3. New identity
  4. Commitment to new identity
37
Q

Radical non-intervention

A

Concept wherein we just stop intervening on people’s deviance.

38
Q

What is Matza’s drift theory?

A

Youth drift between unconventional and conventional behaviour but are not permanently delinquent unless they face official intervention.

39
Q

Why are kids who have been formally processed more likely to reoffend?

A

They internalize labels, learn criminality in juvie, their social skills regress, suffer mental illness, have minor technical breaches that re-jail them.