4.4 - Gender & Crime Flashcards

1
Q

Gender Patterns in Recorded Crime

A

> Males more likely to commit crime and be repeat offender

> Females more likely to commit crime such as theft and prostitution

> Males more likely to commit crimes such as violent and sexual crime

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2
Q

Pollack - Chivalry Thesis

A

> CJS made up of males socialised to have protective attitude to females, unwilling to arrest & convict them - be chivalrous to them

> Crimes - likely to end up in official statistics, gives inaccurate picture and underrepresents female crime

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3
Q

2 Forms of Evidence for CT

A

> Official Stats
Self-Report Studies

> Self-Report Studies

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4
Q

Self Report Studies - Graham & Bowling (Evidence for CT)

A

> Young males 2x more likely than females to commit offence in previous year

> But official statistics shows males 4x more likely to offend

> Also females more likely to be cautioned than prosecuted

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5
Q

Farrington & Morris & Box - Evidence against Chivalry Thesis

A

> Females not sentenced more leniently for similar offences

> Females doing serious offences not treated more favourably than men

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6
Q

Buckle & Farrington - Evidence against Chivalry Thesis

A

> Saw 2x more males shoplifting than women, despite number of male and female offenders in official statistics equal

> Shows female shoplifters more likely to be prosecuted.

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7
Q

Heidensohn - Bias v Women (Criticism of Chivalry Thesis)

A

> Double standards of courts punishing female not males for promiscuous sexual activity

> e.g. Females not conforming to accepted standards of heterosexuality & motherhood punished more harshly

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8
Q

Carlen - Bias v Women (Evidence against Chivalry Thesis)

A

> Double deviance - failed as a mother as well as a criminal

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9
Q

Walkate - Bias v Women (Evidence against Chivalry Thesis)

A

> For rape cases victims on trial often blamed e.g. what they have been wearing

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10
Q

Parsons - Functionalist Sex Role Theory

A

> Male reject female models of behaviour expressing emotion, distance themselves from this

> Engaging in compensatory compulsory masculinity e.g. anti-social behaviour, risk-taking & aggression

> As males have a breadwinner role at work, socialisation is difficult for boys
.

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11
Q

Cohen - Functionalist Sex Role Theory

A

> Lack of male role model, so boys turn to all street gangs for source of masculine identity

> Gain status through delinquency.

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12
Q

New Right - Functionalist Sex Role Theory

A

Absence of male role model in LPF leads boys to street gangs as source of identity.

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13
Q

Walkate (Feminist) - Criticisms of Functionalist Sex Role Theory

A

> Females have biological capacity for kids don’t mean they’re best suited to expressive role.

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15
Q

Heidensohn’s 3 Areas of Patriarchal Control

A

> Home
Public
Work

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16
Q

Home - Heidensohn

A

> Females usually homemakers, keeps them busy & so less time to do crime

> Males impose this role on females through threat of DV.

> Females stopped from going out, restricted to bedroom culture, help mums with housework, so less chance to do crime

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17
Q

Work - Heidensohn

A

> Glass ceiling stops females getting top positions with more chance of white collar crime

> Sexual harassment keep females in their place

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18
Q

Public - Heidensohn

A

> Feel they can’t go out alone at night, threat of rape - so stay inside

19
Q

Hirschi’s Control Theory

A

> We are controlled by being offered a deal e.g. rewards for conforming to norms

> Crime occurs if people don’t think they’ll get rewards or rewards of crime are more than risks

20
Q

Carlen - Class & Gender Deals

A

WC females led to conform through promise of 2 types of deals e.g. Class Deal & Gender Deal

21
Q

Class Deal - Carlen

A

Working females will be offered material rewards with decent standard of living & leisure opportunities.

22
Q

Gender Deal - Carlen

A

Females conforming to traditional domestic division of labour will get material & emotional rewards of family life

23
Q

Implications of Unavailability of Deals - Carlen

A

> Females who can’t get jobs & in poverty & can’t get benefits, feel vicitms of injustice

> Females faced DV & had generally poor family lifes (GD)

> As they’d gained nothing from GD/CD, crime was only route to decent life - w/ nothing to lose & everything to gain.

24
Q

Criticisms of Carlen

A

> See females behaviour controlled by external factors & ignores free will & choice

> Carlen’s sample was unrepresentative only WC & serious offenders

25
Q

Liberation Theory - Adler

A

> Females more liberated from patriarchy so will be more crime & with more severity due to equal opportunities & assertiveness

> Females adopt traditional male roles at work & in illegitimate spheres

> No longer do crimes e.g. theft & prostitution, breaking of glass ceiling so do working class crime

26
Q

Liberation Theology - Denscombe

A

> Females same as male teens engaging in risk-taking behaviour & girls adopting male stances

> e.g. desire for control/looking hard.

27
Q

Chesney-Lind - Criticisms of Liberation Theory

A

> Most female criminals are WC & uninfluenced by liberation

> Females doing male crimes e.g. drugs, but due to link with prostitution and not liberation

28
Q

Laidler & Hunt - Criticisms of LT

A

> Female gang members in US expected to conform to traditional gender roles

29
Q

General Criticisms of LT

A

Female crime rate growing in 50’s before Liberation

30
Q

Schwartz - Net Widening

A

No change in female’s involvement in violent crime, more is due to CJS widening net prosecuting for less serious violence than before.

31
Q

Moral Panic & Increase in Female Criminality

A

More convictions due to media-inspired labels about young females being out of control

32
Q

Sharpe - Moral Panic

A

CJS professionals influenced by media stereotypes of violent ‘’ladettes’’ believed female’s behaviour was getting worse.

33
Q

Effects of Moral Panic on Female Crime

A

> Creates Deviancy Amplification Spiral, courts take tougher stance.

> Resulting in more convictions leading to negative media coverage.

34
Q

Gender & Victimisation

A

> More males than females are victims of violence/homicide

> More females than males are victims of DV

> Lots more females faced sexual assault, but little reported to police

> Females have more of crime, but CSEW shows they’re at less risk, but local surveys found opposite.

35
Q

Messerschmidt - View on Masculinity

A

> Social construction of men having to work at presenting/projecting

> Some males have more resources than others they can rely on

> Deviance is a resource they rely on to accomplish hegemonic masculinity

36
Q

2 Types of Masculinity - Messerschmidt

A

> Hegemonic (HM)
Subordinated (SM)

> Subordinated (SM)

37
Q

Hegemonic Masculinity - Messerschmidt

A

> Dominant form & most males work to accomplish revolves around paid labour & ability to subordinate females

> Uncontrollable heterosexuality

38
Q

Subordinated Masculinity - Messerschmidt

A

> Homosexual males, no desire to achieve hegemonic masculinity, including working class and ethnic minorities who lack resources for it

> So turn to crime e.g. street robberies

39
Q

MC Men Masculinity & Crime - Messerschmidt

A

Middle Class males use crime to achieve hegemonic masculinity but white collar crime or corporate crime

40
Q

Criticisms of Messerschmidt

A

> Description of offenders not explanation.

> Why don’t all males use crime to achieve hegemonic masculinity

> Overworked to fit all crimes e.g. joyriding to embezzlement

41
Q

Winlow: Postmodernity, Masculinity & Crime

A

> Globalisation led to less manual jobs & more service sector e.g. pubs etc.

> Working as bouncers gave males paid work & chance for illegal business ventures in drugs etc

> & opportunity to show masculinity through violence

42
Q

Winlow: Bodily Capital (BC)

A

> Maintaining ‘’hardman’’ image essential for success in night economy

> Made body-building career necessity with need to prove strength & reputation

> Acts as form of intimidation, discourages competitors from challenging them

> New crime chances for males creating conditions for more organised criminal subculture