2.2.2 Crime and Deviance: Interactionism and labelling theory Flashcards

1
Q

Mental illness and suicide

How does Lemert see mental illness as a self-fulfilling prophecy?

A
  • Argues that socially awkward people are labelled and excluded from groups.
  • The negative response gives reason for to fear their mental health and ‘medical patient’ becomes master status.
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2
Q

Mental illness and suicide

What does Douglas argue about how to find the meaning of suicide?

A
  • To find the meaning of suicide we must use qualitative methods such as suicide notes and interviews with family.
  • Official statistics and coroners notes are social constructs which only tell us about labels.
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3
Q

The social construction of crime

What is the marxist evaluation of labelling theory?

A

Marxists criticise labelling theorists for identifying sterotypes but failing to identify that they come from the unequal structure of a capitalist society.

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4
Q

The social construction of crime

How do labelling theorists view crime statistics?

A
  • Labelling theorists see crime as a topic not a resource
  • This is because working class groups are more likely to fit police typifications and so police spend more time in working class areas, leading to disproportionate arrests.
  • Cicourel argues that crime statistics cannot be taken at face value or as a resource, but as a topic of investigation.
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5
Q

The social construction of crime

What is Cicourel’s theory of typifications and who is most likely to suffer because of this?

A

Cicourel argues that the police use typifications of the ‘typical delinquent’ (steroetypes).

Those fitting the typification are more likely to be stopped, arrested and charged.
* Working class and ethnic minority groups are more likely to be arrested, and once arrested more likely to be charged,
* Middle class juvenilesare less likely to fit typification and have parents who can sucessfully negotiate on their behalf so less likely to be arrested and charged.

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6
Q

The social construction of crime

How does Becker view deviance?

A
  • Becker views deviance as a social construct.
  • He argues that no act is deviant in itself, but social groups create deviance by creating rules and applying them to particular people who they label as ‘outsiders’.
  • Therefore, an act only becomes deviant when labelled by others as deviant.
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7
Q

The effects of labelling

What is some evaluation of labelling?

(2)

A
  • Fails to explain why people commit primary deviance in the first place.
  • Accused of being too deterministic - once labelled, SFP is inevitable, although this isn’t always the case.
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8
Q

The effects of labelling

What is Cohen’s study of moral panic?

A
  • Cohen’s study of mods and rockers is an example of moral panic and deviance amplification spiral.
  • Media exaggeration created a moral panic
  • Moral entrepreneurs called for a ‘crackdown’ and police responded by arresting more youths.
  • More panic, youths labelled ‘folk devils’, more deviance.
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9
Q

The effects of labelling

What is a deviance amplification spiral?

A

In a deviance amplification spiral, the attempts to control deviance leads to it increasing rather than decreasing, resulting in greater attempts to control it, and then more deviance in an escalatng spiral.

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10
Q

The effects of labelling

What is Young’s example of a self fulfilling prophecy?

A
  • Young studied Hippies’ marijuana use and found that initially the drug was peripheral to the hippies’ lifestyle (primary deviance)
  • Once the police began to persecute them (societal reaction) they began to retreat into closed groups.
  • They developed a deviant subculture where drug use was central (self fulfilling prophecy).
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11
Q

The effects of labelling

How does being labelled lead to more crime?

(sfp)

A
  • Can lead to aself fulfilling prophecywhere someone turns to secondary deviance.
  • Society then reinforces the individual’s outsider status , leading to them joining a deviant subculture and adopting a deviant career.
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12
Q

The effects of labelling

What does Lemert argue is the result of labelling?

A

Lemert argues that by labelling certain people as deviant, society actually encourages them to become more so, causing ‘secondary deviance’.

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