Lecture 5 - Deviance & Social Control Flashcards

1
Q

What is Deviance? (Statistical terms)

A

Rare or infrequent behaviour (outside of the norm)

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2
Q

What is Deviance? (Rarity terms)

A

Obscures distinctions between people who exceed and people who fall short of certain expectations

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3
Q

What is Deviance? (Harmful terms)

A

Although many people labelled as deviant cause harm, many do not

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4
Q

Is Deviance criminal or illegal?

A

Deviance need not be criminal or illegal, and crime may not be deviant.

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5
Q

Enforcing Laws is a form of ….

A

Social Control

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6
Q

What is Social Control?

A

The ways in which individuals, groups and institutions express their disapproval of people and behaviours.
- Intended to produce conformity and compliance with rules, norms, laws.

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7
Q

What is a Zombie Law?

A

Laws that are in the criminal code, but are not enforced

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8
Q

How do Sociologists view Law?

A

Law only exists as a process

  • it has to be mobilized by actors, or brought into existence each time it is needed.
  • law enforcement always involves the discretion of actors
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9
Q

What is Socio-Legal Studies?

A

Less interested in what law is, more interested in how law works - as a part of society

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10
Q

What is Learning from the Mundane?

A

Learning how law shapes our everyday life, why people engage with the law, what happens when they do

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11
Q

How do scholars of law and society see law?

A

Law is a resource for actors

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12
Q

What is the Strain Theory? (Merton)

A

Deviance as the result of strain caused by mal-integration of cultural and social structures of societies
- lack of fit between the cultural goals that people are encouraged to seek and the means available to achieve these goals

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13
Q

Why was Merton’s Strain Theory criticized?

A

He assumed reliability of official statistics and failure to account for middle-class and upper-class crime and deviance

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14
Q

What is Strain Theory (Agnew)

A

Looks at other kinds of strain, such as negative conditions (like abuse), or the loss of something that is valued
- broader understanding of strain

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15
Q

What is the Cultural Support Theory?

A

Considers how cultural beliefs create and sustain deviant behaviour

  • learning specific drives, motives, attitudes
  • deviant behaviour is acceptable when supported by a group’s cultural values
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16
Q

What is Control Theory

A

Humans beings are neither good nor evil, but are born with the capacity to do wrong

  • no special motivation is needed to explain deviance
  • it is conformity, not deviance, that needs to be explained - why don’y we all commit deviance?
17
Q

What was Travis Hirschi’s Social Bond Theory?

A

Individuals are more likely to turn to illegitimate means if their bonds to society are weak or broken

18
Q

What are the 4 aspects of Travis Hirschi & The Social Bond?

A

Attachment
Commitment
Involvement
Belief

19
Q

What is the Transactional Character of Deviance?

A

Attention should be directed to situations rather than individuals

  • murder is a result of situations in which people feel offended and turn to violence
  • driving force is emotional rather than rational
20
Q

What is Conservative Conflict Theory:

A

Social conflict surrounding moral conduct comes from many different sources
- Various ethnic, religious, professional, lifestyle and cultural groups pursue their social interests and come into conflict with others

21
Q

What is Radical/Marxist Conflict Theory?

A

The social construction of deviance reflects economic realities of capitalism including class exploitation

22
Q

What is Primary and Secondary Deviation

A

Crime Committed –> labelling process –> possibility of contributing more crimes

23
Q

What is Master Status?

A

Trumps all other status considerations. Someone’s criminality can become their defining primary characteristic, overriding all others in importance

24
Q

What is Stignma?

A

Disapproval of a person or group on the basis of some trait that can be perceived or understood to distinguish them from other members of a society
- sex offender

25
Q

How do Social Constructionists view Deviance?

A

Social constructionists believe it is best to study how behaviours and people come to be considered deviant (discourse of social control)
- Actions are not inherently deviant

26
Q

What is Negative and Positive Eugenics?

A

Eliminate bad traits and keep good traits by encouraging reproduction