Labelling Theory Flashcards

1
Q

labelling theory - focuses on

A
  • interactions between deviants & those who define them as deviant
  • process where rules are selectively enforced
  • consequences of being labelled (societal reaction)
  • circumstance that a person is defined as deviant
  • analysis of who has to power to attach deviant label
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2
Q

labelling theory - becker

A

an act becomes deviant when others define it as

finding the causes is pointless as many people engage in some deviant behaviour

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3
Q

labelling theory - official statistics

A

social constructions
only represents those publicly labelled as criminals
law enforces interpret what they see, their subjective perceptions/stereotypes affect the criminal label attached leading to social construction

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4
Q

labelling theory - moral entrepreneurs

A

social agencies (media, police) that have the power to create rules and their definitions of deviance

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5
Q

labelling theory - selective enforcement

A

as police can’t prosecute all crime
considerable discretion and selective judgement is used when dealing with deviant behaviour
pre-existing stereotypical categories, criminal types, ares influence their response

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6
Q

labelling theory - work of cicourel

A

two US cities
juvenile crime rates were higher in working-class read than middle-class areas
people viewed their behaviour differently
perception that middle-class deviant behaviour was a temporary lapse

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7
Q

labelling theory - labelling process; primary deviance

A

deviant act that has not been publicly labeled as no one knows about it
has few consequences

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8
Q

labelling theory - labelling process; secondary deviance

A

when an offender is discovered
publicly labelled as deviant
affects their self-concept

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9
Q

labelling theory - labelling process; master status

A

turned from deviant label
displaces all other characteristics the individual possess
judged solely as a deviant

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10
Q

labelling theory - what does labelling lead to?

A

self-fulfilling prophecy
deviant career
- becker

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11
Q

labelling theory - deviant career

A

prisons help make the label stick
after leaving prison they face rejection from social groups
find lack of alternative legitimate opportunities to live their lives
identity with a deviant group facing similar problems
leads to further deviance

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12
Q

labelling theory - what generates more deviance?

A

deviancy amplification and moral panics

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13
Q

labelling theory - strengths

A
  • establishes that deviants not different to normal people
  • reveals importance of stereotyping in creating deviance
  • shows crime statistics as a product of bias in law-enforcement
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14
Q

labelling theory - weakness

A
  • removes blame from deviant, and into a victim
  • many know what they’re doing is deviant without label
  • doesn’t explain causes
  • deterministic; some choose deviance & some can choose to avoid deviant career by rehabilitating themselves
  • doesn’t explain where different reactions/stereotypes come from
  • doesn’t create a policy/solution to crime
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