Deviance and Crime Flashcards

1
Q

connections with others

A

Attachment- Control Theory

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2
Q

Agreement on common values in society.

A

Belief- Control Theory

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3
Q

Investments in the community

A

Commitment- Control Theory

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4
Q

Pursues their goal in a socially acceptable way.

A

Conformity in Strain Theory

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5
Q

Attachment, commitment, involvement and beliefs.

A

Control theory’s social bonds that connect us in a community:

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6
Q

Social control is directly affected by the strength of social bonds and that deviance results from a feeling of disconnection from society.

A

Control Theory: Travis Hirschi- SI

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7
Q

in charge with supervising individuals who have been arrested, convicted, and sentenced for a criminal offense.

A

Corrections system

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8
Q

is a system that has the authority to make decisions based on law.

A

Court

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9
Q

behavior that violates official laws and is punishable by formal sanctions.

A

Crime

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10
Q

Conformity to the prevailing cultural norms of lower-class society causes crime.

A

Cultural Deviance Theory- Functionalism

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11
Q

is a violation of established contextual, cultural or social norms, whether they’re folkways, mores, or codified law.

A

Deviance

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12
Q

Individuals learn deviant behavior from those close to them, who provides models and opportunities of deviance.

A

Edwin Sutherland: Differential association- SI

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13
Q

needed for a successful society. It challenges previous views.

A

Emile Durkheim believes Deviance is- ( Functionalism)

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14
Q

Officially recognized and enforced norm violations.

A

Formal sanctions

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15
Q

attacks based on a person’s race, religion, or other characteristics .

A

Hate crime

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16
Q

Face-to-face interactions

A

Informal Sanctions

17
Q

Uses criminal/deviant means to accomplish their goals

A

Innovation in Strain Theory?

18
Q

participation in socially legitament activities.

A

Involvement- Control Theory

19
Q

examines the ascribing of a deviant behavior to another person by members of society.

A

Labeling Theory- SI

20
Q

maintain social control throughout laws, which are rules adopted and enforced by political authority.

A

Legal Codes

21
Q

The access to socially acceptable goals plays a part in determining whether a person deviates or conforms.

A

Merton’s Strain Theory Functionalism

22
Q

involve the destruction or theft of property but do not use the threat of force

A

Nonviolent Crimes

23
Q

A civil force in charge of enforcing laws and public order at a federal, state, or community level.

A

Police

24
Q

Offenses that hold no damage to your character, and are often temporary.

A

Primary Deviance (Parking Tickets)

25
Q

Replacing Society’s goals with your own.

A

Rebellion in Strain Theory?

26
Q

Rejecting society’s goals and means.

A

Retreatism in Strain Theory?

27
Q

Reinforce social order.

A

Sanctions

28
Q

Offenses that damages your character, and are often permanent.

A

Secondary Deviance (Murder)

29
Q

a collection of data gathered using voluntary methods such as questionnaires or telephone interview.

A

A Self-Report Study

30
Q

The regulation and enforcement of norms

A

Social control

31
Q

Social Control’s underlying goal

A

to maintain social order

32
Q

Crime is more likely to occur in communities with weak social ties and lack of social control

A

Social Disorganization Theory-Functionalism

33
Q

An arrangement of practices and behaviors in which society’s members base their daily lives.

A

Social Order

34
Q

offenses committed by ordinary people against other people or organizations, usually in public spaces.


A

Street Crime

35
Q

where the perpetrator is not explicitly harming another person.

A

Victim-less crime

36
Q

based on the use or force or the threat of force

A

violent crimes

37
Q

What are the five paths to fill the gap of Merton’s theory?

A

Conform, Innovation, ritualism, retreatism, and rebellion

38
Q

Lowers goals in order to accomplish them in a socially acceptable way.

A

What is ritualism in Strain Theory?-