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Summary Sociology AQA Crime and Deviance notes $4.50   Add to cart

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Summary Sociology AQA Crime and Deviance notes

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My notes on the crime and deviance topic

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  • August 30, 2024
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, ‭********Please ignore SPAG errors. Topic 9 on globalisation and crime is not fully‬
‭ ompleted and the topic of measuring crime is not included in this booklet*******‬
c




‭ opic 1: Functionalist, strain and‬
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‭subcultural theories‬

‭Durkheim's functionalist theory‬
‭ alue consensus: sharing a common culture‬
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‭Socialisation and social control are used to achieve solidarity and a value consensus‬

‭ he inevitably of crime‬
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‭Crime threatens social order but it is an inevitable feature of society‬
‭2 reasons why crime is found in all societies‬
‭1.‬ ‭Not everyone is equally socialised into the shared norms and value‬
‭2.‬ ‭There is diversity in values - different groups develop their subculture with distinctive norms‬

‭ odern societies have a complex specialised division of labour, leading to individuals becoming‬
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‭increasingly different. This weakens shared culture and results in deviance.‬

‭The positive function of crime‬
‭1.‬ ‭Boundary maintenance‬
‭Crime produces a reaction that units its members in condemning the wrongdoers and reinforces their‬
‭commitment to shared norms and values, discouraging deviance‬
‭2.‬ ‭Adaptation and change‬
‭All change starts from an act of deviance. Individuals with new values, challenge existing values which‬
‭may appear deviant at first. However, their values may give rise to a new culture. If new ideas are‬
‭suppressed we will be unable to make necessary adaptive change‬

‭ ther functions of crime‬
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‭Davis:‬‭Crime acts as a safety valve eg. prostitution releases men’s sexual frustration without‬
‭threatening the monogamous nuclear family‬
‭Choen:‬‭a warning that an institution is not functioning properly. eg high truancy may tell us that there‬
‭are problems with the education system and that policymakers need to make appropriate changes to it‬
‭Erikson:‬‭If deviance is positive, society is organised to promote deviance. The true function of‬
‭agencies of social control may be to sustain a certain level of crime rather than to rid society of it‬

‭Criticism‬
‭-‬ ‭Society requires a certain amount of deviance to function successfully but doesn’t say how‬
‭much is the right amount‬
‭-‬ ‭Society doesn’t create crime in advance to strengthen solidarity‬
‭-‬ ‭Focus on crimes functions for society and ignores the individuals and groups affected eg‬
‭prostitution may be functional for the male but it's not for the illegally trafficked sex workers‬
‭-‬ ‭Crimes doesn’t always promote solidarity but can lead to isolation eg. forcing women to stay‬
‭indoors in fear of attack (Sarah Everard)‬



‭Merton’s strain theory‬
‭ eople engage in deviant behaviour when they are unable to achieve socially approved goals by‬
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‭legitimate means.‬

,‭ his is a result of 2 factors:‬
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‭Structural factors: society’s unequal opportunity structure‬
‭Cultural factors: the strong emphasis on achieving goals and weaker emphasis on using legitimate‬
‭means‬

‭ he American dream‬
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‭Americans meant to pursue their goals through legitimate means (self-discipline and study) but‬
‭poverty and other factors deny the opportunity to achieve goals legitimately, creating pressure to‬
‭resort to illegitimate means - called strain to anomie‬

‭ train to anomie:‬‭pressure to deviate as a result of strain between goal and mean‬
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‭The pressure to deviate comes from the emphasis on achieving success through the media‬

‭ eviant adaptation to stain‬
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‭Merton says there are 5 adaptations to strain‬
‭Conformity‬‭: accept goals and legitimate mean‬
‭Innovation‬‭: accept goal and reject mean‬
‭Ritualism‬‭: reject goal but have internalised the mean so they follow rules for their own sake‬
‭Retreatism‬‭: reject goals and mean‬
‭Rebellion‬‭: reject goals and try to replace them with new ones‬

‭ valuation of Merton‬
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‭Patterns shown by official statistics‬
‭-‬ ‭Most crime is property crime because American society values wealth‬
‭-‬ ‭Lower-class crime rates are higher because they have fewer opportunities to obtain goals and‬
‭mean‬

‭Criticism‬
‭-‬ ‭Takes official statistics at face value‬

‭-‬ ‭Deterministic - the WC experiences the most strain yet they don’t all deviate‬

‭-‬ ‭ arxists argue that it ignores the power if the ruling class to enforce laws in ways that‬
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‭criminalise the poor but not the rich‬

‭-‬ ‭ ssumes there is a value consensus ( that everyone strives for money) but not everyone‬
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‭shares this goal‬

‭-‬ ‭ xplain how deviance results from individuals adapting to the strain of anomie but ignore the‬
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‭role of group deviance‬



‭Subcultural strain theories‬
‭ ubcultures‬‭: groups that have different values from mainstream society. They offer an alternative‬
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‭opportunity structure to those denied the chance to achieve through legitimate means‬

‭ ohen's: status frustration‬
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‭He agrees with Merton that deviance is a lower-class phenomenon, as a result of their inability to‬
‭achieve mainstream success.‬

‭However, he criticises Merton‬
‭1.‬ ‭Merton sees deviance as an act of an individual and ignores advances done by groups‬
‭2.‬ ‭Merton focuses on utilitarian crime committed for material gain but ignores non-utilitarian‬
‭crimes‬

‭ e focuses on working-class boys who face anomie in the MC-dominated school system‬
H
‭Unable to achieve and are stuck at the bottom of the status hierarchy‬
‭This causes status frustration, they resolve the frustration by rejecting MC mainstream goals and‬
‭joining delinquent subcultures‬

,‭(Revenge and joy riding)‬

‭ lternative status hierarchy‬
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‭The subculture values are:‬‭Spite, malice, hostility and contempt which are inverted values of‬
‭mainstream society‬

‭ ubculture’s function is that it offers an alternative status hierarchy which you can achieve through‬
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‭illegitimate and delinquent actions‬

‭Evaluation‬
‭-‬ ‭Explains non-utilitarian deviance‬
‭-‬ ‭Ignores the possibility that working-class boys may not have shared middle-class success‬
‭goals in the first place and so never saw themselves as failures‬

‭ loward and Ohlin‬‭: three subcultures‬
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‭*Agree with Merton that the WC are denied legitimate opportunities‬

‭ ot everyone turns to innovation and utilitarian crimes‬
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‭Different subcultures respond in different ways to the lack of legitimate opportunities. They argue that‬
‭different neighbourhoods provide different illegitimate opportunities for young people to develop a‬
‭criminal career. There is also unequal access to illegitimate opportunities‬

‭They identify three types of deviant subcultures as a result:‬

‭ riminal subculture:‬‭provide youth with an apprenticeship for a career in utilitarian crime. Arise in‬
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‭neighbourhoods with a longstanding and stable criminal culture with an established hierarchy of an‬
‭adult criminal who provides training and role model‬

‭ onflict subculture:‬‭Arises in areas of high population turnover. High levels of disorganisation‬
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‭prevent a stable criminal network. Violence provides a release for young men’s frustration due to their‬
‭lack of opportunity‬

‭ etreats subculture:‬‭in neighbourhood where they fail to be a professional criminal and achieve‬
R
‭legitimately ‘double failure as a result may turn to retreatist subculture becoming addicts and‬
‭committing crimes like shoplifting to maintain that lifestyle‬

‭Evaluation‬

-‭ ‬ ‭ hey ignore the crimes of the wealthy, focusing on the WC‬
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‭-‬ ‭Ignores wider structure of who enforcing and making the law‬
‭-‬ ‭They draw the boundaries too sharply eg.‬‭Matza‬‭claims that most delinquents are not strongly‬
‭committed to their subculture and can drift in and out of delinquency‬

,‭ opic 2: Interactionism and labelling‬
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‭theory‬
‭The social construction of crime‬
‭Labelling theories are interested in how and why certain acts come to be labelled as criminal‬

‭ hey argue that no act is criminal or deviant, instead, it becomes criminal when others label it as such.‬
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‭The act is not what makes it a crime but people’s reaction. “Deviance is in the eye of the beholder”‬
‭-becker‬

‭ ecker‬‭says that a deviant is someone to whom the label has been successfully applied and deviant‬
B
‭behaviour is behaviour labeled so‬

‭ ecker‬‭: interested in the role of moral entrepreneurs - people who lead a moral campaign to change‬
B
‭the law‬

‭New laws have 2 effects:‬
‭-‬ ‭The creation of a new group of outsiders - deviants who break the law‬
‭-‬ ‭The expansion of social control agencies to enforce the rule‬
‭Becker says social agencies campaign for change in the law to increase their own power.‬
‭Eg. US FBN Marjiana Tax Act 1937- this was to protect young people but Becker says it was‬
‭to extend their control‬

‭ ho gets labelled?‬
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‭Not everyone who commits an offence gets punished. Depends on: interaction with social control‬
‭agencies, appearance and background and situation of the offence‬
‭Studies show that certain groups are more likely to be held accountable‬
‭Piliavin and Briar:‬‭Police decisions to arrest a youth were mainly based on physical cues (dress and‬
‭manner)‬

‭ icourel: the negotiation of justice‬
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‭Officers decision to arrest is influenced by stereotypes‬
‭Cicourel‬‭found that officers' typifications led them to concentrate on certain types, resulting in class‬
‭bias. In turn, police patrol working-class areas more intensively resulting in more arrests and‬
‭confirming their stereotypes‬

J‭ ustice is not fixed but negotiable. White, male, MC men are less likely to be charged as their‬
‭background doesn’t fit the ode of the police’s typical background. Their parents also also able to‬
‭negotiate successfully on their behalf.‬

‭Topic VS resources‬

‭ icourel‬ ‭argues that stats don’t give a valid picture of the patterns of crime and cannot be used as a‬
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‭resource ( a fact of crime)‬
‭We should treat stats as topics - something to investigate, processes of their creation‬

‭ he social construction of crime statistics‬
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‭Interactionists see crime statistics as socially constructed‬
‭At each stage of the criminal justice system agents of social control make decisions about whether or‬
‭not to proceed to the next stage. That outcome depends on the label they attached to the individual,‬
‭the label is affected by the typification.‬

‭ tats produced by the criminal justice system only represent the decisions of the social control‬
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‭agencies and not the amount of crime there is in society‬

, ‭The dark figure of crime:‬‭refers to the real rate of crime, unreported, unrecorded and undetected‬

‭ lternative statistics:‬‭sociologist use victim surveys or self-reported studies to gain a more accurate‬
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‭view of the amount of crime‬



‭The effects of labelling‬
‭ rimary and secondary deviance‬
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‭Lemert:‬
‭Primary deviance‬‭: deviant acts that have not been publically labelled eg fair dodging‬

‭ econdary deviance:‬‭the result of societies reaction, when the act is witnessed and a label is‬
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‭attached‬

‭Master status‬‭:‬

‭ hen labeled others may see them as that label. It becomes their master status, in the eyes of‬
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‭society, they are an outsider. This leads to people accepting the deviant label (SFP) and creates‬
‭further deviant behaviour and deviant careers.‬

‭ eviance amplification spiral‬
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‭Attempting to control deviance leads to an increase in the level of deviance‬
‭Eg.‬‭Cohen’s‬‭Folks Devils and moral panic study of the societal reaction to the mods and rockers'‬
‭disturbance involving a group of youths. The media exaggeration created moral panic and called for a‬
‭crackdown. The police responded by arresting more youths.‬

‭ abeling and criminal justice policy‬
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‭Increasing control and punishing young offenders has had the opposite effect‬
‭Troplett‬‭: notes an increasing tendency to see young offenders as evil. The criminal justice system has‬
‭relabeled status offences such as truancy as a more serious offence. This increased offending.‬

‭ o reduce deviance we should make and enforce fewer rules for people to break.‬
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‭Eg decriminalisation of drugs to reduce the risk of secondary deviance‬

‭ eintegrative shaming‬
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‭Labeling has a negative effect‬
‭Braithwaite‬‭: identifies two types of shaming that have a positive role in labelling‬

‭ isintegrative shaming:‬‭the crime and criminal labelled as bad and excluded from society‬
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‭Reintegrative shaming‬‭: label the act, not the actor‬
‭Reintegrative shaming avoids stigmatisation of the offender as evil while making them aware that their‬
‭actions had negative impacts, avoiding pushing secondary deviance on them.‬‭Braithwaite‬‭argues that‬
‭crime rates tend to be lower in societies where reintegrative shaming is more dominant‬


‭Criticism of labelling theory‬

I‭t fails to explain primary deviance/why people offend in the first place which occurs before they have‬
‭been labelled‬

‭Determinism; wrongly assumes labelling automatically leads to a deviant career‬

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