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Summary of Crime and Deviance - Realist theories (AS, A-level and GSCE) £3.49   Add to cart

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Summary of Crime and Deviance - Realist theories (AS, A-level and GSCE)

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In-depth notes on Realist theory on Crime and Deviance. It includes the necessary sociologists and recent statistical data to take your grade to the next level. Exams come pre-highlighted to focus on the essential aspects needed in an essay/exam. These notes gave me an A* in Sociology and full mark...

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  • Chapter 4 of crime and deviance
  • August 21, 2023
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Crime and deviance - Topic 4: Realist theories
Right realism-sociologist list

Key:
Heheh-Sociologist Heheh-Important information

Information on right realism:

- Sees crime(esp, street crime), as a real/growing problem that destroys
communities, undermines social cohesion and society’s work ethic

● Wilson
- The main theorist of right realism
- Special adviser of crime to President Reagen
- Provided policies such as ‘zero tolerance’ of street crime/disorder

- Views align closely with neo-conservative governments during the 1970’s-80
- Due to criminologists having no workable solutions, it led to a search for
practical crime control measures(UK and US) → tough stance on offenders,
as the best way way to reduce crime is through control/punishment, rather than
helping other factors(rehabilitation, tackling poverty)

- Reflects a political climate
- Regards labelling theory and critical criminology as too sympathetic to the
criminal, and hostile towards law/order
- Less concerned about the causes, and more concerned about providing
solutions
- They do explain crime, even though they focus on crime reduction strategies

The causes of crime

- Right realists reject the Marxist view(poverty/inequality are causes of crime)
- Example → the old tend to be poor but have a very low crime rate
- Crime is the product of 3 factors:
1. Individual, biological differences
2. Inadequate socialisation
3. Individual's rational choice to offend




1

, Biological differences

● Wilson and Herrnstein (1985)
- Biosocial theory of criminal behaviour
- Biological differences mean that some people are at a greater risk of
offending and strongly predisposed to commit crimes than others → traits
such as risk-taking, aggressiveness, low impulse control

● Herrnstein and Murray (1985)
- The main cause of crime is low intelligence
- Biologically determined



Socialisation and the underclass

- Effective socialisation can decrease the risk of committing crimes →
internalising self-control and mainstream social values
- Best agency of socialisation → the nuclear family

● Murray (1990)
- Crime rate is increasing due to the new ‘underclass’ → defined by their
deviant behaviour and failure to socialise their children properly
- Welfare dependency is one of the main factors
- The increasing underclass in both the UK and the US
- Generous revolution → increase in the number of people dependent on the
state
- This led to the decline of marriage and an increase in lone-parent
households/families
- Men no longer have to take responsibility for their families → no longer
need to work(due to money from the welfare system)
- Lone mothers are ineffective socialisation agents(esp, to young boys) → absent
fathers mean a lack of a male role model and paternal discipline, young
males then turn to other males(mainly delinquents), become socialised into
delinquent subcultures and gain status from crime

● Bennet et al (1996)



2

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