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WJEC A2 Unit 4, Crime and Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

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1 WJEC A2 Unit 4, Crime and Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

2 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
WJEC QUIZ Write a brief description of a crime Swap with a partner and say how best to deal with/punish that particular crime. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

3 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Objectives of Chapter 6 That the Right Realism developed out of a failure of sociology to explain and solve the problem of crime. That Right Realism sees crime as stemming from the greedy nature of people, poor socialisation and too easy opportunities. That Wilson 's 'broken window thesis' argues that minor incivilities, if unchecked, quickly lead to more serious crime. That Lea and Young developed Left Realism as a response to Right Realism and the neo-Marxist ideas of Radical Criminology. That Left Realism takes the view that crime is a real problem, especially to the poor and derived, minority ethnic groups and inner-city residents. That Left Realism explains crime in terms of subculture, relative deprivation and marginalisation. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

4 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Right Realism Right Realism originated in the 1970s particularly by James Q. Wilson (1975, pictured left) and Ernst van den Haag (1975). It developed as a critique of sociological theory which had failed to solve the problem of crime. The basis of Right Realism is a negative view of human nature (that people are naturally selfish and greedy). This aspect of human nature therefore needs to be subject to social controls and socialised into appropriate behaviour. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

5 Rational Choice Theory
For Right Realists the solution to crime lies with Rational Choice Theory which has a lot in common with the 18thC philosophy concept of utilitarianism associated with Jeremy Bentham (left). Rational Choice Theory was developed by Clarke and Coleman (1980) and argues criminals will engage in crime if the benefits outweigh the costs. The solution is simple: increase the costs of crime (likelihood of being caught and tougher punishments). Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

6 Anti-Sociological Criminology
Right Realists particularly oppose any connection Sociologists have made between crime and poverty. They point out that with increased affluence, crime rates have soared. Extending the Welfare State, lack of discipline in education and decline of the traditional family are seen as key factors behind crime increase. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

7 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Selfish Human Nature Rising crime levels reflects ineffective and inadequate social control. Permissive attitudes allow self-indulgent and anti-social behaviour. Feckless parenting, absent fathers, lack of discipline in schools, liberal policies of the state have all served to ferment crime. The result has been spiralling volumes of incivilities: muggings, graffiti, vandalism, car break-ins and theft, assaults, etc. as well as burglaries and robberies. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

8 Inadequate and Inappropriate Socialisation
Right Realists blame crime on inadequate or inappropriate socialisation by key socialisation agencies in society. The non-traditional family, especially single mothers, is viewed as a major factor. Lack of discipline in schools, a mass media that glamorises deviance and crime and the decline in the influence of religious values are other important contributory factors. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

9 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Charles Murray New Right theorist Charles Murray (1990, pictured left) argues the underclass are particularly insufficiently integrated into society’s norms and values. He views the underclass as prone to: criminal tendencies, violence, illegitimacy and promiscuity, educational failure and welfare dependency. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

10 Pair up and take turns to ask these questions
Explain to me what Right realists think about human nature. Can you explain what Rational Choice theory entails? Why is Right realism ‘anti-sociological’ Tell me some of the things that Right realism blames for increases in crime. Use the traffic lights to assess their answers. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

11 Right Realist Solutions to Crime
Reduce opportunities for offending. Increasing the costs to exceed the benefits. Crime control should also fall upon members of the community. Responsible parenting and 'active citizens' who challenge anti-social behaviour. Tough punishment: heavy fines, sentences and advocation of corporal (physical) and capital (death sentence) punishment. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

12 James Q. Wilson and ‘Broken Window Thesis
James Q Wilson argues that unless ‘incivilities’ (litter, graffiti, noise levels, vandalism, etc.) are kept minimal, then wider anti-social behaviour and more serious crimes will follow. He advocates that the police adopt a policy of ‘zero-tolerance’ for even minor crimes (as tried by the Mayor of New York). This reflects Emile Durkheim’s idea that local informal controls are crucial for law and order and A.H. Bottoms’ concept of the ‘tipping’ of problem housing estates. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

13 James Q. Wilson (continued)
Wilson argues there are three key factors affecting long-term crime: Number of Young males (typical deviants) Costs/benefits of crime: Rational Choice Theory Inadequate socialisation into norms/values To deal with this he advocates target hardening of deviant groups and areas through pro-active policing. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

14 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Ernst van den Haag (1975) Van den Haag (1975, pictured left) adopts a very poor view of humanity as willing to cheat to ‘get on’ and therefore some groups need to be controlled for their own good and that of society. Therefore, he argues, it is reasonable for law and order agencies to target the poor! Like Durkheim, he sees punishment as functional, acting as a deterrent. He advocates a tough penal system of punishment: corporal and capital. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

15 Critique of Right Realism
It is influential on Government policy in both the USA and UK. For example 'zero tolerance' has been successfully adopted as a policy in New York. Some argue it is a lack of investment in deprived areas rather than incivilities that cause crime to rise. It is easy to pick on scapegoats like single parent families. Marxists argue that concentration on minor offences means that more serious crime gets ignored by the authorities. Another argument is that where zero tolerance is introduced, this simply shifts crime to other areas. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

16 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Key word check Rational Choice theory Broken windows thesis Target Hardening Zero tolerance Tipping Pro-active policing Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

17 Introduction to Left Realism
Lea and Young (1984, pictured left) developed Left Realism (with Matthews and Kinsey) partly as a response to Right Realism. And partly in response to neo-Marxist Radical Criminology which Young himself was part of and wanted to distance himself from: subsequently calling it “Left Idealism”. Left Realism sees crime as a real problem for ordinary people and explains it through analysis social and economic relationships, and how some groups become marginalised. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

18 Crime is a Real Phenomenon
Left Realism argues the rising crime rate cannot solely be explained by the 'unreliability of official crime statistics’. So, unusually for Sociologists, they are less critical of crime statistics than most, and argue they do reflect typical criminals: young, male, working-class and disproportionately black. They focus on victims as well as offenders, recognising crime is concentrated in the inner-city and sink housing estates. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

19 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Ethnicity and Crime Lea and Young tackle Black criminality head on: accepting there has been a real increase in crimes committed by young Blacks. . They accept there exists institutional racism, and a racist 'canteen culture‘ amongst the police. But black criminality also stems from racial discrimination, material deprivation, low wages and unemployment. They see Black youth having particularly high aspirations, but often not able to legitimately achieve these aspirations. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

20 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Exam Evaluation Point Compare this aspiration to material goods and styles of life with the ‘Strain theory' (anomic paradigm) of Robert Merton, or the response of the illegitimate career structure to ‘blocked opportunities‘ of Cloward and Ohlin. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

21 Left Realist Origins of Crime
Left Realism sees the origins of crime as three fold: Subculture Relative deprivation Marginalisation This explains why young Black working-class males are particularly associated with criminal activity: see next 3 slides. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

22 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
1. Subcultures Lea and Young argue the subculture of young Blacks is distinctly different from their parents who largely accepted their marginalised position in society. Black youth subculture has high material expectations and aspirations: money and status symbols like flash cars, etc. So because Black youth is so closely enmeshed in values of consumption, style and wealth, this is precisely why they engage in crime – because of blocked opportunities. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

23 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Exam Evaluation Point Note the overlap here with the work about young black males by Ralf Nightingale (Philadelphia) and Philip Bourgois (New York). All their work links back to the ideas of Robert Merton and his ‘strain theory‘ (sharing society’s goals but not having means to achieve them). At the same time there may be an element of a marginalised group socialised into its own distinct subcultural set of values: compare to Walter B. Miller's 'focal concerns'. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

24 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
2. Relative Deprivation Lea and Young argue that frustrated from this disparity between expectations and the reality of lifestyle leads to feelings of relative deprivation. They argue the reality for many young Black males is a choice of unemployment, training schemes or ‘white man’s shit work’ (Stuart Hall). They feel unfairly denied the ‘glittering prizes’ offered to others. This can develop into strategies which can involve deviant and criminal behaviour. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

25 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
3. Marginalisation Lea and Young argue that marginalisation means the process by which certain groups find themselves on the edge of society. White and Black working-class youth often feel alienated by schools, unemployment, low-wages, the police, etc. Young Black males face marginalisation through prejudice and harassment e.g., 'military policing‘ (stop and search). They argue this may be the ‘straw that breaks the camel's back’: economic marginalisation is transferred into crime. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

26 Left Realist’s Square of Crime
Left Realism takes us beyond the offender and shows concern for victim patterns and formal and informal factors. They argue that crime can only be understood in terms of the interrelationships between these four elements. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

27 Jock Young, Social Change and Crime
Jock Young (1997) also has a generic theory to explain the recent growth in crime. He argues that late modernity is making crime worse in a number of ways: Greater uncertainty and instability in most aspects of life. Less consensus about moral values People’s desire for Immediate and personal pleasure. A breakdown of informal social controls Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

28 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Can you ? Explain the meaning of relative deprivation? Explain why marginalisation causes crime? Give the four aspects of the ‘square of crime’? Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

29 Left Realism: The Policing Problem
Kinsey, Lea and Young (1984) identify a number of problems with contemporary policing. The police too often resort to 'military policing' as a method of solving crime through 'stop and search' policies. This alienates the community from them, recently the Muslim community. They argue that to improve this relationship the public should have more say in shaping police policy. Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

30 Left realists Police shouldn’t stop and search
Should focus on racial attacks , corporate crime and domestic abuse UK has started this sort of thing e.g. neighbourhood policing Stopping and searching fosters a great deal of resentment Focus on these rather than minor drug offences. Neighbourhood policing – meeting with locals and discussing priorities, more PCSOs as well - ’eyes and ears’ of police TO BE ABLE TO DESCRIBE SOLUTIONS TO THE PROBLEM OF CRIME 30

31 Left realists Labour have been influenced by the Left realists
Tony Blair’s slogan ‘ tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime’ comes from Left realist thinking However, Labour doesn’t = Left realism TO BE ABLE TO DESCRIBE SOLUTIONS TO THE PROBLEM OF CRIME 31

32 Feminist Solutions Changes in policy Safer streets
Encouragement for women to speak out Rape and domestic abuse crisis centres Better police training Legislation to protect women at work. TO BE ABLE TO DESCRIBE SOLUTIONS TO THE PROBLEM OF CRIME

33 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology
Key word check Relative deprivation Marginalisation Military policing Stop and search Square of crime Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

34 Critique of Left Realism
It only focuses on managing capitalism Its focus on victims as well as offenders is good, adding another dimension to our understanding of crime. However, Relative deprivation or marginalisation cannot explain the motive behind offender’s actions (e.g. white-collar or corporate crime) Equally not all people in relative deprivation turn to crime. It assumes that when society’s values break down crime become more likely – a return to anomie theory and a view not too distant from Right Realism? Wednesday, 05 September 2018Wednesday, 05 September 2018 Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology

35 Objectives for today Work in groups ( either Left or Right Realists)
Prepare a poster outlining the perspective including their proposed solutions to crime, key ideas and main researchers. Prepare 3 questions for the opposing team which requires them to answer to criticisms Prepare responses to the criticisms of your own perspective. Present your poster and findings to the class and respond to questions from the other team.

36 Critically assess realist theories of crime and deviance (45)
AO2 A01 Intro – explain where realism came from. Outline Right realism causes of crime - names Outline Right realist solutions to crime - names Outline Left realism causes of crime – names Outline Left realist solutions – names Conclusion – which is best? Are they really that different? Both right and left realism have been influential in policy making e.g Tony Blair’s speech. 2 Criticisms of Right realism and 1 other perspective it supports/conflicts with 2 Criticisms of the solutions using contemporary examples and 1 other perspectives e.g Marxist. 2 Criticisms of Left realism and a 1perspective which support/conflict. 2 Criticisms of Left realist solutions using contemporary examples and 1 other perspective which supports/conflicts. Deviance Chapter 7: Realist Criminology


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