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Questions to Think About in this Topic

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Presentation on theme: "Questions to Think About in this Topic"— Presentation transcript:

1 WJEC A2 Unit 4, Crime and Deviance Week 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

2 Questions to Think About in this Topic
How are crime and deviance defined? How some people are more likely to acquire a criminal identity? How are some groups more powerful and able to define behaviour of others as deviant or criminal? Do criminal and deviant identities result from natural or social factors? Do social processes, and institutions like the media, shape our picture of crime and criminals? Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

3 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
What is Deviance? Deviant behaviour is: Behaviour that incurs public disapproval. Behaviour subject to some form of sanction. Behaviour that differs from the normal. Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

4 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
Anthony Giddens ‘Non-conformity to a given norm, or set of norms, which are accepted by a significant number of people in a community or society’ (Anthony Giddens 1993). Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

5 Are These Acts of Deviance?
Look at the pictures on the next few slides. Identify in what ways they may be viewed as deviant. Note deviance does not need to be criminal, have any crimes been broken in these pictures? Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

6 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

7 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

8 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

9 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

10 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

11 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

12 Deviance Controlled by Sanctions
Deviant behaviour is effectively controlled by sanctions that promote conformity. Sanctions may be: Informal Formal or Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

13 Legal Definitions of Crime
The OED defines crime as: ‘an act punishable by law, as being forbidden by statute’. Crime is therefore a specific act of deviance that breaks society’s formal rules or laws. The process of law-making is a social one since laws are human products. Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

14 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

15 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
Deviance is Relative Definitions of deviance will clearly vary between: Cultures Time Periods Sub-cultures Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

16 Religious Crimes Before industrialisation the most serious
crimes were typically religious in nature: Heresy Sacrilege Blasphemy Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

17 ‘Just’ and ‘Unjust’ Laws
Some people regularly flout laws. Dog licences were withdrawn because so few bought them. For example, many people ignore 30 mph laws in towns or 70 mph on motorways Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

18 Middle-class Criminals?
Steal stationery Middle-class Criminals? Respectable people may: Put private letters through office mail Make private phone calls at work Fiddle expenses Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

19 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?
White Collar Crime Marxists argue there is an enormous amount of white-collar and corporate crime. Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

20 Crime is not Fixed or Permanent
Homosexuality and abortion are no longer crimes in most societies. During the period of ‘prohibition’ in the USA the possession and consumption of alcohol was illegal. Cannabis was recently declassified to a Class C drug. Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

21 Becker and Labelling Theory
No action in itself is deviant. It has to excite some social reaction from others. Howard Becker (above) highlights the social construction of deviance by stating: It depends upon who commits it, who sees it, and what action is taken about it. Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

22 Conclusions on Chapter 2
Deviance is behaviour by individuals or social groups that fails to conform to culturally expected norms of behaviour. It is a relative concept – no act in itself is deviant per se. Labelling theory makes the important point that it is the social reaction or label that defines an act as ‘deviant’. Sanctions can be positive or negative, formal or informal. Deviance is distinct from crime, although crimes tend to be deviant behaviour, not all deviance is criminal. Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?

23 Conclusions (continued)
Deviance is controlled by sanctions. Crime is a formal act of deviance that violates statute law. Besides this legal definition, it carries normative judgements – criminals are not viewed sympathetically. In pre-industrial society most crimes were religious in nature, or acts of theft against the aristocracy. According to people’s value judgements crimes can be ‘just’ or ‘unjust’. Monday, 31 December 2018 Deviance Chapter 1: Social Construction of Crime and Deviance?


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