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Deviance and social control

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Presentation on theme: "Deviance and social control"— Presentation transcript:

1 Deviance and social control
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2 Culture and norms regarding appropriate behavior

3 Social Control Social control: techniques and strategies employed for preventing deviant human behavior in any society Parents Peer groups Government Bureaucratic organizations

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5 Why do we accept these norms? Social Control and sanctions
Sanctions: penalties and rewards for conduct concerning a social norm If we fail to live up to the norm we may face informal sanctions (fear and ridicule) or formal sanctions (jail sentences or fines)

6 Conformity and Obedience
The Milgram Experiment Experimenter instructed people to administer increasingly painful electric shocks to a subject Conformity: going along with peers who have no special right to direct behavior Similar status – peer group, minority status group Obedience: compliance with higher authorities in a hierarchical structure Higher status – police officers

7 Conformity and Obedience
Reflecting on the Milgram Experiment Two-thirds of participants fell into category of “obedient subjects” People in modern industrial world accustomed to submitting to impersonal authority figures Recent replications of experiment confirm findings

8 The Milgram Experiment

9 Reflecting on the Milgram experiment
Why did these subjects obey? – why were they willing to inflict painful socks on innocent people? Submission to authority Power of symbols – people in uniform Shift of responsibility to authority figure

10 Informal and Formal Social Control
Informal social control: used casually to enforce norms Smiles, laughter, raised eyebrows, ridicule Formal social control: carried out by authorized agents Informal social control can undermine formal social control, encouraging people to violate social norms Example – Binge drinking

11 Law and Society Some norms are so important to a society that they are formalized into laws Law: governmental social control Regulations – hunting regulations

12 How laws are created? Laws are passed due to perceived need for social control Nixon's private comments about marijuana showed he was the epitome of misinformation and prejudice. He believed marijuana led to hard drugs, despite the evidence to the contrary. He saw marijuana as tied to "radical demonstrators." He believed that "the Jews," especially "Jewish psychiatrists" were behind advocacy for legalization, asking advisor Bob Haldeman, "What the Christ is the matter with the Jews, Bob?" He made a bizarre distinction between marijuana and alcohol, saying people use marijuana "to get high" while "a person drinks to have fun."

13 He also saw marijuana as part of the culture war that was destroying the United States, and claimed that Communists were using it as a weapon. "Homosexuality, dope, immorality in general," Nixon fumed. "These are the enemies of strong societies. That's why the Communists and the left-wingers are pushing the stuff, they're trying to destroy us." His approach drug education was just as simplistic: "Enforce the law. You've got to scare them.“ Source: This article originally appeared on Points, an Atlantic partner site.

14 The legal order reflects values of those in a position to exercise authority
Medical use of marijuana These values are internalized through the process of socialization - We are socialized to want to belong and be fearful of being viewed as different of deviant

15 Control Theory Control theory: connection to members of society leads people to systematically conform to society’s norms Social connections Family Peer group Induce conformity Mores Folkways Self-control Internalization Social norms Socialization

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17 What Is Deviance?

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19 Deviant behavior

20 What Is Deviance? Deviance: behavior that violates the standards of conduct or expectations of a group or society Involves violation of group norms, which may or may not be formalized into law Subject to social definition within a particular society and at a particular time

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22 What makes action deviant?
Presence of some social audiences that regard the behavior or appearance as deviant and take action to discourage and punish it. Deviance is not inherent to a particular behavior. (Example – marrying first cousin). It is important to understand social context

23 What Is Deviance? Deviance and Social Stigma
Stigma: labels society uses to devalue members of certain social groups Mental illness and perception of crime Overweight people

24 Sociological Perspectives on Deviance
Why do people violate social norms? Early explanations blamed supernatural causes or genetic factors (“bad blood”) Socio-biologists critical of emphasis on genetic roots of crime and deviance Lombroso ( ) – Italian physician – his theory – all criminals have some physical traits in common

25 Durkheim on Deviance Ideas about what is deviant vary, but is present in all societies Deviance is act that offends collective sentiment Deviance will be present in most “perfect” societies

26 Functionalist Perspective
Durkheim’s Legacy Punishments established within a culture help define acceptable behavior and contribute to stability Erikson illustrated boundary-maintenance function of deviance Anomie: loss of direction felt in society when social control of individual behavior has become ineffective

27 Table 24-1: Merton’s Deviance Theory
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29 Interactionist Perspective
Cultural Transmission Cultural transmission: humans learn how to behave in social situations, whether properly or improperly Differential association: process through which exposure to attitudes favorable to criminal acts leads to the violation of rules (Sutherland)

30 Social disorganization theory

31 Interactionist Perspective
Social Disorganization Theory Increases in crime and deviance attributed to absence or breakdown of communal relationships and social institutions Some claim social disorganization theory seems to “blame the victim”

32 Labeling Perspective Labeling theory: attempts to explain why some people are viewed as deviants while others are not; also known as societal-reaction approach Societal-reaction approach: another term for labeling theory, designed to remind us that the response to an act, not the behavior, determines deviance

33 Labeling Perspective Labeling and Agents of Social Control
Focuses on police, probation officers, psychiatrists, judges, teachers, employers, school officials, and other regulators of social control Social constructionist perspective: deviance is a product of the culture we live in

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37 Conflict Perspective People with power protect their own interests and define deviance to suit their needs Contends that the entire criminal justice system in the United States treats suspects differently based on their race, ethnicity, or social class Differential justice: differences in way social control is exercised over different groups

38 Conflict theory of deviance

39 Who has power?

40 Feminist Perspective Adler and Chesney-Lind suggest existing approaches to deviance and crime developed with men in mind Great effort undertaken by feminist organizations to redefine legal definitions of rape Cultural views and attitudes toward women influence how they are perceived and labeled

41 Crime

42 Crime Crime: violation of criminal law for which governmental authority applies formal penalties Six types differentiated by sociologists: Victimless crimes Professional crime Organized crime White-collar and technology-based crime Hate crimes Transnational crime

43 Types of Crime Victimless Crimes Professional Crime
Willing exchange among adults of widely desired, but illegal, goods and services – drug abuse, gambling Should these be regulated? Are these crime really victimless? Professional Crime Committed by a professional criminal: person who pursues crime as a day-to-day occupation

44 Professional Crime Edwin Sutherland Highly organized
Specialization in a crime – Burglary, Con artists Spend lot of time perfecting the crime Develop skill to avoid arrest, convictions Connected to other criminals – develop a sub culture

45 Types of Crime Organized Crime
Group that regulates relations between various criminal enterprises involved in illegal activities Prostitution, gambling Dominates world of illegal business, just as large corporations dominate conventional businesses Serves as means of upward mobility for groups of people struggling to escape poverty Can be characterized by the process of ethnic succession

46 Types of Crime White Collar and Technology-Based Crime
White-collar crime: illegal acts committed in the course of business activities Computer crime: use of high technology to carry out embezzlement or electronic fraud Corporate crime: any act by a corporation that is punishable by the government

47 Corporate Crime

48 Changing views about corporate crime How corporate crime is dealt with?
Generally, corporate wrong-doers get off easily Few exceptions – Martha Steward (2004) Enron's bankruptcy in December 2001 led to thousands of layoffs, the collapse of the company’s stock price and the loss of billions of dollars by investors, including many of the company’s own employees. Two billion dollars in employee pensions were wiped out, as well as $60 billion in stock. Five thousand employees lost their jobs, and 20,000 people lost their entire life savings.

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50 ENRON Jeff Skilling was never convicted of causing Enron's bankruptcy or losing its employees' retirement plans millions of dollars. Federal judge approved a deal resentencing Skilling to just 14 years, six of which he has already served. While that is still quite a long stint behind bars, the reduction means that Skilling is no longer effectively jailed for life.

51 White collar crime and stigma

52 Types of Crime Hate Crime – Perpetrators action and purpose of their conduct Offender is motivated to choose a victim based on race, religion, ethnic group, national origin, or sexual orientation, and when evidence shows that hatred prompted offender to commit the crime In 2013, official reports of more than 7,200 hate crimes and bias-motivated incidents

53 Hate Crime Statistics Act, 1990
Official mandate to record hate crime Definitions of hate crime Punishment for hate crime – fines and jail Race – highest motivator for hate crime Vandalism, intimidation Assaults, rape and murder

54 Types of Crime Transnational Crime
Crime that occurs across multiple national borders Once often limited to shipment of goods across single border; now, spans the globe Slavery Trafficking in endangered species, drugs, stolen art and antiquities

55 Crime Statistics Index Crimes and Victimization Surveys
Index crimes include eight types of crime tabulated by the FBI Violent crimes against people Murder, rape, robbery, assault Crimes against property Burglary, theft, motor vehicle theft, arson

56 Crime Statistics Index Crimes and Victimization Surveys (continued)
Crime index is disproportionately devoted to property crimes Only crimes reported to law enforcement agencies tracked Under-reporting of crime – serious issue Victimization surveys: surveys of ordinary people, not police officers, to determine whether they have been victims of crime

57 Media and public perception of crime

58 Crime Statistics Crime Trends
Public regards crime as major social problem, yet rate of crime being reported in was comparable to what it was in 1963 Violent crime and property crime has dropped by about 20% in the last 10 years Why the decline?

59 Crime Statistics International Crime Rates
Violent crimes much more common in U.S. than western Europe in 1980s and 1990s England, Ireland, Denmark, and New Zealand have higher rates of car theft than U.S. Rapid rise in homicide rates in developing countries that supply drugs to industrialized countries Why are violent crimes higher in the US? Can we use Merton’s Strain Theory?


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