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Control Theories
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Fundamentals of Control Theory The Issue: Why are most people not deviant? Hirschi’s views on society and human nature: –Humans are “naturally-motivated offenders.” –Society is built on consensus on “rules”; in social settings, people give up their “human nature.” Hirschi on the nature of crime and deviance –It’s solitary. –It’s self-interested. –It’s opportunistic. –It’s easy.
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Social Control Theory (original version): The “Bonds” Bonds that encourage conformity: –Attachment –Commitment –Involvement –Belief Bonds have independent and additive effects, but “belief” is probably the strongest.
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Self Control Theory: An Update of Control Theory (Hirschi and Gottfredson) SCT is a “general theory of crime.” Crime per SCT has six elements: –Immediate gratification –Satisfies simple needs (like monetary) –Provides excitement –Provides few long-term benefits –Requires little skill –Causes its victims pain
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Self Control Theory (cont.) Causes of low self control: –Lack of nurturance in infancy and early childhood –“Poor child monitoring,” ie, lack of discipline –Dysfunctional family structures, eg, big families, single-parent households Crime prevention starts at home.
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Empirical Support for Control Theories Studies in schools suggest that bonds (commitment and involvement) to conventional activities do prevent delinquency. Studies of prisoners support SCT: Robbers are impulsive and self-centred, not “rational.”
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Criticisms of Control Theories Unsupported basic assumptions Avoidance of situational/structural factors (aside from families) Bizarre arguments regarding “at-risk” persons Reliance on self-reports Tautology: the result of low self-control is also operationalized as an indicator of low self-control: Being deviant makes one deviant.
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