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The Criminological Use of Culture and Subculture Understanding Criminology 2 nd November 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "The Criminological Use of Culture and Subculture Understanding Criminology 2 nd November 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Criminological Use of Culture and Subculture Understanding Criminology 2 nd November 2006

2 Lecture Outline Subculture: Definitions and Typology Gangs and the variety of adaptations to strain Social Class and Subculture Drift Theory

3 Culture and Subculture Adaptations of Strain theory, with an awareness of the diversity of deviant forms Initial focus on gangs and youth delinquency

4 Subculture: Definitions A relatively small grouping that develops distinctive norms, values and beliefs. Subcultures provide members with a range of personal resources (e.g. status, capital, excitement) that have often been denied by mainstream society / culture Subcultural Theory: aim to identify the cause and expressive nature of subcultures

5 Typology Reactive / Oppositional Subcultures –The subcultural form is a direct reaction against mainstream culture -Most directly influenced by strain theory -Independent Subcultures -Subcultures develop their own values and norms of behaviour independently of mainstream culture

6 William Whyte: Street Corner Society Easier for a “slum” resident to achieve monetary success in a racket, than by conventional means Role models: college boys v. corner boys Gang activities highly organised Pioneering participant observation based study KEY: expressive nature of subcultures

7 Sutherland’s Differential Association Theory Delinquent practices are ‘culturally transmitted’ from one individual to another Cultural conflict: if “definitions” favourable to law violation outweigh those unfavourable, crime will occur Applied largely to white-collar crime, but has subsequently been applied to other crime KEY: Cultural Transmission

8 National = Strain / Inequality / Limited Opportunities Community = Legitimate and Illegitimate Opportunities

9 Albert Cohen: “Delinquent Boys:The culture of the gang” Subculture evolved in response to strain, and a rejection of ‘middle-class values’ Education paramount: –Make children aware of social status –Key to the constraint of opportunities Goal: status, not necessarily monetary success An attempt to understand non-economic deviance Gangs were a particular form of subcultural adaptation, characterised by:-

10 Richard Cloward and Lloyd Ohlin Focussed on the range that adaptations to strain could take, incorporating differential association Criminal Gangs Conflict Gangs Retreatist Gangs Returned to Merton’s focus on monetary success

11 Evaluation of Strain Influenced Subcultural Theories Fits with –Over-representation of working class, urban offenders in gang activity –A dominant / superior middle class culture Possibly fits with –Gang activity being predominantly male: girls and young women have alternative sources of status? Doesn’t fit with –Widespread, but petty offending –British experience

12 David Downes: a British Perspective In Britain, social class is central to understanding subcultural adaptation Working class youth had a “realistically low” level of aspiration / fatalism Delinquency as a ‘fact’ of life, but not a ‘way’ of life

13 Downes and Subculture in Britain Key cause of delinquency: boredom and the importance of leisure little opportunity for excitement (akin to strain) leisure became the location for excitement and expression of - toughness, daring, panache Links between leisure and delinquency – proceeds of crime funding leisure – delinquency is itself exciting – delinquency is a by-product of certain forms of excitement

14 Marxist analysis of sub-culture / counter-culture Phil Cohen Economic Decline -> –family tensions –fragmented community –economic insecurity Mods: socially mobile white-collar worker Skinheads: emphasising masculinity of hard manual labour

15 David Matza: Drift and Neutralization Sees subcultural theories are over-predictive Drift: a ‘limbo between convention and crime’ preceding delinquency Techniques of neutralization demonstrate continued commitment to mainstream cultural values Delinquency represents the exaggeration of “subterranean”, but not deviant values: –the pursuit of excitement –the disdain for routine work –toughness and masculinity

16 What is a Cultural of Deviance? Pockets of specific activities providing meaning and resources to the member –E.g. The Gang A widespread loose affinity between relatively informal groupings –E.g. Anti-globalisation environmental groups A reflection of temporary adolescent rejection of parental / mainstream values – functional? A vital mechanism that acts to support and reproduce mainstream culture

17 Summary Most cultural theories would expect more criminality than actually seen Matza and Drift theory would not predict much ‘career criminality’ Cultural Relativism: a danger that criminality is romanticized: the expressive qualitative nature of deviance is addressed: rarely the same focus on mainstream culture or victimisation


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