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Theory Construction and Evaluation in Criminology

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Title: Theory Construction and Evaluation in Criminology


1
Theory Construction and Evaluation in Criminology
  • 1.Importance of Theory
  • 2.Theory Evaluation

2
What is Theory?
  • Theory is a set on interconnected statements or
    propositions that explain how two or more events
    or factors are related to one another

3
Example
  • Children who experienced harsh and inconsistent
    punishment are more likely to become deviant

Harsh Inconsistent Punishment
Violence
4
More complicated theory
Isolation
Violence
Harsh Inconsistent Punishment
5
Two ways to build a theory
  • Deductive Approach (theory, hypothesis, research
    design, observations, empirical generalizations,
    theory)
  • Inductive Approach (research design,
    observations, empirical generalizations, theory)

6
A Model of the Research Process
THEORY
Deduction
Induction
HYPOTHESIS
FINDINGS
Operationalization
Analysis
DATA GATHERING
RESEARCH DESIGN
Measurement
7
Quantitative Qualitative
  • Hypothesis
  • Data are in the form of numbers from precise
    measurement
  • Theory is largely causal and deductive
  • Replication is possible
  • Analysis proceeds by using statistics, tables, or
    charts
  • No hypothesis
  • Data are in the form of words and images from
    observations, and transcripts
  • Theory noncausal and inductive
  • Replication is rare
  • Analysis proceeds by extracting themes or
    generalizations (although numbers are possible)

8
Criteria for Evaluating Theory
  • Logical consistency
  • The scope
  • Parsimony
  • Testability
  • Empirical validity
  • Usefulness and Policy implications

9
Logical consistency
  • Propositions of a theory have to be logically
    stated and internally consistent
  • Theory that state that criminals are biologically
    deficient cannot claim that socialization is the
    cause of criminal behavior

10
The Scope
  • The Scope of a theory refers to the range of
    phenomena which it proposes to explain
  • A theory that accounts only for the crime of
    check forgery may be accurate, but it is
    obviously very limited in scope
  • Gottfredson and Hirschi posit that both imprudent
    and criminal behaviors can be predicted by a
    common characteristic lack of self-control

11
Parsimony
  • Parsimony (simplicity of theorys structure)
  • The theory based on fewest assumptions and
    requiring the fewest propositions is considered
    the superior theory

12
Differential Association Theory is based upon
these nine postulates
  • 1. Criminal behavior is learned
  • 2. Criminal behavior is learned in interaction
    with others persons in a process of communication
  • 3. The principal part of the learning of criminal
    behavior occurs within intimate personal groups
  • 4. When criminal behavior is learned, the
    learning includes techniques of committing the
    crime, which are sometimes very complicated,
    sometimes simple and the specific direction of
    motives, drives, rationalizations, and attitudes
  • 5. The specific direction of motives and drives
    is learned from definitions of the legal codes as
    favorable or unfavorable to committing deviant
    acts

13
Differential Association is based upon these nine
postulates
  • 6. A person becomes delinquent because of an
    excess of definitions favorable to violation of
    law over definitions unfavorable to violation of
    the law
  • 7. Differential associations may vary in
    frequency, duration, priority, and intensity
  • 8. The process of learning criminal behavior by
    association with criminal and anticriminal
    patterns involves all of the mechanisms that are
    involved in any other learning
  • 9. While criminal behavior is an expression of
    general needs and values, it is not explained by
    those general needs and values, since non
    criminal behavior is an expression of the same
    needs and values

14
Testability
  • Testability by objective and repeatable evidence
    (theory which are untestable are not scientific)

15
Untestable theories
  • Propositions are open-ended so that any
    contradictory empirical evidence can be
    interpreted or re-interpreted to support the
    theory
  • A theory may propose that males who robe banks
    are motivated by an unconscious impulse to
    resolve their guilt over their childhood sexual
    attraction toward their mothers

16
Untestable theories
  • If we find enough bank robbers who fit this
    description, then the theory is supported
  • If research uncover that bank robbers claim their
    only motive is money then that does not mean that
    the theory is rejected
  • Denial of these feeling by robbers supports the
    theory, because the same unconscious impulse that
    motivated them to rob also rendered them
    unconscious of their true motivation

17
Untestable Theories
  • A theory may also be untestable because its
    concepts are not measurable by observable events
  • If a theory proposes that people commit crimes
    because they are obsessed by invisible demons,
    there is no way to prove it
  • Imitation in social learning theory is observable
    thing

18
Empirical validity
  • Empirical validity means that a theory has been
    supported by research evidence
  • None of the theories is found to be entirely true
    or false
  • The questions is, what degree of empirical
    support does the theory have (weak or strong)

19
Usefulness and Policy implications
  • Every criminological theory implies a therapy or
    policy
  • The better the theory explain the problem, the
    better it is able to guide efforts to solve the
    problem
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