DEVIANCE and SOCIAL CONTROL - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

DEVIANCE and SOCIAL CONTROL

Description:

DEVIANCE and SOCIAL CONTROL Defined as an act that violates a social norm. Refers to any action that is perceived as violating some widely shared moral values or ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:384
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 92
Provided by: Value173
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: DEVIANCE and SOCIAL CONTROL


1
DEVIANCE and SOCIAL CONTROL
  • Defined as an act that violates a social norm.
  • Refers to any action that is perceived as
    violating some widely shared moral values or
    norms of a society or group culture.
  • Prerequisite to deviance is the violation of
    standards of conduct or expectations of a group
    of society.

2
Kinds of deviance
  • Positive
  • - develops, hones, and uplifts the
  • personality of the person.
  • Negative
  • - destroys, injures, jeopardizes the
  • personality of the person.

3
Some forms of deviance
  • Criminal and non-criminal deviance
  • - involves violation of criminal law.
  • Social definition of deviance
  • - involves violation of social norms.

4
Bio-Psychological Theories of Deviance
  • According to Cesare Lombroso (1835-1909),
    considered as the Italian father of criminology,
    criminal deviants have low cranial capacity,
    retreating forehead, highly developed frontal
    sinuses, tufted hair, large ears, and relative
    insensibility to pain.

5
  • 1. Somotypes
  • - in 1940, William H. Sheldon conducted
    another study related to Lombrosos claim that
    crime is biologically determined. He concluded
    that we could predict mans likes and dislikes by
    measuring his body.
  • (The Varieties of Human Physique)

6
  • The theory of SOMOTYPES stated that peoples
    behavior or temperament is determined by their
    physique.

7
  • According to this theory there are 3 somotypes
  • 1. endomorphs people who are fat,
  • and round, with short tapering limbs.
  • 2. ectomorphs people who are thin,
  • delicate, and bony, with small faces,
  • sharp noses, and fine hairs.

8
  • 3. mesomorphs people who are big-
  • boned and muscular with large trunks,
  • heavy chests, and large wrists and
  • hands.

9
  • Temperamentally, ENDOMORPHS are relaxed, outgoing
    people who like comfort and eating.
  • ECTOMORPHS shrink from big crowds, noise, and
    distractions and have numerous complaints,
    allergies, and skin troubles, and usually suffer
    from chronic, fatigue and insomnia.

10
  • Mesomorphs are usually the troublemakers and have
    the greatest chance of becoming delinquent.
  • - they are active, walk and talk, and often
    behave aggressively.

11
  • 2. Genetics
  • - this comprises one of the present day
    criminology theories that continue to offer a
    genetic explanation for the cause of violent
    crime.

12
  • The theory suggests that excessive aggression and
    hostility are the result of the presence of an
    extra Y chromosome.
  • Proponents of this theory argue that there is
    a disproportionate number of criminal men with an
    XYY chromosomal make-up as compared to the
    remaining population.

13
  • 3. Pathology
  • - another biological explanation of deviance
    today is evident in Alcoholics Anonymous programs
    which, according to Preston (1975), are based on
    the belief that alcoholism is both a physical
    allergy and mental compulsion, or simply a
    physical sickness as a form of social deviance.

14
  • According to Smith and Preston (1982), pathology
    has been popular and satisfying explanation for
    deviance because of two main reasons

15
  • 1.Pathology-based theory is easily understood
    since everyone knows what disease is and this is
    easily given credibility.
  • 2.Pathology removes the element of blame, i.e.,
    no person or institution is responsible for
    deviant behavior since it is caused by physical
    or emotional problem of the individual.

16
  • 4. Socio-biological theories
  • In his book entitled SociobiologyThe New
    Synthesis, Edward O. Wilson (1978) conceives of
    sociobiology as a science with a broad scope
    entire societies. His general assumption has been
    based on the works of those applying biology in
    explaining deviance behavior.

17
  • He (Wilson) assumes that human social behavior is
    genetically determined to the extent that biology
    defines human learning potential.
  • The human mind is not blank that simply records
    and assimilates experiences, but instead, it is
    biologically programmed to accept certain
    experiences while rejecting others.

18
  • There are many sociobiological approaches to
    explain deviant behavior. According to Charles H.
    McCaghy (1985), in his book Deviant Behavior
    Crime, Conflict, and Interest Groups, the
    approaches fall into one of the following
    categories

19
  • 1.) Evolutionary process
  • - these theories are concerned with the
    long-term development of specific behaviors over
    the course of generations. The most that these
    studies contributed is that they sensitize us to
    the manner in which biological factors may affect
    behavior.

20
  • 2.) Genetic Differences
  • - these theories are concerned with how
    behavior is influenced by hereditary factors that
    are mere immediate that those formed during
    evolution.
  • - of particular interest here is the
    hypothesis that certain mental disorders often
    re-occur among generations of the same family.

21
  • 5. Neurophysiological differences
  • - these theories concern a wide range of
    physiological factors that might influence human
    behavior. They include
  • 1) hormone imbalance
  • 2) vitamin deficiency
  • 3) brain malfunctioning
  • 4) any organic aspects that might
  • interfere with learning or behaving

22
  • It has to be noted that psychological, like
    biological explanation of deviance, tend to be
    individualistic, focusing on abnormalities in the
    individual personality.
  • Although some of these abnormalities are
    hereditary, psychologists view most of these as a
    result of socialization.

23
  • 6. Psychological Causes
  • 6.1 Psychodynamic Perspective refers to
  • unfulfilled needs and unresolved
  • conflicts.
  • Psychological deprivation
  • parental-rejection, deprivation of
  • attention and affection due to strong
  • need for affiliation and social status.

24
  • displaced aggression direct
  • expression of antisocial impulses
  • difficulty in impulse control.
  • 6.2 Behavioral Perspective refers to
  • the fact which states that learning
  • theorists believe that a deviant
  • behavior is learned and reinforced
  • or the individual is conditioned to
  • doing it. Refers also to social
  • learning theory.

25
  • 6.3 Cognitive Perspective maintains
  • that a deviant behavior is manifested
  • as a result of some ideas or beliefs
  • that the individual has about.

26
  • Under the psychological theories, it is held that
    since personality is shaped by social experiences
    throughout life, deviance is usually understood
    to be the result of unsuccessful socialization.

27
  • Psychological explanations of deviance downplay
    biological factors and emphasize instead the role
    of parents and early childhood experiences, or
    even behavioral conditioning, in producing
    deviant behavior.

28
  • Psychological explanation of deviance assumes
    that the seeds of deviance are planted in
    childhood and that adult behavior is
    manifestation of early experiences rather than an
    expression of on-going social or cultural
    factors.

29
  • Ergo, the deviant individual is viewed as a
    psychologically sick person who has experienced
    emotional deprivation or damage during childhood.

30
  • Anti-Social Personality Disorder
  • Jethro was the leader of a teenage street
    gang that was reputed to be the most vicious in
    the neighborhood. He grew up in a chaotic home
    atmosphere, his mother having lived with a series
    of violent men who were heavily involved in drug
    dealing and prostitution. At the age of 18,
    Jethro was jailed for the brutal mugging and
    stabbing of an older adult woman. This was the
    first time in a long

31
  • series of arrests for offenses ranging from
    drug trafficking to car thefts to counterfeiting.
    At one point, between jail terms, he met a woman
    at a bar and married her the next day. Two weeks
    later, he beat her when she complained about his
    incessant drinking and involvement with shady
    characters. He left her when she became pregnant,
    and he refused to pay child support. From his
    vantage point now as a drug trafficker and leader
    of a child prostitution ring, Jethro

32
  • shows no regret what he has done, claiming that
    life has sure given me a bum steer.

33
Diagnostic Features
  • This diagnosis is assigned to adult who as
    children showed evidence of conduct disorder and
    who, from the age of 15, have shown a pervasive
    pattern of disregard for and violation of all the
    rights of others, as indicated by three or more
    of the following

34
  1. Repeated engagement in behaviors that are grounds
    for arrest.
  2. Deceitfulness, such as lying, using false
    identities, or conning others for personal profit
    or pleasure.
  3. Impulsivity, or failure to plan ahead.
  4. Irritability and aggressiveness, such as repeated
    fights or assaults.
  5. Reckless disregard for the safety of self or
    others.

35
  • 6.Consistent irresponsibility, such as repeated
    failure to keep a job or honor financial
    obligations.
  • 7. Lack of remorse, such as being indifferent to
    or rationalizing ones hurtful or dishonest
    behavior.

36
  • 7. Psychoanalytic theory
  • - this is based on the work of Sigmund Freud
    and his followers. This theory holds that the
    unconscious (the part of individual consisting of
    irrational thoughts and feelings of which he/she
    is not aware) causes one to commit deviant acts.

37
  • According to Freud, our personality has three
    parts
  • 1) ID our irrational drives and instincts.
  • 2) SUPEREGO our conscience and guide
  • as internalized from our parents and
  • other authority figures.
  • 3) EGO the balance among the impulsiveness
  • of the ID, the restrictions and demands of
    the
  • superego, and the requirements of the
  • society.

38
  • According to psychoanalytic theory, all of us
    have deviant tendency because of the ID. But, we
    learn to control our behavior because of
    socialization.
  • Most of the people are able to function
    effectively according to societys norms and
    values.

39
  • 8. Behavior theories
  • - people adjust and modify their behavior in
    response to the rewards and punishments elicited
    by their actions. If an action leads to favorable
    outcome, one is likely to repeat the action. If a
    behavior leads to unfavorable outcomes, one is
    not likely to do the same action.

40
  • According to this approach, deviant behavior is
    learned by a series of trials and errors.
  • One learns to be a snatcher, or a thief in the
    same way the professionals learned their
    profession, or the artists learn their craft.

41
  • 9. Containment theory
  • - Walter Reckless and Simon Dinitz (1967)
    explained juvenile delinquency as
  • outcome of the childrens personality traits.
  • - under this theory, the desire to engage in
    delinquent activities can be contained if the
    young individuals have developed strong moral
    values and a positive self-image in younger age.

42
  • It is held in this theory that the good
    children seem to have a strong conscience (or
    Sigmund Freuds superego), generally coped well
    with frustration, and identified positively with
    cultural norms and values. Hence, they are far
    from becoming deviant. This is usually not the
    case among what is described as bad children.

43
Sociological Theories of Deviance
  • 1. Functionalist Theory
  • - Emile Durkheim said that there is nothing
    abnormal with deviance. He gave four major
    functions of deviance
  • 1) Deviance affirms cultural values and
  • norms.
  • 2) Responding to deviance clarifies moral
  • boundary.

44
  • 3. Responding to deviance promotes
  • social unity.
  • 4. Deviance encourages social change.

45
  • 2. Strain theory
  • - Robert Merton claimed that American society
    pushes individuals toward deviance by
    overemphasizing the importance of monetary
    success while failing to emphasize the importance
    of using legitimate means to achieve success.

46
  • Merton meant that those people occupying
    favorable positions in the social class
    structures have many legitimate means at their
    disposal to achieve success. On the other hand,
    those in unfavorable positions do not have such
    means.

47
  • In this case, the goal of financial success
    combined with unequal access to important
    environmental resources creates deviance.

48
  • Merton gave the following types of deviance that
    emerge from this strain
  • (pp. 218-219)
  • 1) Conformity involves accepting both the
    cultural goal of success and the use of
    legitimate means for achieving that goal.
  • - conformists use positive success goal and
    legitimate means.

49
  • 2) Innovation this response involves accepting
    the goal of success but rejecting the use of
    socially accepted means to achieve it, turning
    instead to unconventional illegitimate meas.
  • - The innovator resorts to deviant ways of
    reaching a cultural validated goal.

50
  • 3) Ritualism occurs when people no longer set
    high goals but continue to toil as conscientious,
    diligent workers.
  • - The ritualists are people who deemphasize or
    reject the importance of success once they
    realize they will never achieve it and instead
    concentrate on following or enforcing these rules
    than ever was intended.

51
  • 4) Retreatism this means withdrawal from
    society, caring neither about success nor about
    working.
  • - The retreatists are individuals who have
    pulled back from society altogether and who do
    not pursue culturally legitimate goals.
  • - Examples of these are vagabonds, outcasts,
    drug addicts, alcoholics, and other similar
    groups.

52
  • 5) Rebellion this occurs when people reject and
    attempt to change both the goals and the means
    approved by society.
  • - The rebels try to overthrow the existing
    system and establish a new system with different
    goals and means.
  • - The rebels reject both the goals of what to
    them is an unfair social order and the
    institutionalized means of achieving them.
  • - They propose alternative societal goals and
    institutions.

53
  • It has to be noted that Merton applied Durkheims
    concept of ANOMIE by linking deviance to certain
    societal imbalances.
  • He started with the observation that financial
    success is widespread goal in America.
  • The society endorses certain means to thata goal.

54
  • Ideally, success is achieved through obtaining an
    appropriate education and hard labor.
  • Success gained through theft or other dishonest
    activities is a violation of cultural norms.
  • He argued that if people are socialized to aspire
    for success and to play by the rules, conformity
    should result.

55
  • 3. Deviant subcultures
  • - There is an extension of Mertons theory
    developed by Richard Cloward and Lloyd Ohlin
    (1966).
  • - They pointed out that criminal deviance
    results when there is limited legitimate
    opportunity to achieve success plus available
    illegitimate opportunity.

56
  • For Cloward and Ohlin, patterns of deviance and
    conformity largely reflect the relative
    opportunity structure confronted by various
    categories of young people.
  • They also said that if an illegal (criminal)
    structure is not readily available in a given
    social location, a criminal subculture is not
    likely to develop among adolescents.

57
  • Furthermore, if violence offers a primary
    channel to a higher status in a community, a
    greater participation by juveniles in conflict
    (violence) will normally occur.
  • This means that if relative opportunity favors
    what Merton might call organized innovation,
    criminal subculture is likely to develop.

58
  • Commonly, delinquency is pronounced among
    lower-class youth because they are denied the
    opportunity to achieve success in a conventional
    way.

59
  • 4. Control theory
  • - An advocate of this theory is Travis Hirschi
    (1969).
  • - He assumed that the family, school, and
    other social institutions can greatly contribute
    to social order by controlling deviant tendencies
    in every individual.
  • - If such control is lacking or weak, people
    will commit deviant acts.

60
  • The control theory is based on the idea that
    social ties among people are important in
    determining their behavior.
  • It asks what causes conformity, instead of what
    causes deviance.
  • This theory hold that what causes deviance is the
    absence of that which causes conformity.

61
  • Under the control theory, conformity is a direct
    result of control over the individual. It is,
    therefore, the absence of social control that
    causes deviance.
  • This means that people will be free to violate
    norms and standards of society if they lack
    intimate attachments of their parents, teachers,
    and friends.

62
  • The absence of these attachments and the
    acceptance of conventional norms usually lead
    young people to violate norms since there is no
    expected disapproval.
  • According to this theory, many people do not
    commit deviant acts because of their strong bond
    to society.

63
  • Hirschi suggests four ways in which individuals
    become bonded to society and the conventional
    behavior prevailing in it
  • 1) Attachment to others
  • 2) Commitment
  • 3) Involvement
  • 4) Belief

64
  • 5. Shaming theory
  • - While Hirschi emphasized how society
    controls individuals through bonding, John
    Braithwaite (1989), an Australian sociologist,
    emphasized how society controls people through
    shaming.

65
  • Shaming involves an expression of disapproval
    designed to evoke remorse in the wrongdoer.
  • Under this theory, there are two types of
    shaming
  • 1) Disintegrative shaming
  • 2) Reintegrative shaming

66
Conflict Perspective-Devianceand Social
Inequality
  • Conflict theory
  • - this holds the view that some laws are used
    to protect and preserve the capitalist system.
  • - Richard Quinney (1974) blamed unjust laws on
    the capitalist system contrary to the assumption
    that the law is based on the consent of citizens,
    that it treats citizens equally, and serves the
    best interest of society.

67
  • According to Quinney, some criminal laws are used
    by the state and the ruling class to secure the
    survival of the capitalist system.

68
  • Furthermore, according to Quinney
  • It hires law enforcers to apply those definitions
    and protect its interests.
  • It exploits the subordinate class by paying low
    wages so that the resulting oppressive life
    conditions virtually force the powerless to
    commit what those in power have defined as
    crimes.
  • The dominant class defines as criminal those
    behaviors like murder, robbery, etc., that
    threaten its interests.

69
  • 4) It uses these criminal actions to spread and
    reinforce the popular view that the subordinate
    class is dangerous in order to justify its
    concerns with making and enforcing the law.

70
  • Power theory
  • - this can also be a significant cause of
  • deviance.
  • - it may stem from relative deprivation, the
    feeling that disables to achieve relatively high
    aspiration.

71
  • The powerful enjoys greater opportunities for
    deviance. This explains why corruptions are
    likely to involve people in high positions.

72
  • Likewise, the powerful are subjected to weaker
    social control because they have more influence
    in making laws and in they have more influence
    in the making of laws and their implementation

73
  • Symbolic Interactionalist Perspective
  • - This describes deviance as a product of
  • slavery.
  • - This considers deviance as a process of
  • interaction between the person
  • considered deviant and the rest of
  • society.
  • - This considers deviance as learned.

74
  • 1. Differential association and opportunity
    theories
  • - According to Edward Sutherland (1930s),
    individuals are likely to become deviant if more
    of their primary group interactions favor
    deviance rather than oppose it.
  • - For him, deviance is learned in the same
    way as normative behaviors through a differential
    association.

75
  • Differential association and opportunity theories
    are founded on the following premises
  • 1) All criminal behaviors, including habitual,
    professional, organized, and white-collar is
    learned.
  • 2) Social interaction and communication are
    essential to the learning process.

76
  • 3) Criminal behavior is the result of personal
    participation in groups, rather than impersonal
    contacts with mass media and formal agencies of
    institutions.
  • 4) The learning of criminal behavior includes
    the acquisition of criminal techniques and the
    formation of new attitudes, motives, drives, and
    forms of neutralization that have been
    systematically reinforced.

77
  • 5) Criminal behavior occurs because group norms
    favor rather than oppose, violation of the law.
    This is reinforced by the group commitments or
    relationships the individual has established.

78
  • 6) The tendency to commit crimes reflects the
    contacts an individual has with a group that
    accepts or approves of such acts.
  • 7) The criminal and non criminal behaviors are
    learned by the same process.

79
  • 8) Criminal and non-criminal behaviors are both
    expressions of the goals and/or values of the
    individual or group.

80
  • 2. Labeling theory
  • - This view emerged in the 1950s from the
    writings of Edwin Lemert in 1972. Since then,
    many sociologists have elaborated on the labeling
    approach.

81
  • According to labeling theory, society tends to
    react to a rule-breaking act by labeling it as
    deviant.
  • Deviance is not something that a person does but
    merely a label imposed on that behavior.

82
  • Once a person is labeled a thief or a delinquent
    or a drunkard, the individual may be stuck with
    that label for life, and may be rejected or
    isolated as a result.
  • Paradoxically, this labeling process actually
    helps bring about more of the deviant behavior in
    society.

83
  • Being caught and branded as deviant has important
    consequences for ones further social
    participation and self-image.
  • It creates a drastic change in the individuals
    public identity.

84
  • - Tischler (1990) identified at least three
    factors that determine whether a persons
    behavior will set in motion the process by which
    he/she will be labeled deviant
  • 1) the importance or gravity of the norms
  • that are violated.
  • 2) the social identity or status of the
  • individual who violates them.
  • 3) the nature of the social context of the
  • behavior in question.

85
  • - Two types of deviance (acc. to labeling
    theory)
  • 1) Primary deviance refers to the
  • original behavior that leads to the
  • individuals being labeled deviant.
  • 2) Secondary deviance emerges as a
  • result of having been labeled deviant.

86
  • Functions of deviance
  • 1) Deviance serves as an outlet for diverse
  • forms of expression.
  • 2) Deviance serves to define the limits of
  • acceptable behavior.
  • 3) Deviance may also promote in-large
  • solidarity.
  • 4) Deviance can serve as a barometer of
  • social strain.

87
Social Control of Deviance
  • Social control refers to the efforts of a group
    or society to regulate the behavior of its
    members in conformity with established norms.

88
  • Social control involves the application of
    systematic behavioral restraints intended to
    motivate people to obey social expectations.

89
  • Ideally, people conform on their own because they
    have internalized the norms.
  • They have absorbed deeply into their way of
    thinking through the process of socialization.

90
  • Two types of deviance
  • 1) Informal sanctions
  • a. Social gossips, intrigues, ostracism,
  • alienation
  • b. Psychological low self-esteem
  • c. Spiritual remorse of conscience

91
  • 2) Formal sanctions
  • a. Administrative warning,
  • suspension, termination, expulsion
  • b. Civil indemnity (payment for
  • damages)
  • c. Criminal incarceration
  • (imprisonment)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com