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Deviance

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Title: Deviance


1
Deviance
  • Chapter 8

2
What Is Deviance?
  • The word deviance connotes odd or unacceptable
    behavior, but in the sociological sense of the
    word, deviance is simply any violation of
    societys norms.
  • Deviance can range from something minor, such as
    a traffic violation, to something major, such as
    murder.

3
Relativism and Deviance
  • Deviance is a relative issue, and standards for
    deviance change based on a number of factors,
    including the following
  • 1 Location
  • 2 Age
  • 3 Social status
  • 4 Individual societies

4
Deviant Traits
  • A person does not need to act in a deviant manner
    in order to be considered deviant.

5
Deviant Traits
  • Sometimes people are considered deviant because
    of a trait or a characteristic they possess.
  • Sociologist Erving Goffman used the term stigma
    to identify deviant characteristics.
  • These include violations of the norms of physical
    ability or appearance.

6
Social Control
  • Punishing people for deviant behavior reminds
    people what is expected of them and what will
    happen if they do not conform to societys norms.
  • Every society has methods of social control, or
    means of encouraging conformity to norms.
  • These methods of social control include positive
    sanctions and negative sanctions.

7
Positive Sanctions
  • Society uses positive sanctions to reward people
    for following norms.
  • Positive sanctions can be formal, such as an
    award or a raise.
  • They can also be informal and include words,
    gestures, or facial expressions.
  • A reaction to an individuals actions can be a
    positive sanction, even if it is not intended to
    be.

8
Negative Sanctions
  • Negative sanctions can range from formal to
    informal.
  • Some subcultures dole out negative sanctions for
    behaviors generally condoned by the rest of
    society.
  • Academic achievement is usually held in high
    esteem.
  • Some subcultures, succeeding in a way that the
    dominant society approves of is not considered a
    good thing.
  • In some gangs, getting good grades is not
    acceptable, and gang members who do well in
    school are criticized by their friends for
    selling out.
  • Conformity to traditional figures of authority,
    such as teachers, is negatively sanctioned.

9
Symbolic Inter-actionist Perspective
  • Symbolic inter-actionists study how people use
    symbols to create meaning.

10
THEORY OF DIFFERENTIAL ASSOCIATION
  • Sociologist Edwin Sutherland studied deviance
    from the symbolic inter-actionist perspective.
  • The basic tenet of his theory of differential
    association is that deviance is a learned
    behavior people learn it.

11
Edwin Sutherland
  • He further explained exactly what one learns from
    people who commit deviance.
  • He said that the future deviant learns values
    different from those of the dominant culture, as
    well as techniques for committing deviance.

12
Edwin Sutherland
  • Part of Sutherlands theory is that if people
    learn deviance from others, the people with whom
    we associate are of utmost importance.
  • The closer the relationship, the more likely
    someone is to be influenced.

13
Deviant Subcultures
  • When individuals share a particular form of
    deviance, they often
  • form a deviant subculture, a way of living that
    differs from the dominant culture and is based on
    that shared deviance.

14
Control Theroy
  • Sociologist Walter Reckless developed the control
    theory to explain how some people resist the
    pressure to become deviants.
  • According to control theory, people have two
    control systems that work against their desire to
    deviate.
  • Each person has a set of inner controls and outer
    controls.

15
Travis Hirschi and Control Theory
  • Sociologist Travis Hirschi elaborated on the
    control theory.
  • He identified four elements that would render an
    individual more or less likely to commit
    deviance attachment, commitment, involvement,
    and belief.

16
Labeling Theory
  • A key aspect of the symbolic inter-actionist
    perspective of deviance is labeling theory.
  • First proposed by sociologist Howard Becker in
    the 1960s, labeling theory posits that deviance
    is that which is so labeled.
  • No status or behavior is inherently deviant until
    other people have judged it and labeled it
    deviant.

17
Primary and Secondary Deviance
  • Sociologist Edwin Lemert differentiated between
    primary deviance and secondary deviance.
  • The difference between primary deviance and
    secondary deviance is in the reactions other
    people have to the original act of deviance.
  • Primary deviance is a deviant act that provokes
    little reaction and has limited effect on a
    persons self-esteem.
  • The deviant does not change his or her behavior
    as a result of this act.
  • Secondary deviance includes repeated deviant
    behavior that is brought on by other peoples
    negative reactions to the original act of primary
    deviance.

18
Chambliss and the Saints and Roughnecks
  • In the 1970s, sociologist William Chambliss
    studied two groups of high school boys to find
    out how strongly labels affected them.

19
Structural Functional Theory
  • Another framework sociologists use to understand
    the world is the structural functional theory.
  • Its central idea is that society is a complex
    unit, made up of interrelated parts.
  • Sociologists who apply this theory study social
    structure and social function.
  • French sociologist Emile Durkheim based his work
    on this theory.

20
Functions of Deviance
  • Emile Durkheim
  • Affirmation of cultural norms and values Seeing
    a person punished for a deviant act reinforces
    what a society sees as acceptable or unacceptable
    behavio
  • 2. Clarification of right and wrong Responses to
    deviant behavior help individuals distinguish
    between right and wrong.
  • 3. Unification of others in society Responses to
    deviance can bring people closer together.
  • 4. Promoting social change Deviance can also
    encourage the dominant society to consider
    alternative norms and values.

21
Strain Theory of Deviance
  • Sometimes people find that when they attempt to
    attain culturally approved goals, their paths are
    blocked.
  • Not everyone has access to institutionalized
    means, or legitimate ways of achieving success.
  • Strain theory, posits that when people are
    prevented from achieving culturally approved
    goals through institutional means, they
    experience strain or frustration that can lead to
    deviance.
  • People also experience anomie, or feelings of
    being disconnected from society, which can occur
    when people do not have access to the
    institutionalized means to achieve their goals.

22
Institutionalized Means to Success
  • In the 1960s, sociologists Richard Cloward and
    Lloyd Ohlin theorized that the most difficult
    task facing industrialized societies is finding
    and training people to take over the most
    intellectually demanding jobs from the previous
    generation.
  • To progress, society needs a literate, highly
    trained work force. Societys job is to motivate
    its citizens to excel in the workplace, and the
    best way to do that is to foment discontent with
    the status quo.
  • Cloward and Ohlin argued that if people were
    dissatisfied with what they had, what they
    earned, or where they lived, they would be
    motivated to work harder to improve their
    circumstances.
  • In order to compete in the world marketplace, a
    society must offer institutionalized means of
    succeeding.
  • For example, societies that value higher
    education as a way to advance in the work place
    must make educational opportunity available to
    everyone.

23
Illegitimate Opportunity Structures
  • Cloward and Ohlin further elaborated on Mertons
    strain theory.
  • Deviant behaviorcrime in particularwas not just
    a response to limited institutionalized means of
    success. Crime also resulted from increased
    access to illegitimate opportunity structures, or
    various illegal means to achieve success.
  • These structures, such as crime, are often more
    available to poor people living in urban
    slums.
  • A poor person can become involved in
    prostitution, robbery, drug dealing, or loan
    sharking to make money.
  • While these activities are clearly illegal, they
    often provide opportunities to make large
    amounts of money, as well as gain status
    among ones peers.

24
Reactions to Cultural Goals Institutionalized
Means
Method of adaptation Cultural goals Institutionalized means
Conformists Accept Accept
Innovators Accept Reject
Ritualists Reject Accept
Retreatists Reject Reject
Rebels Reject / Replace Reject / Replace
25
Conflict Perspective
  • A third important sociological framework is the
    conflict theory.
  • Unlike the structural functional theory, which
    views society as a peaceful unit, conflict theory
    interprets society as a struggle for power
    between groups engaging in conflict for limited
    resources.

26
Conflict Perspective
  • Karl Marx is the founder of conflict theory.
  • Conflict theorists like Marx posit that there are
    two general categories of people in
    industrialized societies the capitalist class
    the working class.
  • The capitalist class, or elite consists of those
    in positions of wealth and power who own the
    means of production or control access to the
    means of production.

27
Conflict Perspective
  • The working class consists of relatively
    powerless individuals who sell their labor to the
    capitalist class.
  • It is advantageous to the elite to keep the
    working class in a relatively disadvantaged
    position so that they can maintain the status quo
    and their own privileged positions.

28
Conflict Theory and Crime
  • Conflict theorists believe that the broad
    division of people into these two categories is
    inherently unequal.
  • Conflict theorists cite the criminal justice
    system to support their claim.

29
Conflict Theory and Crime
  • The capitalist class passes laws designed to
    benefit themselves.
  • These same laws are detrimental to the working
    class.
  • Both groups commit acts of deviance, but the
    system the capitalists created defines deviance
    differently for each group.
  • The criminal justice system judges and punishes
    each group differently.

30
Conflict Theory and Crime
  • In addition, the elite can often afford expensive
    lawyers and are sometimes on a first-name basis
    with the individuals in charge of making and
    enforcing laws.
  • Members of the working class generally do not
    have these advantages.

31
White - Collar Crimes
  • Conflict theorists also look at the types of
    crimes committed by members of the two classes.
  • The working class is more likely to commit
    so-called street crime, such as robbery, assault,
    or murder.
  • Members of the elite are less likely to commit
    acts of violence but more likely to engage in
    white-collar crime, or nonviolent crime committed
    by the capitalist class during the course of
    their occupations.
  • White-collar criminals are difficult to catch and
    prosecute for two main reasons
  • a. White-collar crime is difficult to identify.
    It leaves little physical evidence and no
    easily identifiable victim.
  • b. White-collar criminals are sometimes able to
    use their power and influence to avoid
    prosecution. Because of their social and
    economic clout, white-collar criminals rarely
    face criminal prosecution.

32
Deviance and Power
  • Conflict theorist Alexander Liazos points out
    that the people we commonly label as deviant are
    also relatively powerless.
  • The people in positions of power make the laws of
    any given society they create laws to benefit
    themselves.

33
Deviance and Power
  • According to the conflict view of deviance, when
    rich and powerful people are accused of
    wrongdoing, they have the means to hire lawyers,
    accountants, and other people who can help them
    avoid being labeled as deviant.

34
Deviance and Power
  • Lastly, members of a society generally believe
    that laws are inherently fair, which can draw
    attention away from the possibility that these
    laws might be unfairly applied or that a law
    itself might not be good or just.

35
Crime
  • White-collar crime is just one type of crime.
    Crime, or the violation of a written law, is a
    specific kind of deviance. What constitutes a
    crime varies from society to society. In our
    society, sociologists have identified three
    general categories of crime

36
Crime
  • Crimes against the person These are crimes in
    which an act of violence is either threatened or
    perpetrated against a person. A mugging is an
    example of a crime against the person.

37
Crime
  • Crimes against property These are crimes that
    involve the theft of property or certain forms of
    damage against the property of another. Arson is
    an example of a property crime.

38
Crime
  • Victimless crimes These are crimes in which laws
    are violated, but there is no identifiable
    victim. Prostitution is often classified as a
    victimless crime.

39
Profile of a Criminal
  • Sociologists studying crime and deviance study
    statistics on who commits crime. Identifying a
    criminal profile can help sociologists understand
    the causes of crime and other deviance.
  • Sociologists use the categories of age, gender,
    social class, and race and ethnicity to create
    this profile.

40
Profile of a Criminal
  • Age Young people, roughly between the mid-teens
    and early twenties, commit almost 40 percent of
    all crimes. The likeliness to commit crime,
    particularly violent crime, decreases with age.
  • Gender Men are arrested for crimes far more
    often than women. Men are arrested for
    approximately 70 percent of all property crimes
    and 80 percent of all violent crimes. Several
    theories, including the following, attempt to
    explain this situation
  • a. In all known societies, men are allowed more
    behavioral freedom than women are. More
    freedom means more opportunity to engage in
    deviant acts.
  • b. Traditionally, police have been less willing
    to define a woman as a criminal, and the
    court system has been less likely to convict
    a woman and sentence her to jail or prison.

41
Profile of a Criminal
  • Social Class Street crime, particularly violent
    crime, is more prevalent in poor, inner-city
    neighborhoods than in affluent communities.
    Violent crime in inner-city neighborhoods tends
    to be committed by the same group of seasoned
    criminals. Their victims are most often the
    law-abiding inhabitants of those neighborhoods.
    White- collar crime tends to occur in more
    affluent communities.

42
Profile of a Criminal
  • Race and Ethnicity African Americans represent
    approximately 12 percent of the population in the
    United States and comprise 30 percent of
    property-crime arrests and 38 percent of
    violent-crime arrests. White people represent 66
    percent of the arrests for property crimes and 60
    percent of the arrests for violent crimes.
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