Social Structure Theory - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 40
About This Presentation
Title:

Social Structure Theory

Description:

Slum children choose to join gangs when values are in conflict with existing middle-class norms ... Criminal gangs exist in stable neighborhoods ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:592
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 41
Provided by: laura430
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Social Structure Theory


1
Chapter 6
Social Structure Theory
2
Socioeconomic Structure and Crime
  • The U.S. is a stratified society social strata
    are created by the unequal distribution of
    wealth, power, and prestige.
  • Social classes are segments of the population who
    share attitudes, values, norms, and an
    identifiable lifestyle
  • The poverty rate is 2003 was 12.5 percent
  • Nearly 36 million people live in poverty

3
Figure 6.1 Number in Poverty and Poverty Rates,
1959-2003
4
Socioeconomic Structure and Crime
  • Child Poverty
  • Poverty during early childhood has a more severe
    impact than during adolescence
  • Low income children are less likely to achieve in
    school and more likely to suffer health problems
  • Social problems in lower-class slum areas are
    epidemic
  • Nearly 25 percent of children under age 6 live in
    poverty

5
Figure 6.2 Poverty Rates by Age, 1959-2003
6
Socioeconomic Structure and Crime
  • Weblink
  • www.aecf.org/kidscount

7
Socioeconomic Structure and Crime
  • The Underclass
  • Culture of poverty is passed from one generation
    to the next
  • Gunnar Myrdal suggested that an underclass was
    cut off from society
  • Unemployment and underemployment disrupts family
    life and creates despair

8
Socioeconomic Structure and Crime
  • Minority Group Poverty
  • 20 percent of African Americans and Hispanics
    live in poverty
  • 10 percent of Whites live in poverty
  • William Julius Wilson suggests disadvantaged
    minorities direct their aggression toward those
    close to them

9
Social Structure Theories
  • Social and economic forces in deteriorated
    lower-class areas push residents into criminal
    behavior patterns
  • Social structure theories include, social
    disorganization, strain theory, and cultural
    deviance theory
  • Each theory suggests that socially isolated
    people living in disorganized areas are the ones
    most likely to experience crime-producing social
    forces

10
Figure 6.3 The Three Branches of Social Structure
Theory
11
Social Disorganization Theories
  • Links crime rates to neighborhood ecological
    characteristics
  • Social disorganization includes low income groups
    with large single-parent households and
    institutions of broken down social control
  • Residents in crime-ridden areas are trying to
    leave at the earliest opportunity

12
Figure 6.4 Social Disorganizational Theory
13
Social Disorganization Theories
  • The Work of Shaw and McKay
  • Linked transitional slum areas to the inclination
    to commit crime
  • Transitional neighborhoods are incapable of
    inducing residents to defend against criminal
    groups
  • Concentric zone mapping identified the inner-city
    transitional zones as having the heaviest
    concentration of crime.
  • Slum children choose to join gangs when values
    are in conflict with existing middle-class norms
  • Crime rates correspond to neighborhood structure
    according to Shaw and McKay

14
Figure 6.5 Shaw and McKays Concentric Zones Map
of Chicago
15
Social Disorganization Theories
  • The Social Ecology School
  • Community deterioration Associated with crime
  • Disorder, poverty, alienation, dissociation, and
    fear of crime are characteristic of community
    deterioration
  • Poverty concentration Economically disadvantaged
    neighborhoods have higher rates of serious crimes
    (concentration effect)
  • Chronic unemployment Limited employment
    destabilizes households

16
Social Disorganization Theories
  • Community fear Social and physical incivilities
    increase the fear of crime (i.e. graffiti,
    prostitutes, dirt, and noise)
  • Race and fear Fear by Whites is based on racial
    stereotypes. Fear by minorities is greater
  • Gangs and fear Open activities of brazen gang
    activity creates community fear
  • Mistrust and fear A siege mentality develops
    based on mistrust of the outside world
  • Community change Communities undergoing rapid
    structural changes experience great changes in
    crime rates (gentrification)
  • Change and decline Neighborhoods most at risk
    contain large numbers of single-parent families
    and social strain

17
CNN Clip - New Approaches To Gang Problems
18
Social Disorganization Theories
  • Collective Efficacy
  • Cohesive communities develop interpersonal ties
    and mutual trust
  • Informal Social Control Involves peers,
    families, and relatives
  • Institutional Social Control Involves schools,
    churches, businesses, social agencies
  • Public Social Control Policing
  • Social support/Altruism crime rates are lower in
    areas with a positive social climate

19
Strain Theories
  • Theories that view crime as a direct result of
    lower-class frustration and anger.
  • Anomie (from the Greek word a nomos, without
    norms) in an anomic society rules of behavior
    have broken down because of rapid social change,
    war, or famine.
  • Mechanical solidarity pre-industrial styled
    societies held together by traditions and shared
    values
  • Organic solidarity Complex post-industrial
    societies which are interdependent for services
    and needs

20
Figure 6.6 The Basic Components of Strain Theory
21
Strain Theories
  • Theory of Anomie (Robert K. Merton)
  • Merton argued that socially mandated goals are
    uniform throughout society and access to
    legitimate means to achieve those goals is bound
    by class and status
  • Some people have inadequate means to attain
    societal goals.
  • Modes of Social Adaptation
  • Conformity
  • Innovation
  • Ritualism
  • Retreatism
  • Rebellion

22
Table 6.2 Typology of Individual Mode of
Adaptation
23
Strain Theories
  • Evaluation of Anomie Theory
  • Social inequality leads to perceptions of anomie
  • People innovate to resolve goals-means conflict
  • Mertons theory does not explain why people
    choose certain types of crime

24
Strain Theories
  • Institutional Anomie Theory (Steven Messner
    Richard Rosenfeld)
  • Update of Mertons theory describes the American
    Dream as both a goal and a process
  • Goals refer to material goods and wealth
  • Process involves being socialized to pursue
    material success
  • Certain institutions have been rendered powerless
    and obsolete in controlling anomie such as
    religious and charitable institutions
  • Economic terms are part of the common American
    vernacular

25
Strain Theories
  • Relative Deprivation Theory
  • Perceptions of economic and social inequality
    lead to feelings of envy, mistrust, and
    aggression
  • Lower-class people feel both deprived and
    embittered
  • Minorities feel relative deprivation more acutely
    than nonminorities

26
Strain Theories
  • General Strain Theory
  • Robert Agnew GST explains why individuals who
    feel stress and strain commit crime
  • Negative Affective States anger, frustration,
    and adverse emotions emerge in destructive
    relationships

27
Figure 6.7 Elements of General Strain Theory
28
Strain Theories
  • Multiple Sources of Stress
  • Criminality is the direct result of negative
    affective states
  • Failure to achieve positively valued goals
  • Disjunction of expectations and achievements
  • Removal of positively valued stimuli
  • Presentation of negative stimuli
  • Agnew suggests the greater the intensity and
    frequency of strain experiences, the more likely
    criminality will occur

29
Strain Theories
  • Sources of Strain
  • Social sources Peer and social groups
  • Community sources Relative deprivation producing
    negative affective states in large population
    segments

30
Strain Theories
  • Coping with Strain
  • Juveniles high in negative emotionality and low
    constraint are likely to react with antisocial
    behaviors
  • Crime provides relief from strain and stress for
    some people
  • Expectations increase with maturity, which may
    reduce the sources of strain

31
Strain Theories
  • Evaluating GST
  • Sources of strain vary over the life course
  • Empirical evidence supports that indicators of
    social strain are linked with criminality
  • Gender issues GST does not adequately account
    for gender differences in crime rate.
  • Females may be socialized to turn stress inward,
    whereas males turn their frustration outwards
    through aggression
  • Evidence suggests that people who fail to meet
    success goals are more likely to engage in
    criminal behavior

32
Cultural Deviance Theory
  • Combines the effects of social disorganization
    and strain to explain criminality
  • Lower classes create an independent subculture
    with its own set of rules and values
  • Subcultural norms clash with conventional values

33
Figure 6.8 Elements of Cultural Deviance Theory
34
Cultural Deviance Theory
  • Conduct Norms
  • Thorsten Sellin suggested criminal law is an
    expression of the rules of the dominant culture
  • Culture conflict occurs when the rules expressed
    in the criminal law clash with the demands of
    conduct norms

35
Cultural Deviance Theory
  • Focal Concerns
  • Walter B. Miller identified the focal concerns of
    the lower-class environments
  • Trouble
  • Toughness
  • Smartness
  • Excitement
  • Fate
  • Autonomy
  • clinging to lower class focal concerns promotes
    illegal or violent behavior.

36
Cultural Deviance Theory
  • Theory of Delinquent Subcultures
  • Albert Cohen suggests lower-class youths protest
    again the norms and values of the middle class
    (status frustration)
  • Teachers, employers, and authority figures set
    the standards referred to as middle-class
    measuring rods
  • Cohen contends lower-class boys will form deviant
    subcultures when frustrated

37
Cultural Deviance Theory
  • Formation of the Deviant Subculture
  • Corner boy Most common response to middle-class
    rejection, engages in petty or status offenses
  • College boy embraces cultural and social values
    of the middle class, is ill-equipped
    academically, socially, and linguistically to
    achieve
  • Delinquent boy adopts values and norms in
    opposition to middle-class values, engages in
    short-run hedonism (reaction formation)

38
Cultural Deviance Theory
  • Theory of Differential Opportunity
  • Richard Cloward and Lloyd Ohlin suggested people
    share the same goals but have limited means to
    achieve them
  • Because of differential opportunity, young people
    are likely to join gangs
  • Criminal gangs exist in stable neighborhoods
  • Conflict gangs develop in areas unable to provide
    legitimate or illegitimate opportunities
  • Retreatist gangs are double failures constantly
    searching for a way to get high

39
Cultural Deviance Theory
  • Evaluating Social Structure theories
  • The core concepts appear valid
  • Factors that cause strain produce social
    disorganization
  • Critics charge lower-class crimes rates are
    attributable to biases in the criminal justice
    system
  • Not all members of a disorganized community
    respond by committing crime

40
Public Policy Implications of Social Structure
Theory
  • Social structure theory has significantly
    impacted public policy
  • Public welfare programs
  • Chicago Area Projects
  • War on poverty
  • Head Start, Neighborhood Legal Services, and
    Community Action programs
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com