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Introduction to Sociology SOC-101 Unit 11 - Deviance What is Deviance? Sociologists use the term deviance to refer to a violation of norms According to sociologist ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Sociology SOC-101


1
Introduction to SociologySOC-101
  • Unit 11 - Deviance

2
What is Deviance?
  • Sociologists use the term deviance to refer to a
    violation of norms
  • According to sociologist Howard S. Becker, it is
    not the act itself that makes an action deviant,
    but rather how society reacts to it
  • Deviance is a relative concept
  • What is deviant to some is not deviant to others
    since different groups have different norms
  • Crime is the violation of rules that have been
    written into law

3
What is Deviance?
  • Sociologists use the term deviance
    nonjudgmentally to refer to any act to which
    people respond negatively
  • To sociologists, all people are deviants because
    everyone violates rules from time to time
  • Stigma
  • Erving Goffman
  • Attributes that discredit ones claim to a
    normal identity
  • A stigma (e.g., physical deformities, skin color)
    defines a persons master status, superseding all
    other statuses the person occupies

4
What is Deviance?
  • Norms allow social ordera groups customary
    social arrangementsbecause they lay out the
    basic guidelines for how we play our roles and
    how we interact with others
  • Deviance is often seen as threatening because it
    violates a groups customary social arrangements
    and undermines the predictability that is the
    foundation of social life
  • Human groups develop a system of social control
    formal and informal means of enforcing the norms

5
What is Deviance?
  • Societys disapproval of deviance takes the form
    of negative sanctions
  • Ranges from frowns and gossip to imprisonment and
    capital punishment
  • Most negative sanctions are informal
  • Positive sanctions are used to reward people for
    conforming to norms
  • The sociological explanations of deviance differ
    from the biological and psychological ones
  • Psychologists and sociobiologists explain
    deviance by looking within individuals
  • Sociologists look outside the individual

6
What is Deviance?
  • Biological explanations focus on genetic
    predisposition
  • Includes factors such as intelligence, XYY
    theory, or body type
  • Psychological explanations of deviance focus on
    personality disorders
  • Includes bad toilet training, suffocating
    mothers, etc.
  • Yet these do not necessarily result in the
    presence or absence of specific forms of deviance
    in a person
  • Sociological explanations search outside the
    individual
  • Social influencessuch as socialization,
    subcultural group memberships, or social
    classaccount for why some people break norms

7
  • What is deviance?

8
Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
  • Edward Sutherland and Differential Association
  • We learn to deviate from or conform to societys
    norms mostly from the people with whom we
    associate
  • The key to differential association is the
    learning of ideas and attitudes favorable to
    following the law
  • Because we learn both from the various people we
    associate with, the end result is an imbalance
  • We conform or deviate depending on which set of
    messages is stronger
  • Studies have demonstrated that families do teach
    their members to violate the norms of society
  • Families involved in crime tend to set their
    children on a lawbreaking path

9
Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
  • Differential Association (cont)
  • The neighborhood is also likely to be influential
  • Sociologists have found that delinquents tend to
    come from neighborhoods in which their peers are
    involved in crime
  • Symbolic interactionists stress that we are not
    mere pawns, but help produce our orientation to
    life
  • Our choice of associates helps to shape our sense
    of self

10
Control Theory
  • Walter Reckless and Control Theory
  • Everyone is propelled towards deviance, but two
    control systems work against these motivations to
    deviate
  • Inner controls are ones capacity to withstand
    temptations toward deviance
  • Include internalized morality, integrity, fear of
    punishment, and the desire to be good
  • Outer controls involve groups that influence a
    person to stay away from crime
  • Include family, friends, the police

11
Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
  • Travis Hirschi
  • Noted that strong bonds to society lead to more
    effective inner controls
  • Bonds are based on attachments, commitments,
    involvements, and beliefs
  • The likelihood that we will deviate from social
    norms is related to the strength of our control
    systems
  • If the systems are strong we will be less likely
    to deviate than if they are weak

12
Labeling Theory
  • Labeling theory
  • The labels people are given affect their own and
    others perceptions of them, and thus channel
    their behavior either into deviance or into
    conformity
  • Most people resist being labeled as deviant, even
    when engaging in deviant behavior
  • There are five different techniques of
    neutralizations
  • Denial of responsibility (I didnt do it)
  • Denial of injury (Who really got hurt?)
  • Denial of a victim (She deserved it)
  • Condemnation of the condemners (Who are you to
    talk?)
  • Appeal to higher loyalty (I had to help my
    friends)

13
Labeling Theory
  • Some people invite a deviant label
  • Examples motorcycle gangs may pride themselves
    on getting into trouble, laughing at death, etc.
  • Chamblisss study of the Saints and the
    Roughnecks provides an excellent illustration of
    labeling theory
  • There were social class differences not only in
    terms of the visibility of the law-breaking
    behavior, but also in the styles of interaction
    with those in authority
  • These influenced the way in which teachers and
    the police saw and treated them
  • The study showed how labels open and close the
    door of opportunity for the individuals involved

14
  • Robert Merton
  • (1910-2003)

15
Functionalist Perspective
  • Emile Durkheim
  • Stated that deviance is functional, for it
    contributes to social order
  • Deviance clarifies moral boundariesa groups
    ideas about how people should act and thinkand
    affirms norms
  • Deviance promotes social unity
  • Deviance promotes social change (if boundary
    violations gain enough support, they become new,
    acceptable behaviors)

16
Strain Theory
  • Robert Merton and Strain Theory
  • What happens when people are socialized to desire
    a cultural goal but denied the institutionalized
    (i.e., legitimate) means to reach it?
  • Anomie
  • The strain people experience when they are
    blocked in their attempts to achieve those goals
  • Deviants are products of their society
  • Some people experience greater frustration in
    achieving cultural goals because of their
    location in society, making them more likely to
    deviate

17
Strain Theory
  • Merton identified five reactions to cultural
    goals and institutionalized means
  • Conformity - Using acceptable means to seek the
    goals society sets
  • Deviant innovation - Using illegitimate means to
    achieve them
  • Ritualism Giving up on achieving cultural
    goals, but clinging to conventional rules of
    conduct
  • Retreatism - Rejecting cultural goals, dropping
    out
  • Rebellion - Seeking to replace societys goals

18
Illegitimate Opportunity Theory
  • According to illegitimate opportunity theory,
    social classes have distinct styles of crime due
    to unequal access to institutionalized means of
    achieving socially acceptable goals
  • Many poor children in industrialized societies,
    who are socialized into wanting to own things,
    end up dropping out of school because of
    educational failure
  • Therefore, the doors are closed on many
    legitimate avenues to financial success

19
Illegitimate Opportunity Theory
  • Richard Cloward and Lloyd Ohlin suggest that
    opportunities for remunerative crime are woven
    into the texture of life
  • May result when legitimate structures fail
  • In this way the poor may be drawn into certain
    crimes in unequal numbers
  • Illegal income-producing activities are
    functional for those who want to make money, but
    whose access to legitimate activities is blocked
  • This includes robbery, drug dealing,
    prostitution, pimping, gambling, and other
    hustles

20
Illegitimate Opportunity Theory
  • Gangs offer disadvantaged youth an illegitimate
    opportunity structure
  • Research by Martin Sanchez Jankowski demonstrated
    that young men joined gangs because they provided
    them with access to steady money, recreation,
    anonymity in criminal activities, protection, and
    a way to help the neighborhood
  • White-collar crime refers to crimes that people
    of respectable and high social status commit in
    the course of their occupations
  • Such crimes exist in greater numbers than
    commonly perceived, and can be very
    costlytotaling 400 billion a year
  • They can involve physical harm and sometimes death

21
  • Conflict Theory

22
The Conflict Perspective
  • Conflict theorists address the issue of why the
    legal system is inconsistent in terms of
    providing justice for all
  • This inequality is central to their analysis of
    crime and the criminal justice systemthe police,
    courts, and prisons
  • The criminal justice system is controlled by the
    wealthy and powerfula power elite
  • This group determines the basic laws whose
    enforcement is essential to the preservation of
    its power

23
The Conflict Perspective
  • According to conflict theory, the law is an
    instrument of repression
  • It is a tool designed to keep the powerful in
    privileged positions and the powerless from
    rebelling and overthrowing the social order
  • When members of the working class get out of
    line, they are arrested, tried, and imprisoned in
    the criminal justice system
  • While the criminal justice system tends to
    overlook the harm done by the corporations,
    flagrant violations are prosecuted
  • The publicity given to white collar criminals
    helps to stabilize the system by providing
    evidence of fairness

24
The Conflict Perspective
  • Usually the powerful bypass the courts
    altogether, appearing instead before some agency
    whose members are people from the same wealthy
    background
  • Given this, it is not surprising that the usual
    sanction is a token fine
  • Property crimes committed by the masses are
    handled by the courts
  • These crimes not only threaten the sanctity of
    private property, but ultimately, the positions
    of the powerful

25
  • Reactions to Deviance

26
Reactions to Deviance
  • Imprisonmenta reflection of a get-tough
    orientationis an increasingly popular reaction
    to crime
  • There has been a tremendous growth in the U.S.
    prison population
  • It is estimated that more than 1.8 million people
    are currently incarcerated
  • About 94 percent are men, and about half are
    African American
  • The recidivism rate in the U.S. runs as high as
    79, and those given probation do no better

27
Reactions to Deviance
  • Research on the death penalty reveals that the
    death penalty is not administered evenly
  • Biases including differential treatment based on
    geographic location, gender, social class, as
    well as racial and ethnic biases
  • As opinions change, or different groups gain
    access to power, definitions of deviance and laws
    also change

28
Reactions to Deviance
  • Medicalization of Deviance
  • View that deviance is a symptom of some
    underlying illness that needs to be treated by
    physicians
  • Thomas Szasz argues that mental illness is simply
    problem behaviors
  • Some forms of mental illnesses have organic
    causes (e.g., depression caused by a chemical
    imbalance in the brain)
  • While others are responses to trouble with
    various coping devices
  • Some sociologists find Szaszs analysis
    refreshing because it indicates that social
    experiences, and not illnesses of the mind,
    underlie bizarre behaviors

29
Reactions to Deviance
  • Just the experience of being homeless can cause
    mental illness
  • Because you are on the streets and often have no
    place to wash yourself or your clothes, you are
    stared at or ignored, which results in withdrawal
  • Homelessness and mental illness can be
    reciprocal
  • Just as mental illness can cause homelessness,
    so can the trials of being homeless and living on
    the streets can lead to unusual and unacceptable
    thinking and behaviors

30
Reactions to Deviance
  • With deviance inevitable, one measure of a
    society is how it treats its deviants
  • The larger issues are how to protect people from
    deviant behaviors that are harmful to their
    welfare, to tolerate those that are not, and to
    develop systems of fairer treatment for deviants
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