Chapter 5 Social Process Theories - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 5 Social Process Theories

Description:

Social Process Theories Chapter Summary Chapter Five introduces the reader to the social process theories of crime. The chapter begins with an overview of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:316
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: rmcm4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 5 Social Process Theories


1
Chapter 5Social Process Theories
2
Chapter Summary
  • Chapter Five introduces the reader to the social
    process theories of crime.
  • The chapter begins with an overview of
    differential association theory, and how this
    theory developed out of the neoclassical
    theories.
  • This follows with a description of the social
    bond theories. Theories regarding labeling and
    neutralization are the last theories to be
    discussed in Chapter Five.
  • The author follows with an overview of the pros
    and cons of each of the theories. Chapter Five
    concludes with the policy implications set forth
    by each of the social process theories.

3
Chapter Summary
  • After reading this chapter, students should be
    able to
  • Explain symbolic interactionism
  • Describe critique differential association
    theory
  • Understand and critique social bond theory
  • Explain the process of labeling theory and
    critique the theory
  • Describe neutralization theory
  • Understand the policy implications of social
    process theories

4
Introduction
  • Social process criminologists operate from a
    general sociological perspective known as
    symbolic interactionism, which focuses on how
    people interpret and define their social reality
    and the meanings they attach to it in the process
    of interacting with one another via language.

5
Introduction
  • Thomas theorem If men and women define
    situations as real, they are real in their
    consequences
  • Social process theories seek to describe the
    process of criminal and delinquent socialization
    and how the process of social conflict pressures
    individuals into committing antisocial acts.

6
Differential Association Theory
  • Edward Sutherland championed differential
    association theory.
  • Nine propositions outlining the process by which
    individuals come to acquire attitudes favorable
    to criminal or delinquent behavior
  • Criminal behavior is learned.
  • Criminal behavior is learned in interaction with
    other persons in a process of communication.

7
Differential Association Theory
  • The principle part of learning criminal behavior
    occurs within intimate personal groups.
  • When criminal behavior is learned, the learning
    includes techniques of committing the crime, the
    specific direction of motives, drives,
    rationalizations, and attitudes.

8
Differential Association Theory
  • The specific direction of motives and drives is
    learned from definitions of legal code as
    favorable and unfavorable.
  • A person becomes delinquent because of an excess
    of definitions favorable to violations of law
    over definitions unfavorable to violations of
    law.
  • Differential associations may vary in frequency,
    duration, priority, and intensity.

9
Differential Association Theory
  • The process of learning criminal behavior by
    association with criminal and anti-criminal
    patterns involves all of the mechanisms that are
    involved in any other learning.
  • While criminal behavior is an expression of
    general needs and values, it is not explained by
    them since non-criminal behavior is an expression
    of the same needs and values.

10
Differential Association Theory
  • Definitions Meanings our experiences, how we see
    things, our attitudes, values habitual ways of
    viewing the world.
  • Differential social organization allows
    differential association theorists to adequately
    account for the association people have without
    reference to individual differences.

11
Crime and delinquency
12
Ronald Ackers Social Learning Theory
  • Social learning theory applies the concepts of
    operant psychology to the vague definitions
    favorable.
  • Operant psychology A perspective on learning
    that asserts that behavior is governed and shaped
    by its consequences.
  • Behavior has two general consequences it is
    reinforced or it is punished.
  • Reinforcement Positive or negative consequences
    for behavior that make it more likely the
    behavior will be repeated in similar situations.

13
Ronald Ackers Social Learning Theory
  • -Punishment Leads to the weakening or
    eliminating of the behavior preceding it that may
    also be positive or negative.
  • Rewards punishments are differentially valued,
    shaping our behavior.
  • -Discrimination Clues that signal whether a
    particular behavior is likely to be followed by
    reward or punishment.

14
Figure 5.2 Illustrating Types of Reinforcement
and Punishment
Reinforcement Increases Behavior Punishment Decreases Behavior
Positive Reinforcement Positive Punishment
(something rewarding received) (something punishing applied)
Negative Reinforcement Negative Punishment
(something punishing avoided) (something rewarding lost)
15
Social Control Theories
  • Social control Any action on the part of others,
    deliberate or not, that facilitates conformity to
    social rules.
  • Social control may be direct, formal, and
    coercive, but indirect and informal social
    control is preferable because it produces
    prosocial behavior regardless of the presence or
    absence of external coersion.

16
Walter Reckless Containment Theory
  • Walter Reckless theory is an early control that
    sought answers to why it is that some people in
    similar environments are immune to criminal
    temptations and others are not.
  • Those of us who resist antisocial temptations are
    contained by two overlapping forms of
    containment outer and inner.
  • Outer containment is the social pressure on
    individuals brought to bear by the family other
    important individuals and groups to abide by
    community rules.

17
Walter Reckless Containment Theory
  • Inner containment relies heavily on how persons
    see themselvestheir
  • self-concept.
  • Persons with a negative self-concept are more
    likely to become criminal and delinquent than
    persons with a positive self-concept.

18
Travis Hirschis Social Bonding Theory
  • Travis Hirschis social control theory is a
    theory that places primary importance on the
    family.

19
The Four Social Bonds
  • Hirshi makes the assumption that the typical
    delinquent lacks
  • Attachment Emotional component of conformity.
  • Commitment Rational component of conformity and
    refers to a lifestyle in which one has invested
    considerable time and energy in the pursuit of a
    lawful career.
  • Involvement A direct consequence of commitment
    it is a part of an overall conventional patter of
    existence.
  • Belief The acceptance of the social norms
    regulating conduct.
  • Antisocial and criminal behavior will emerge
    automatically if social controls are lacking.

20
From Social- to Self-Control Gottfredson
Hirschis Low Self-Control Theory
  • Self-control The extent to which different
    people are vulnerable to the temptations of the
    moment.
  • Following an unrestrained path to pleasure often
    leads to crime.
  • Most crimes are spontaneous acts requiring little
    skill and earn the criminal minimal, short term,
    satisfaction.

21
(No Transcript)
22
The Origin of Self-Control
  • Low self-control
  • is established in early childhood, it tends to
    persist throughout life, and it is the result of
    incompetent parenting.
  • Low self-control
  • is the default outcome that occurs in the
    absence of adequate socialization.
  • Low self-control is considered a stable component
    of a criminal personality.
  • A criminal opportunity is a situation that
    presents itself to an offender by which he or she
    can immediately satisfy needs with minimal mental
    or physical effort.

23
Labeling Theory The Irony of Social Reaction
  • The labeling or societal reaction school takes
    seriously the power of bad labels to stigmatize,
    and by doing so they evoke the very behavior the
    label signifies.
  • Labeling theory shifts the focus from the actor
    to the reactor.
  • Tannenbaum (1938) viewed labeling of a delinquent
    or criminal as bad or evil as amounting to a
    self-fulfilling prophecy.

24
Crime and delinquency
25
The Nature of Crime
  • Labeling theorists asserted that crime is defined
    into existence rather than discovered.
  • There is no crime independent of cultural values
    and norms.
  • No act is by its nature criminal, because acts do
    not have natures until they are witnessed, judged
    good or bad, and reacted to as such by others.

26
Primary Secondary Deviance
  • Edwin Lemert Primary deviance is the initial
    nonconforming act that comes to the attention of
    the authorities.
  • Secondary deviance Deviance that results from
    societys reaction to offenders primary deviance
  • Labeled persons may alter their self-concepts in
    conformity with the label.
  • The label may exclude the person from
    conventional employment opportunities lead to
    the loss of conventional friends.

27
Figure 5.5 Diagrammatic Presentation of
Labeling Theory
Primary deviance Flowing from a variety of causes that are of no concern to labeling theorists Apprehension and labeling as criminal or delinquent. Person is stigmatized with a master status. Offenders may come to accept labels and change their self-concepts to fit those labels Secondary deviance Delinquency and crime consequent to changes in self-concept
28
Extending Labeling Theory
  • John Braithwaite (1989) Nations with low crime
    rates are those where shaming has great social
    power.
  • Disintegrative shaming Condemnation received by
    offenders in the criminal justice system this
    shaming is counterproductive.
  • Reintegrative shaming A method of condemning the
    offenders acts without condemning him or her
    personhood.

29
Sykes and Matzas Neutralization Theory
  • Techniques of neutralization theory suggests that
    although delinquents know that their behavior is
    wrong, they justify it as acceptable on a
    number of grounds
  • Five techniques of neutralization
  • Denial of responsibility
  • Denial of injury
  • Denial of victim
  • Condemnation of the condemners
  • Appeal to higher loyalties

30
Sykes and Matzas Neutralization Theory
  • If we start engaging in behavior that we consider
    morally wrong, but find that behavior rewarding,
    we tend to develop a form of psychological
    discomfort called cognitive dissonance.
  • The elimination of uncomfortable inconsistencies
    between attitudes and behavior becomes a powerful
    motive to change on or the other.
  • Techniques of neutralization are both ways of
    easing uncomfortable feelings of guilt and shame,
    and ways of loosening moral constraints.

31
Evaluation of Social Process Theories
  • Differential association theory shares the
    unconstrained vision in that it assumes that it
    is antisocial behavior is learned, not
    something that comes naturally in the absence of
    prosocial training.
  • Critics of differential association stress that
    antisocial behavior comes naturally to the
    unsocialized individual the theory ignores
    individual differences.

32
Evaluation of Social Process Theories
  • Ackers social learning theory specifies how
    definitions favorable to law violation are
    learned.
  • This is emphasized through the use of operant
    conditioning, although it neglects the role of
    individual differences in the ease or difficulty
    with which persons learn.
  • Hirschis social control theory is criticized for
    its lack of emphasis on the social, economic
    political factors that impede stable and
    nurturing families.

33
Evaluation of Social Process Theories
  • One of the positive elements of neutralization
    theory is that it eliminates much of the over
    determined image of subcultural values implied in
    subculture theories.
  • Neutralization theory says nothing about the
    origins of the antisocial behavior the actors
    seek to neutralize.

34
Evaluation of Social Process Theories
  • The major criticism of self-control theory arises
    from the Gottfredson and Hirschis claim that it
    is a general theory meant to explain all crime.
  • Labeling theory comes dangerously close to
    claiming that the original causes of crime do not
    matter.

35
(No Transcript)
36
Theory Key Concepts
Strengths Weaknesses
Self-Control Low self-control explains all crime and analogous acts. Low self-control occurs in the absence of proper parenting. Exposure to criminal opportunities explains differences in criminal behavior among low self-control individuals. Identifies a single measurable trait to be responsible for many antisocial behaviors. Accords well with the impulsive nature of most criminal behavior. Links sociology to psychology. Claims too much for a single trait. Neglects child influences on parenting behavior and the affects of genes on low self-control.
Labeling Crime has no independent reality. Original primary deviance is unimportant what is important is the labeling process, which leads to secondary (continuing) deviance. Labeling people criminal leads them to organize their self-concepts around that label. Explains consequences of labeling with a master status. Identifies the social construction of crime and points to the power of some (the powerful) to criminalize the acts of others (the powerless). The neglect of causes of primary deviance. Advice that criminals should be treated not punished contradicts the theory that says that there is nothing intrinsically bad about crime and therefore there is nothing to treat.
Neutralization Delinquents and criminals learn to neutralize moral constraints and thus their guilt for committing crimes. They drift in and out of crime. Emphasizes that criminals are no more fully committed to antisocial attitudes than they are to prosocial attitudes. Shows how criminals handle feelings of guilt. Says nothing about the origins of behavior being neutralized. More a theory of antisocial rationalization than of crime.
37
Policy Prevention Implications of Social
Process Theory
  • If learning crime and delinquency within a
    particular culture is the problem, then changing
    relative aspects of that culture appear to be the
    answer the provision of positive role models to
    replace negative role models.
  • Given the importance of nurturance and
    attachment, both versions of control theory
    support the idea of early family intervention
    designed to cultivate these things.

38
Policy Prevention Implications of Social
Process Theory
  • Social-control theory emphasizes opportunity as
    well as self-control, thus some of the same
    policies advocated by routine activities and
    rational choice theorists (target hardening) are
    being recommended.
  • Labeling theory recommends that we allow
    offenders to protect their self-images as
    non-criminals by not challenging their
    techniques of neutralization.

39
Policy Prevention Implications of Social
Process Theory
  • The only policy implication of neutralization
    theory is that criminal justice agents charged
    with managing offenders should strongly challenge
    their excuse making.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com