Functionalist Perspective on Deviance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Functionalist Perspective on Deviance

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Functionalist Perspective on Deviance Emile Durkheim-Function of Deviance Most people are upset by deviance, especially crime and assume that society would be better ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Functionalist Perspective on Deviance


1
Functionalist Perspective on Deviance
2
Emile Durkheim-Function of Deviance
  • Most people are upset by deviance, especially
    crime and assume that society would be better off
    without it
  • He said that deviance (including crime) is
    functional for society because it contributes to
    social order

3
Functions of crime continued
  • 3 main functions of crime
  • Clarifies moral boundaries and affirms norms
  • Moral boundaries- a groups idea about how people
    should think and act
  • Deviant acts challenge the boundaries and
    punishment affirms the groups norms
  • Promotes social unity
  • Fosters a we mentality
  • In saying you cant get away with that affirms
    the rightness of the groups own way
  • Promotes social change
  • Boundary violations that gain enough support
    become new, acceptable behaviors
  • Example Civil Rights Movement

4
Mertons Strain Theory
  • Some mainstream values actually generate crime
  • Most people have strong desires to reach cultural
    goals like wealth or high states
  • Not everyone has equal access to legitimate means
    of achieving those goals
  • These people experience strain or frustration
    which may motivate they to take a deviant path

5
Strain Theory continued
  • People who experience strain are likely to feel
    anomie (a sense of normlessness)
  • Mainstream norms s/a working hard and pursuing
    higher education dont seem to get them anywhere
  • Some may feel wronged by the system

6
5 responses to goal-means inconsistency
  • Conformity- using socially acceptable means to
    try and reach cultural goals
  • Example dont understand calculus, need it for
    college applications, then get a tutor
  • 2. innovators- people who accept the goals of
    society but use illegitimate means to reach them
  • Example dont understand calculus, need it for
    college, cheat on the test

7
5 responses continued
  • 3. ritualism- people get discouraged and give up
    on achieving cultural goals yet still cling to
    conventional rules
  • Example dont understand calculus, need it for
    college, give up on ever understanding it, go
    through the motions and maybe pass with a D
  • 4. retreatism- rejects both cultural goals and
    acceptable means of achieving them
  • Example drop out of school and maybe pursue GED
  • 5. rebellion- Convinced that their society is
    corrupt and reject societys goals and means.
  • Seek to give society new goals
  • Example Drop out and get a job

8
Social Class and Crime
  • Social classes have distinct styles of crime
  • Unequal access to the acceptable means to success
    can explain this

9
Street Crime
  • Industrialized societies socialize the poor into
    wanting to own thing
  • The poor are bombarded with advertisements and
    images on TV of middle-class people enjoying
    luxurious lives
  • These images reinforce the myth that all
    full-fledged Americans can afford societys goods
    and services
  • School Systems (acceptable means to success)
    often fail the poor
  • Run by middle class and clashes with their
    background
  • More likely to drop out of school, closing the
    door to legitimate avenues to financial success

10
Street Crime continued
  • Other doors open to the poor- illegitimate
    opportunity structures
  • Robbery, drug dealing, prostitution, gambling,
    etc.
  • For many in poor neighborhoods the hustler- or
    person succeeding through these avenues are role
    models
  • easy money bring them closest to the cultural
    goal of success

11
White-Collar Crime
  • The more privileged social classes are not
    crime-free
  • They find other forms of crime to be functional
  • Physicians who cheat Medicare, embezzlement,
    manipulating stock prices, evading income tax.

12
Corporate Crime
  • Special form of white-collar crime
  • Committed by executives in order to benefit their
    corporation
  • Corporate crime is rarely taken seriously (more
    so nowadays with Enron, etc.) and few people end
    up in jail

13
Gender and Crime
  • There is a growing number of female offenders
  • Reason women's changed social location
  • As more women work in factories, corporations,
    etc., their opportunities for crime increase
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