Sociology of Deviance PDF
Sociology of Deviance PDF
Sociology of Deviance PDF
DEVIANCE
A TEXT FOR THE SOCIOLOGY
OF DEVIANCE
By
Semalegne Kendie Mengesha
Prepared By
UNIVERSITY OF GONDAR
FACULTY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES AND
HUMANITIES
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY
Sociology of Deviance
Preface
This teaching material for the course Sociology of Deviance and Social Control
has been prepared by Semalegne Kendie upon the approval of the first draft by the
department council. The main aim of preparing this book was to provide students
of sociology and other related disciplines with an organized knowledge of the
course.
Sociology of Deviance is one of those advanced course given in the department of
sociology. The main reason that drives my department delivering this course is
the interest of making sociology students aware of the nature of deviation from
social norms and values and their societal and individuals reactions. However, the
course has so far been given without any organized teaching material as well as
available reference books at University of Gondar. In addition, topics of sociology
of deviance have been intermingled with those subject matters familiar in
criminology irrespective of the reality that deviance and crime are not always
overlapping concepts, as it is discussed under chapter one. Therefore, here is the
need to prepare an appropriate independent course textbook for sociology of
deviance that can help students grasp a more clarified understanding of the subject
matter of sociology of deviance.
The objectives that are pillars to this textbook include: (1)to enable students have
a better understanding of different theories of deviance and social control; (2) to
discuss major strategies that society uses to control its members in different social
settings; (3) to make students have a better understanding of different deviant
behaviours like alcoholism, drug abuse, mental disorder, etc; (4) to discuss the
consequence of deviance in society (negative and positive); and (5) to explore
forms of deviance and how society attempts to manage and control them.
Sociology of Deviance
Table of Contents
Preface...................................................................................................................... i
Table of Contents .................................................................................................... ii
Introduction ............................................................................................................. 1
1.1. Definition of Deviance ................................................................................. 2
1.1.1. Positive Deviance................................................................................. 2
1.1.2. Specific Definitions of Negative Deviance.......................................... 4
1.1.3. Deviance: a Relative Term................................................................... 6
1.1.3.1. The Relativity of Deviance in Terms of Society .............................. 7
1.1.3.2. The Relativity of Deviance in Terms of Time .................................. 8
1.1.3.3. The Relativity of Deviance in Terms of Place .................................. 8
1.1.3.4. The Relativity of Deviance in Terms of Social Group ..................... 8
1.1.3.5. The Relativity of Deviance in Terms of Social Situation ................. 8
1.2. Deviant Statuses ........................................................................................... 9
1.3. Deviance and Crime ..................................................................................... 9
1.4. Functions and Dysfunctions of Deviance .................................................. 10
1.4.1. Dysfunctions of Deviance .................................................................. 10
1.4.2. Functions of Deviance ....................................................................... 11
1.5. Reactions to Deviance................................................................................ 12
Chapter Two: Theories of Deviance ..................................................................... 13
1.2. Introduction ................................................................................................ 13
2.2. Demonological Explanations of Deviance................................................. 13
2.3. Biological and Psychological Theories of Deviance ................................. 14
2.3.1. Biological Theories of Deviance ....................................................... 14
2.3.1.1. Physiognomists and Phrenologists.................................................. 15
2.3.1.2. Cesare Lombrosos Theory of Atavist ............................................ 16
2.3.1.3. Post Lombrosian Theories .............................................................. 19
2.3.1.4. William Sheldon: Theory of Somatotype ....................................... 21
2.3.1.5. Modern Biological Researches on Crime ....................................... 23
2.3.2. Psychological Theories of Deviance .................................................. 25
2.3.2.1. Psychoanalytic Theories of Deviance ............................................. 25
2.3.2.2. Personality Theories of Crime and Deviance ................................. 29
2.3.2.3. Moral Development Theories of Deviance ..................................... 30
2.3.2.4. Learning Theories: Conditioning Theory ....................................... 32
2.3.2.5. Psychopathology Theory of Deviance ............................................ 32
2.3.3. Limitations of Psychological Theories ................................................... 33
2.3.4. Application of both Biological and Psychological Theories ............. 34
2.4. Sociological Theories of Deviance ............................................................ 34
2.4.1. Introduction ........................................................................................ 34
2.4.2. Anomie Theories of Deviance ................................................................ 34
2.4.2.1. Durkheims Anomie Theory of Deviance....................................... 35
2.4.2.2. Robert K. Mertons Strain Theory .................................................. 37
2.4.2.3. Agnews General Strain Theory ..................................................... 40
2.4.2.4. Relative Deprivation Theory........................................................... 42
2.4.2.5. Durkheims, Legacy: Anomie and Relative Deprivation ................ 45
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Introduction
The teaching material consists of five chapters. The first chapter is concerned
with the introduction remarks of deviance. It comprises of the definitions of
deviance, the differences between negative and positive deviance, the relativity of
deviance across different factors, deviant statuses, the relationship between
deviance and crime, the function and dysfunction of deviance, and the reactions to
deviance.
The second chapter, which is a vast part of the paper, deals with theories of
deviance and crime. All theories related to deviance and crime have been included
here. These theories are grouped into three major categories, i.e., the
demonological explanations, biological and psychological theories and
sociological theories of deviance and crime. The largest part of the chapter
concerns with those sociological theories of deviance and crime. All these
sociological theories of deviance and crime are also presented being categorized
under seven groups. These are anomie theories, structural and substructural
theories, ecological theories, control theories, social learning theories,
interactionist theories, and conflict theories. The number of these groups of
theories is nearly above thirty. Under this chapter, it has been tried to include
some theories which were not commonly studied in the classroom of the earlier
classes of sociology of deviance and crime. This was done for the primary
intention of briefing students of sociology with the possibility of looking at the
same issue from different points of view.
Chapter three of this work, on its behalf, is all about the possible relationships
between urbanization and deviance and crime. Here, it has been attempted to see
such issues as urbanism as a way of life, links between urbanism and deviance,
family disorganization in urban areas and its link with deviance, subcultures in
urban areas as sources of deviance, materialism in urban areas and cultural
deviations, individualism among urbanites and deviance, the impersonality nature
of urban communications and deviation and its relationship between urban areas
and deviance.
The mechanisms for social control in a given society are also found treated under
chapter four of the paper. Informal and formal social controlling mechanisms of
deviance and crimes have been discussed in a very detailed manner under chapter
four. The history of formal social control mechanisms of Ethiopia has also been
addressed here. Besides, this chapter gives you an insight about the function of
formal punishments as a formal social controlling means and that of the juvenile
justice system. The similarities and differences of the juvenile and adult justice
systems are also presented in the chapter.
Finally, the paper, under chapter five, presents you the discussion on major
deviant acts, especially on some selected victimless crimes such as drug abuse,
Sociology of Deviance
homosexualism, prostitution, and gambling. At the end of the paper references are
listed.
Chapter One: Nature and Definition of Deviance
This chapter is basically concerned with the introductory aspect of the term
deviance. It consists of the definition of deviance, the difference and similarity of
the concepts deviance and crime, the function and dysfunctions of deviance, the
idea of positive deviance, and self and societal reactions to deviance.
1.1. Definition of Deviance
The term deviance has different definitions as it is seen from the point of view of
different scholars from different fields of studies. It is obvious that a biologists or
a psychologists definition of deviance could not be one and the same with that of
a sociologists definition of the term deviance. Thus, deviance cannot be
uniformly defined throughout the world. That is why Adler (2000) argued that
differences in opinion exist regarding the definition of deviance.
Under this sub-topic, all the possible definitions of deviance have been tried to be
discussed. However, before directly proceeding to these specific definitions, it is
found worthwhile addressing the general definition of deviance.
Generally, deviance can be defined as any behaviour, belief, or condition that
violates significant social norms in the society or group within which it occurs
(Kendall, 2003). Similarly, Macionis (1997) explained that deviance is the
recognized violation of cultural norms which are a guideline for virtually all
human activities. Thus, the term deviance refers to those behaviors which are not
considered normal, at least, by the good majority of a society, community, or
social group, irrespective of the direction to where those behaviours deviate from
the norm (normal). In other words, deviation from the normal way of behaving
may be occurred either to the positive or the negative direction.
Those behaviours which deviate from the normal to the negative direction are
known as negative deviance, whereas those which are positive achievements and
positive actions beyond the normal (average) behaviour are known as positive
deviance. Crime, insanity, adultery, theft and other similar behaviours are good
examples of negative deviations while those positive deviations are manifested by
such behaviours as altruism, charisma, innovation, and so forth.
1.1.1. Positive Deviance
Positive deviance has been variously defined in the literature (Kelly, 2002).
Besides, divergent examples, ranging from extreme intelligent to accomplished
athletes have been advanced as prominent examples of positive deviance.
Consequently, a classificatory model developed from the examples that have been
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in the literature on positive deviance is presented (Adler, et. al., 2000). The
writers have identified the following ideal types of behaviours as positive
deviance: altruism, charisma, innovation, supra-conformity behaviours, innate
characteristics and ex-deviant.
A myriad behaviour and/or actions have been advanced as examples of
positive deviance. Specifically, the following have been referred as to
examples of positive deviance: noble prize winners the gifted
motion picture stars supra-star athlete pro quarterbacks
altruists congressional medal of winners religious leaders
straight A students zealous weight lifters and runners innovative or
creative people such as Freud and Darwin and social idealist .
(Kelly, et. al., 2002: 23).
People will publicly evaluate those behaviours (considered positive actions)
and/or actors in a superior sense; and these behaviours can be categorized under
one of the following types:
a. Altruism: includes saints and good neighbours, self-sacrificing heroes,
congressional medal of honour winners, etc. It involves an act undertaken
voluntarily to assist others persons or other people without any
expectations of reward. Scholars, who have addressed positive deviance,
identified two types of altruism: autonomous altruism which refers to
actors such as abolitionists who died exert themselves and sacrifice
themselves to a much greater degree, and acts such as donating a small
amount of money and doesnt require much effort. Thus, it can, however,
be concluded that autonomous altruism is more descriptive of positive
deviance.
b. Charisma: Some of the examples of charismatic individuals include
Gandhi, religious leaders in general, Emperor Tewodrous IV, Mandela,
etc. Charismatic people have extra-qualities that force followers or other
people to be willing to obey their leadership.
c. Innovation: This type of deviance is described by such behaviours as
noble prize winners, innovative or creative figures (such as Freud, and
Darwin), reformers, etc. Innovation refers to the combination of already
existing cultural elements in a novel manner, or the modifying of already
existing cultural elements to produce a new one. Note that innovations are
fundamental factors for social change in a society.
d. Supra-conformity: Straight A students, zealous weight lifters and runners,
and extreme moralists exemplify supra-conformity. It is a behaviour which
is at the level of the idealized norms within a culture. We know that norms
operate at two levels: the ideal which most people believe is better but few
achieved and the realistic version which most people can achieve. The
negative deviant fail to abide by either level; the normal person operates
at the realistic level; but doesnt achieve the idealized level; and the
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mores of a given society. Laws, on the other hand, are the strongest norms since
they are supported by codified sanctions. By the same token, the violation of dayto-day norms doesnt create serious outrage, but considered as some odd
behaviour whereas the infringing of mores is stronger, and they would generate
serious social condemnation. Similarly, the breaches of those codified laws leads
to arrest and punish.
Now, it is time to come back to those specific definitions of deviance mentioned
earlier. Let us begin with the explanation of absolute definition of deviance.
According to the absolute model of definition of deviance, social norms and rules
are taken to be absolute, uniform, universal, clear and obvious for all in every
nook and corner of the world. Hence, deviance is defined as the behaviour that
totally dead against these absolute norms of the universe. It is not something
relative; rather it is eternal and global: if some behaviour is judged to have been
intrinsically morally wrong in the past, for example, adultery and divorce, it
should be recognized as wrong today and forever in the future. Similarly, if
something is regarded to be a morally bad in some place of the world, it should
also be judged bad everywhere in the universe.
This absolute definition of deviance is subscribed to the demonological
explanation of human behaviour it is a religious definition of deviance behavior.
Absolutists definition of deviance has its own limitations. Basically, it ignores
cultural differences across the globe. We know that people in the world are
different as they have diversified norms and values. Although it is well
recognized fact that norms and values are culture universal (found in every
culture), they do differ from one society to the other - even from one social group
to others within a given society.
Deviance can also be defined from statistical point of view. This model applies
the assumption that what the majority is doing is normal behaviour whereas
those minority acts remain deviant behaviours. Thus, deviance is seen as the
violation of norms and values of the greater part of a society. For this definition,
deviance is a question of number; that is why this definition is regarded as
statistical definition of deviance. For example, chat chewing in rural areas of
Northern Gondar Administrative Zone is a deviant act simply because the large
majority of the people in these areas do not engage in the very act of chat
chewing. On the contrary, it is a normal and healthy behaviour in eastern part of
Ethiopia since the mass of the people use it as habitual behaviour.
The labeling model of definition of deviance, on its behalf, rejects the idea that
deviance is absolute or universal. This definition, however, believes that deviance
is forged by people and referred by them anew in different times and locations
that lead to significant construction and reconstruction of deviance. According to
this model, deviance is, therefore, lodged in the eyes of the beholder rather than in
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the act itself. Hence, deviance is found outside of the act of the deviant person,
but it is up to the point of view of the social audience. The proponents of this view
further explain that after a person has been labeled (publicly evaluated deviant),
people consider them deviant; and then the person himself will accept the label;
and later on, he starts to act in accordance with the label tagged to him.
Power definition of deviance is somewhat similar to the labeling model, partly in
the idea that social group creates deviance by making the rules and regulations
whose infraction constitutes deviance on outsiders. Subsequently, this model
argues that deviance is not a quality of an act that a person commits, but rather it
is an outcome of the application of rules and regulations by others to sanction an
offender. This view also contends that deviance is not natural, but a particular
group with power who has set rules and regulations in a society that determines
deviant acts. As a result, deviance is the violation of rules and regulations
formulated and implemented by a powerful segment of a society. In a given
society, as per this definition, the politically, economically, and socially dominant
group imposes its definitions on the behaviour of the powerless segment; and the
behaviours of this powerless majority are always evaluated against those rules and
regulations formulated by the dominant class. Therefore, deviance is a
presentation of unique power in the society. Here, it is worthwhile noting that the
dominant or powerful class of a society can violate the rules and regulations they
themselves made without being considered as deviants, because power is in their
palms which lets them change the rules and regulations in favour of their own
benefits.
The normative definition of deviance comes earlier than the relativistic model. For
this view, deviance refers to the behaviour that violates social norms or to a
person who engages in such behaviour. This definition of deviance has been
challenged by sociologists who favour the relativistic alternative.
The normative definition narrows deviance on persons who engage in norm
violating behaviours. It suggests the importance of identifying who breaks norms
and explaining why they commit deviant acts.
1.1.3. Deviance: a Relative Term
So far we have seen those different models of defining deviance which define the
behaviour from only one angle. However, deviance cannot always be treated in
this way since it is a relative social behaviour which differs in its from one society
to others, from social groups to social groups, from time to time, from social
situation to social situation, and from one place to the other. Thus, we can see that
it is not possible to isolate a certain acts and find them universally condemned by
all societies as deviant acts (not even murder and incest). Even within a given
society, behaviour defined as deviant continuingly undergoes redefinition (Russ
Long, 2008). This type of definition of deviance is known as relative definition,
Sociology of Deviance
because it views persons or their behaviour as deviant only relative to the way
other people react to them.
Relative definition of deviance is the one to which most sociologists are
subscribed. For most of the sociologists, deviance is not absolute, universal,
statistical, power-based, or labeled; but it is reacted with a particular social
audience. As a result, deviance is always defined by some particular social
audience. This, in turn, shows that it is advisable to take the society, social
structure, social stratification, social norms, social control and social behaviours
into consideration when we treat social deviance.
More surprisingly, the relativity of deviance is also observable even within
deviant groups themselves. Deviant groups may have their own norms and values
which governs/guides the activities and behaviours of their own members. These
norms of deviant groups are totally antagonistic to the norms and values of the
mainstream culture. Whatever antagonistic they are, still norms of deviant group
govern the deviant members. Those individuals who violate the norms of these
deviant groups become a deviant of a deviant group (deviant-deviant).
Deviance, furthermore, is relative to time and place, too. It is not possible to find
something that is absolutely condemned by all societies of the world. A behaviour
which is deviant in one society may no be deviant in another. Even within one
society, what is deviant today may not be deviant tomorrow (Russ Long, 2008),
because perspectives of social audiences also change across time. Thus, deviance
is a dynamic behaviour that changes along with the changes of the social structure
or the society.
Therefore, the relativity of deviance can be seen across time, society, social
group, social situation and place. Now lets see this conditions for the relativity of
deviance one by one
1.1.3.1. The Relativity of Deviance in Terms of Society
Societies are different due to the difference in social norms. Norms, as we know,
are standard of behaviour to identify what is good or bad, appropriate or
inappropriate, suitable or unsuitable, proper or improper, and so forth. However,
what is appropriate for one society cannot be appropriate for the other simply
because there are norm variations. Thus, what is normal for the Sudanese may not
be normal for Ethiopians. For example, taking alcohol drinking is a serious crime
in Sudan whereas it is a normal behaviour in Ethiopia. This is a good indicator for
the relativity of deviance across societies. Another possible example is that
abstinence from sex for two years after marriage in the West would be viewed as
weird (strange) and grounds for annulment. Such behaviour is, however, required
for newly weds in the Dani tribes of New Guinea. Sexual activity for the Dani
before two years would be viewed as a sexual deviance.
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Note that although deviance is a relative act or subjective social behaviour, which
depends on time, place, society, group and situation, there are some acts which
are universally regarded as deviant. Examples of such types of deviant acts are:
cannibalism, theft of personal property, armed robbery, suicide, rape, corruption,
abortion, sexual deviations, delinquency, crime, drug addiction, gambling, mental
disorder, burglary, arson, assault, murder, incest, and child-molestation.
However, we should be critical of these listed deviant acts when we treat them as
universal deviance since there are several exceptions for each of these behaviours
in which they cannot be considered as deviant.
1.2. Deviant Statuses
Deviant status, as a social position, can be two types: achieved and ascribed
deviant statuses. People cast into the deviant realm for their behaviours have an
achieved status: they have gained the deviant label through something they have
done. People regarded as deviant due to the fact that their conditions often have
an ascribed deviant status. It is involuntarily acquired from birth. This category,
according to Adler, et. al., (2000), would include having deviant social, economic,
cultural and political statuses, such as being a deviant racial status, a congenital
physical handicapped, or a height deviants (too tall or too short).
People with ascribed deviant status have nothing to become deviant and nothing
they can do to repair the deviant status, whereas people with achieved deviant
status have done something that exposed them to be seen a deviant.
1.3. Deviance and Crime
Deviance is generally referred to as the violation of social norms whereas crime is
the infraction from written rules and regulations, especially criminal law of a give
society or social group. In most cases, crime involves victims. Criminal acts such
as murder, arson, robbery, burglary, and larceny are totally unacceptable and
condemnable simply because they involve victims. We label these acts crime,
meaning that their violation of the public order is so severe that they must be
handled punitively and coercively by social institutions, like the police, the courts,
and prisons (Adler, et. al., 2002). Most of these and other unmentioned criminal
acts are considered deviant behaviours. However, there are many cases in which
criminal acts cannot be taken as deviant behaviours due to several reasons. Thus,
the argument crime is not always a subset of deviance, is sound. For example,
white-collar crimes are commonly regarded as merely aggressive business
practices.
In the analysis of the relationship between deviance and crime, we can have the
following three possible dimensions: First, the overlap between deviance and
crime is extensive with those crimes of violence, crimes of harm, and theft of
personal properties. These behaviours, according to Kelly, et. al., (2002), are both
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illegal and deviant. Secondly, in the actual sense, much deviance is considered
non-criminals. Some of the examples of such category include obesity, stuttering,
physical handicaps, interracial marriage, unwed pregnancy, and so on. Finally, we
can also have another dimension, different from the above two, of the relationship
between crime and deviance. Here, we can see that there are some criminal
behaviours which do not violate norms and values of a society, for example,
white-collar crimes crimes which need a higher status to be committed and
forms of civil disobedience, where people break laws to protest against them.
Besides of these dimensions, there is still another area of difference between
deviance and crime. As we have tried to mention earlier, deviance includes those
deviations from the normal to the positive direction; but crime never include those
positive deviant behaviour.
Therefore, it is possible to conclude that crime is not a subset of deviance. They
can be overlapping categories only in a single independent dimension (see the
first dimension above).
1.4. Functions and Dysfunctions of Deviance
According to functionalist school, deviance is both functional and dysfunctional
to the social system within which it occurs. Let us begin or discussion with the
dysfunction it brings to the society at large.
1.4.1. Dysfunctions of Deviance
Dysfunctions of deviance, as to sociologists, are the negative or disruptive
consequences of deviance. Obviously, several societies can tolerate a good deal of
deviance without serious results. However, resistant and intensive deviance can
impair and even seriously belittle organized social life. As all we know, organized
social life is a product of the coordinated actions of many different peoples.
Should some people fail to perform their actions at the proper time in accordance
with accepted expectations, institutional life may be threatened. (Vander, 1990:
2005). The writer further argued that if a parent deserts a family, it commonly
complicates the task of child care and child rearing. If in the midst of the battle a
squad of soldiers fails to obey and run away, the entire army with no doubt
becomes overwhelmed and defeated.
Second important dysfunction is that deviance undermines our willingness to
discharge our responsibilities and obligations. It reduces our effort to play our
roles and to contribute to the larger social enterprises. If we realize that some
people get rewards (even disproportionate rewards) without playing by the rule,
we develop resentment and bitterness. Our morale, self-confidence and loyalty
suffer ((Vander, 1990). Suppose that you have known that a number of students
from your class got a grade in the course sociology of deviance illegally through
either by cheating, favour made for a course instructor, or other forms of evil
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deeds. What would your reaction be? Undoubtedly, your motivation to struggle
with the materials (books) and to study long hours would very likely be
undermined and totally discouraged. Similarly, in a society with a higher degree
of corruption, like Ethiopia, the situation will really discourage people who are
engaging in acceptable ways of getting money; and most portion of members of
the society become willing to internalize this illegal mechanism of getting money
which later on can be seen a natural and common ways of being affluent.
Deviance also reduces our trust to other members of our social lives. We know
that our social lives indicate that we trust one another. No trust to others in the
social organization means there is no organized social life. Thus, we must have
confidence that other will play by the rules and regulations constructed around our
social lives in committing ourselves to collective enterprise, we allocate some
resources, forgo some alternatives, and make some investment in the future. We
do so because we assume that other people will do the same, but, would other not
reciprocate our trust, we felt that our own efforts are pointless, wasted, and
foolish. Subsequently, we remain less motivated and willing to play by the rules
of our social lives.
1.4.2. Functions of Deviance
Although deviance undermines social organizations by demotivating as to
contribute to social organization, it may, at the same time, facilitate social
functioning in several ways. Sociologist, such as Durkheim, Erikson, and others
expressed that deviant behaviour is not always harmful to group life. It enables
groups capable of defining boundaries; it preserves stability within the group by
pointing out the contrast between what is within a group and what is outside.
Erickson suggests that without the battle between normal and deviant, the
community would lack a sense of identity, sense of belongingness (or espirit de
corps), and a sense of what makes it a special place in the larger world. Similarly,
Lewis A. Coser argued that deviance is very important to bring about social
cohesiveness in loosely integrated group.
Generally, Durkheim has identified the following four functions of deviance:
a. Deviance affirms cultural values and norms. Culture, as to Macionis
(1997), involves moral choices: people must prefer some attitudes and
behaviours to others, for the write, conceptions of what is morally right
exists only in opposition to notions of what is morally wrong just as there
can be no righteousness without evil; there can be no justice without
crime. (ibid: 211). In short deviance is inseparable from the process of
generating and sustaining morality in a society or social group.
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Demonological Theories,
Individualistic and Naturalistic Theories, and
Social Theories.
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activities. They think that studying the shape of the skull would allow them to tell
which area of a persons brain would dominate behaviour and possibly lead to
crime (Conklin, 2004).
During the late 18th century and early 19th century Franz Gall systematically
promoted his theory that the brain is the source of all personality, including
deviant personality (Martin, 2005). His theories eventually systematized as
phrenology, caught on among many members of the scientific community, who
focused their research on head shape.
Phrenologists, especially Gall and Spurzheim, believed that the mind controlled
human conduct. Mind was made up of specific functions. It had three faculties:
the lower or active propensities (crime causation), moral sentiments and
intellectual faculties. Brain according to them is a physiological organ of the
mind.
According to phrenologists, mind exists within brain. The three different faculties
of human mind have specific locations, and functions. Crime is caused by an
overdevelopment of parts of the brain and underdevelopment of other parts of it.
Thus, it is caused by the greater the development (or lack) of corresponding parts.
Skull, for phrenologists, conforms the shape of the brain. Bumps, lumps,
indications, protuberances, and other carnal features were considered to be
indicators of human brain development, especially development of faculties of
the mind.
According to Martin (2005), an underdeveloped location on the skull suggests
underdevelopment of that portion of the brain, and overdeveloped skull location
suggests overdevelopment of portion of the brain. Using brain maps as guides,
experts believed that they could postulate criminal/delinquent skull shapes as
creative, intelligent, insane, and unintelligent skull shapes.
Phrenology was a viable theory throughout the 19th century, and lingered to the
beginning of the 20th century. It arguably still exists at the level of popular
culture, in films and carnivals. However, it was rejected due to the fact that
empirical research could not support its concepts or conclusions (Conklin, 2004;
and Martin, 2005).
2.3.1.2. Cesare Lombrosos Theory of Atavist
Cesare Lombroso (1835 - 1909) was an Italian university professor and physician
who become worldwide renowned for his studies and theories in the field of
criminology, or the relationship between mental and physical characteristics. He
departed from Galls phrenological movement by examining a variety of physical
anomalies in humans.
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Deviation in the head size and shape from the type common to race and region from which the
criminal comes
Asymmetry of the face
Eye defects and peculiarities
Excessive dimensions of jaws and check bones
Ears of unusual size, or occasionally very small or standing out from the head as do the
chimpanzee
Nose twisted, unturned or flatted in the thieves, or aquiline or breakline in murderers, or .
Lips fleshy, swollen and protruding
Paunches in the cheek like those of small animals
Peculiarities of the plate, such as are found in some reptiles and cleft plates
Chin receding, or excessively long or short and flat, as in apes
Abdominal dentations
Abundance variety and precocity of wrinkles
Abundance of hair, marked by characteristics of the hair of the opposite sex.
Defects of the thorax such as too many or too few ribs, or supernumerary nipples
Inversion of sex characters in the pelvic organs
Excessive length of the arms
Supernumerary fingers and toes
Imbalance of the hemisphere of the brain (asymmetry of cranium)
Taken from Weese, (2005: 12).
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He failed to select a control group from the general population with which
to compare criminals (Conklin, 2004).
The differences between criminals and non-criminals that he documented
were small enough to have been occurred by chance (ibid).
His measurements were often relied on observation leads to poor
reliability (Andargachew, 1988).
He had applied crude statistical techniques.
His theory of atavism and degeneracy as applied to primitive men were
not found in line with post Darwinism thinking (Andargachew, 1988)
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2005). The writer further argued that positivists began to theorize that biology,
psychology, society, and environment can affect human behaviour. Subsequently,
those influences lead to criminality among those who are predisposed towards
deviant behaviour. Lombrosos contribution was to suggest that physiological
traits or qualities and culture, in combination, are central causes of delinquency
and crime.
2.3.1.3. Post Lombrosian Theories
Several researches, inspired by Lombrosos finding, were conducted towards the
verification of Lombrosos theory. However, Charles Goring and Earnest Hooton
were the two most important scholars who conducted researches one after the
other following Lombrosos findings.
Charles Goring, an English prison medical officer, done an important research
and published The English Convict: a statistical research. His main goal of
conducting this research was to determine the recidivist criminal population
differed significantly on physical attributes from the general population as it had
been argued by Lombroso. In order to achieve this goal goring measured 300
English prisoners against a control group of non-criminals (mostly college
students, military personnel and others). He tested on 37 measure and found
significant differences only on two factors: weight and height. Therefore, Gorging
concluded that there was no distinct biological criminal type against Lombrosos
research.
However, he found that offenders generally were several inches shorter than
control group people; were lighter in weight (by 3 to 7 pounds) than controls; and
were less intelligent than controls and genetically so (not because they lacked
education) (McCartney, 2007).
Goring had committed a methodological flaw. The offender group he sampled
was composed entirely of incarcerated recidivists that corresponded to
Lombrosos habitual criminal type.
Goring considered only convicts without a control group; made no
attempt to measure the influence of the environment; considered the
possibility of transmitting criminal techniques by patterns not the
likelihood of their transmitting criminal values; and was unable to
account for the apparent failure of the inherited characteristics to show up
in the females in the families.(Williams, 2004: 132).
Earnest Hooton, professor of physical anthropology at Harvard, found himself
dissatisfied with Gorings finding and spent 12 years in search for the purpose of
disproving Goring and validating Lombroso. For this purpose, he selected 17,000
individuals from ten different states, out of which 14,000 were prisoners and the
rest 300 controls. He tried to do his level best more than Goring had done to
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The ideal type is equal to perfect formed body and perfectly balanced
temperament. Natural beauty fell within normal physical boundaries and any
deviation from the normal was associated with both personality disorder and
behavioural abnormalities, i.e., there is a constitutional (physical) basis for all
diversities of temperament and physique (McCartney, 2008).
Based on the above continuum, Sheldon developed basic assumption that the
primary determinants of behaviour are inherited and constitutional. He also
believed that body type is a reliable indicator of personality and behaviour. In
1940s Sheldon developed a theory of the three body type, or somatotype on the
basis of the three tissue layers: endoderm, mesoderm, and ectoderm. Each of these
body types was associated with personality characteristics, representing a
correlation between physique and temperament.
Sheldons Somatotypes
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1. His conclusions were not much more then speculations due to the fact that
his research method was inadequate.
2. He did not mention whether his samples were good representative of the
population from where these samples selected out.
3. He rejected the legal definition of delinquency and replaced it by a new
definition without adequate justification.
4. The use of photographs in somatotyping would not provide adequate data;
even the definition he himself developed was too vague to be meaningful.
5. His theory, according to critics, was conceptually unsatisfying. His
somatotypes are actually little more than stereotypes that enjoy misleading
face validity.
6. Sociologist Edwin H. Sutherland strongly criticized Sheldons theory that
it has any relationship with heredity at all (Andargachew, 1990).
It is advisable to take into consideration the idea that there were several early
biological theories that have not been discussed so far. To mention some of them,
Goddard argued that anywhere from 25-50% of those persons were found feebleminded. He further explained that it was hereditary feeble mindedness and not
hereditary criminality that accounts for worlds prison population. Dugdale, on his
behalf, tried to show the relationship between criminality and hereditary inferior
genes that traced to certain ancestors.
However, all these early biological theories of deviance and crime are not a fullfledged theories that can explain deviant or criminal behaviours in a
methodologically sound and reliable manner. Therefore, all early biological
theories as a whole were subject to the following criticisms:
1. All early biological theories have given insufficient attention to social,
economic, and environmental actors.
2. Social wings of theories of deviance have changed and biological theories
have fallen out of favour. Most universities of the world are dominated by
social sciences.
3. There were also only little empirical investigations that support early
biological explanation of human behaviours.
4. All early biological theories of crime and deviance were methodologically
weak.
2.3.1.5. Modern Biological Researches on Crime
Modern biological approaches to the study of crime propose that there is a great
variation among individuals in terms of their biological strengths and weaknesses;
and that individuals with certain vulnerabilities or risk factors have a greater
probability of responding to stressful environmental conditions with antisocial
(deviant and criminal) behaviours (Conklin, 2004).
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2004). This internal conflict, for psychoanalysts, is always occurred between the
demand for reason and conscience, and those of instincts of components of
personality. If the instinct becomes victorious, the behaviour will always be
socially unacceptable. Subsequently, there will be a need to solve this conflict in a
socially acceptable way. Otherwise, it may be remaining antisocial. Generally,
psychoanalytical theories of deviance are based on the idea that it is the inner
dynamic process and conflict which determine human behaviour, be it normal or
abnormal.
Several scholars from the field of psychology contend that modern psychoanalysis
and psychology began with the aware of Sigmund Freud. However, Freud did not
write a great deal specifically about deviance and crime. But, it is possible to see
how some of his behavioural theories can be used as explanation of deviance,
delinquency, and crime.
Sigmund Freud divided human personality into three component parts. These are
the id, the ego, and the superego. The id is unconscious area of the mind; and it is
the most primitive part of personality because it is constituted of all basic
biological drives such as the need to drink, to eat, to excrete, to be warm and
comfortable and to obtain sexual outlets. It is always not logical and moral as it
simply seeks absolute pleasure irrespective of the cost this pleasure brings.
According to Freud, the id represented those unsocialized and unstrained
individuals because it needs immediate gratification without any conception of
reality. Moreover, the id is biological or natural. Thus, there is a need for this
biological drive to be suppressed and controlled.
The ego, according to Freud, doesnt exist at birth it is not biological or natural.
But, it is something that the individual learns through his /her interaction with the
society to which he/she belongs. It is largely conscious even though some of it is
sometimes unconscious. Its purpose is to temper the desirous longing of the id
with the reality of what might happen if it is released free. The ego also learns the
reality of how best to serve the id. Slowly, the ego develops and controls the id.
The superego (conscience), on other hand, is the internalized sets of rules and
regulations of the society through a socialization process. Parents and loco
parents are important agents of this process of internalizing norms, rules and
regulations of the society. It is largely a part of unconscious personality. It may,
however, contain some conscious elements, for example, professional code of
ethics is always internalized knowingly. But, superego is basically unconscious in
its operation. As to Freud, superego characterizes those persons who are fully
socialized and conforming members of a society.
Therefore, the ego has two masters the id and the superego. The id seeks
pleasure at whatever cost while the superego tries to suppress this illogical
pleasure seeking id. The outcome is internal conflict which can never be
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completely solved. However, the basis for repression and control is seen as built
upon the relationship of children with their parents and loco parents. This
relationship has strong impact of the development of the superego.
Freud explained that individuals with underdeveloped superego have the
inclination to act totally antagonistically to societal norms and values since their
actors are guided by their id. Thus, here, we can see that behaviours of individuals
with uncontrolled and unsuppressed id become deviant or criminal.
However, Freud also showed another dimension of explaining the relationship
between personality development and the possibility of being deviant. This
dimension is Freuds explanation about Oedipus complex and Electra complex.
The development of Oedipus complex in boys and Electra complex in girls during
human sexual development very much influences the development of the
superego. These two complexes are observable during human sexuality growth.
Oedipus complex is a sexual rivalry arises between the son and his father.
Realizing the supremacy of the father, the son fears castration; and this fear forces
him to control his sexual desire to his mother. As to Freud, it is from the
resolution of this conflict between the boy and his father that the males superego
or conscience develops mostly during the time until five or six years old.
Here, there are two conditions for the occurrence of deviant behaviour. First, if
the problem is not resolved in the way that is mentioned above during the time till
five or six years old, serious personality problems may arise because the superego
remains underdeveloped. If the superego is incompletely formed, then the
individual may have little conscience and so have no reason to retain his desires.
Secondly, if the superego is overdeveloped, the individual may develop guilt
feelings. This guilt feeling may lead the individual to develop a compulsory need
for punishment. This compulsory need for punishment is a continuous process
since the individual feels constant guilt feeling. This constant guilt feeling is
always justified by constant punishment. Thus, the individual remains deviant or
criminal in this way.
The resolution of the Electra complex in women is more complex and Freud
believed that it is less completed. Thus, we do not find any importance of
explaining it pertaining to deviant and criminal behaviour.
Generally, Freuds mode of personality structure can be summarized in the
following table:
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Personality
Structure
Id
Ego
Superego
Guiding Principle
Pleasure
Reality
Description
-unconscious biological drives
- require instant gratification
-help personality refine demand of
id
-helps person adopt conventions
-the moral aspect of personality
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However, without a control group there was no way to show that those personality
traits are more common among criminals than among the general population from
where criminals came (Conklin, 2004).
Generally, several psychologists and psychiatrists believed that criminals tend
towards certain well-defined personalities. They assumed that each individual has
core personality which can explain reactions to most stimuli and will determine
the likelihood of becoming criminality involved. However, different theorists, as
it has been mentioned earlier, have identified and linked different personality
types to criminality and other deviant acts. According to the proponents of
personality theories of deviance and crime, the tendency of being criminal or
deviant can be resolved by controlling those core personalities. These theories
tried to explain human personality on the basis of some personality tests. But, in
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Kohlberg related crime and deviance with his idea of moral development. As to
him people develop morally as they go through these stages in their life span. A
child, for Kohlberg, wants immediate gratification of the need to the development
of love, empathy, and recognition of other peoples viewpoints. Different people
at these three levels of moral development can have the following three types of
types of reasoning:
i. Ecocentric Stage of Reasoning: this is a stage of reasoning which is
characterized by individuals who are totally selfcentered.
ii. Conventional Moral Reasoning: the individual at this stage of reasoning
focuses on the roles of authority in determining
proper action. A person understands that there will
be certain consequences for engaging in certain
actions.
iii. Principle Reasoning: here, the individual gives much more attention to
principles which are universally applicable. They
see the need for principles, not for punishments. A
person uses moral judgment in his duties and
responsibilities.
According to Kohlberg, some people pass from level to level sequentially; but
many others get stalk at one stage. Thus, those people who have got stalk at one
stage of moral development may more likely become deviants than those who
pass stage by stage smoothly. Kohlberg further explained that only few people
may have the chance to arrive at the final stage of moral development most
probably, due to environmental limitations and weak inner control.
Kohlbergs theory has provoked a good deal of criticisms. First, everyone is not
enthusiastic about the concept of a post conventional morality. Hagan (1975) felt
that it is dangerous for people to place their own principles above society and the
law. Secondly, Kohlbergs stages are culturally biased. Sampson (1974) said that
Kohlbergs stages apply to great eastern philosophies. Third, Kohlbergs theory is
also sex biased as his stages were derived exclusively from interviews with male
children (Crain, 1985).
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Conditioning
Psychopathology
Indicators of
Deviance
-Week superego
-Incomplete
personality
development
-response to
environmental
stimuli
Effect on
Behaviour
-psychopathology
-repressed or fixed
personality
Critiques of Theory
-crime and
delinquency
-Dysfunctional
personality
-unpredictability,
instability
-aggressiveness
i
d
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occurred due the mismatch between societal goals and socially approved means
by which goals are attained.
2.4.2.1. Durkheims Anomie Theory of Deviance
Emile Durkheim, the founding father of functionalism in sociology, first studied
anomie during the late 19th century. The concept generally refers to the state of
normlessness vis-a-vis the accepted norms of the greater society (Martin, 2005).
These norms are rules and consensus about the way people should behave in
society. As to Durkheim, after social upheavals such as war, traditional norms of
behaviour no longer work, thus causing societal normlessness. Several deviant
acts like suicide, crime, and other crises exist in societies that do not develop
effective norms. Therefore, anomie, for Durkheim, refers to a broad breakdown of
norms in society, or a disconnecting of an individual from the norms of his
societys contemporary values (ibid).
According to Durkheim, deviance or crime is inevitable and normal aspect of
social life. It is an integral part of all healthy societies. Thus, it is impossible to
have a society totally devoid of deviance and/or crime (Williams, 2004). Thus,
deviance is inevitable due to the fact that not every member of society can be
equally committed to the collective sentiments, the shared values and moral
beliefs of society. Since individuals are exposed to different influences and
circumstances, it is impossible for all to be alike. Therefore, not everybody shares
the same strains about breaking the law (Haralambos, 2005).
Durkheim tried to identify several types of suicide as a deviant act based upon
their relationship to the social facts: integration and regulation (normative and
integrative currents). Suicidal people tended to have less to bind and connect
themselves to stable social norms and goals. However, those who were well
integrated into society and those who were well regulated tended to have the
lowest suicide rates. The two dimensions of the social bond social integration
and social regulation are mostly independent of individuals. Those who are
very much integrated fall under the category of altruism and those who are very
much unintegrated fall under egoism. Similarly, those who are much regulated
fall under fatalism and those who are very much unregulated fall under
anomie.
Durkheims social strain theory attributed social deviance to the extremes of the
dimension of the social bond. Altruistic suicide (death for the good of the society),
egoistic suicide (death for the removal of the self due to or justified by the lack of
ties to others.), anomic suicide (the death due to the confounding of self interest
and societal norms), and fatalistic suicide (death due the prevalence of oppressive
rules and regulations of the society) are the four forms of suicide that can happen
due to extremes. Likewise, individuals may commit crimes for the good of an
individuals group, for the self due to or justified by lack of ties, or because the
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societal norms that place the individual in check no longer have power due to
societys corruption (Kelly, et. al., 2002).
Table 2.2: The Dimensions of the Social Bonds
Social Currents
Normative
Integrative
Weak
Anomic
Egoistic
Strong
Fatalistic
Altruistic
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The writer further explains the function of punishment based upon the point of
view of Durkheim on deviance. Thus, the function of punishment is not to remove
criminals or deviants (negative) in society. Rather, it is to maintain the collective
sentiments at their necessary level of strength. Without punishment, collective
sentiments would lose their force to control behaviour and the crime rate would
reach the point where it becomes dysfunctional. Thus, for Durkheim, both crime
and punishment are inevitable and functional for a healthy society (Kelly, et.al.,
2002). Therefore, crime and deviance are necessary features of every society
(Williams, 2004). Durkheims ideas have had great influence on sociology,
continuing well into the modern era (Martin, 2005). His view on anomie was
taken and modified by Robert K. Merton in explaining deviant behaviour in a
society (Kelly, et.al., 2002).
2.4.2.2. Robert K. Mertons Strain Theory
Robert Merton, according professor Andargachew (1988), took up Durkheims
original idea of anomie and used it to explain deviant behaviour. He used the
concept anomie to explain the social state in which individuals fail to attain the
societal goals using socially approved means. Thus, Mertons explanation about
deviance is based on goals and means. Where Durkheim stated that anomie is the
confounding of social norms, Merton goes further and stated that anomie is a state
in which social goals and the legitimate means to achieve these goals do not
correspond (Kelly, et.al., 2002; and Williams, 2004).
According to Kendall (2003), strain theory focuses on the idea that people feel
strain when they are exposed to cultural goals that they are unable to obtain
because they do not have access to culturally approved ways of achieving those
goals. Merton posited that the greater society encourages its members to use
acceptable means of achieving acceptable goals. In the United States, acceptable
means include hard work, prudent saving, and higher education. Acceptable goals,
on the other hand, comprise comfort, leisure time, social status, and wealth
(Martin, 2005). However, acceptable means are not evenly distributed among
members of the society though societal goals do. In other words, not all members
of a society have equal availability of resources to achieve societys recognized
goals, thus creating strain for those with less empowered members. Strain is
manifested at the desire to achieve these [socially approved] goals; and ones
inability to acquire the legitimate means to achieve them. (ibid: 83). This implies
that those without resources may become criminals or delinquents simply because
of using illegal means to achieve comfort, leisure, prestige, and wealth. Here, the
idea of Mertons individual adaptation comes. Individuals will respond to anomic
condition in different ways. In particular, their reaction will be shaped by their
status in the social structure (Haralambos, 2005 & Kelly, et.al, 2002).
Merton has outline five possible ways in which members of US society can
respond to success goals: conformity, innovation, ritualism, retreatism, and
rebellion. Please refer to the following table.
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Cultural goals
+
Conformity
Innovation
Ritualism
Retreatism
Rebellion
a. Conformity: is the most common response. Members of the society can form
both to success goals and the normative means of reaching them. Conformists
strive for success through acceptable channels. A good example for this mode
of adaptation is a white-collar employee who holds a job to support a family.
Conformity, according to Adler (2000), is very important for societal stability
and continuity. Were this not so, the stability and continuity of society could
not be maintained. (ibid: 62).
Merton saw the remaining four modes of individual adaptation as deviance
(Kendall, 2003), because they reject either acceptable goals or means or both.
b. Innovation: This response accepts the goal of the society but pursue them
with the means which is regarded as unacceptable (Schaefer, 2003). Merton
argues that members of the lower class are most likely to choose this route to
success (Haralambos, 2005), because they are less likely to succeed via
conventional channels. Thus, there is greater pressure among them to deviate.
Educational qualities of lower class people are low, their jobs provide little
opportunity for advancement. As a result, their way to progress is so blocked
that they innovate other mechanisms crime or deviance which promises
greater rewards than legitimate ones.
However, Haralambos (20005) has explained, Merton stresses that membership
of the lower strata is not itself sufficient enough to produce deviance. (p: 414). In
some more traditional European societies, those at the bottom of the social
structure are more likely to accept their status since they have not internalized
mainstream success goals. Instead, they have developed distinctive subculture
which defines success in terms that differ from those of the wider society. But, in
USA, all members share the same success goals which result in the pressure to
innovate and operate forcefully on the lower class (ibid, & Kelly, et.al, 2002).
c. Ritualism: This mode of adaptation involves the abandoning or scaling down
of the loft cultural goals of greater pecuniary success and rapid social mobility
to the point where ones aspiration can be satisfied. It is the opposite of
innovation (Kendall, 2003); persons who cannot obtain expensive material
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However, Mertons strain theory has been severely criticized by several scholars.
Some of these critiques include:
1. It gives too much emphasis on deviance emanating from the poorer class
of society (Martin, 2005 & Andargachew, 1990).
2. Mertons research depends totally on American society that cannot be
generalized for others with different socio-cultural settings (Andargachew,
1998).
3. Merton failed to adequately explain why some many youth and adults who
suffer from strain do not turn to delinquency or crime (Martin, 2005).
4. Criminalities arose not necessarily because of discrepancies between goals
and means, but because of all members of that society were led to believe
there was equality of opportunity. However, in practice, there were sharp
constraints on such assumed quality. Consequently, feelings of unfairness
may arise and lead to the use of illegitimate opportunity structure.
5. Little effort has been made to determine to what extent all acts of deviance
can be accounted for by Mertons five modes of individual adaptation
(Schaefer, 2003).
6. Mertons theory of deviance fails to answer easily such questions as why
do some disadvantaged groups have lower rates of reported crime than
others? Why is criminal activity not viewed as a viable alternative by
many people in adverse circumstances? (Schaefer, 2003).
7. Other critics, like Paul Tappan, argued that American society was not as
criminogenic as Merton argued. Tappan further discussed that the rigidity
of the class structure in the USA was more acceptable by the lower and
lower middle classes, hence, reduced frustration reduced crime rate
(Andargachew, 1990).
2.4.2.3. Agnews General Strain Theory
In the mid of 1970s strain theory came under heavy attacking after having
dominating deviance research in the decades of the 1960s, prompting that it
become abandoned. However, since that time have survived such attacks, but has
felt behind a diminished influence. In 1992, Robert Agnew proposed a general
strain theory that focused on, at least, three measures of strain. Agnews theory
was an extension of Mertons theory (Conklin, 2004). In place of anomie theorys
limited focus on blockage of access to societal goals, especially those involving
monetary success. The three measure of strain proposed by Agnew are:
1. The actual or anticipated failure to achieve positively valued goals;
2. The actual or anticipated removal of positively valued stimuli; and
3. The actual or anticipated presentation of negative stimuli.
(Williams, 2004)
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i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
vi.
vii.
viii.
General strain theory fails to explain the reality that there are people who
commit crimes and delinquent acts and do not possess traits of low
constraints and negative emotionality. Thus, general strain theory focuses
mainly on micro level factors while ignoring those factors at a macro level
of a society.
It does not explain why many of the so-called white-collar crime occur.
According to general strain theory, those who commit crime should be nonwhite, poor with low constraint and high negative emotionality. If it is so,
why is it that more poor people are not committing crime? What about those
who are okay being poor?
General strain theory reveals that juveniles commit crimes and delinquent
acts because they do not have the means by which to properly deal with
their low constraints and high negative emotionality. This explain why
desistance occur later in life for these juveniles, but what about for those
who do not desist from crime as they get older?
It is a sundry fact that crime does occur in slum areas; and this coincides
with the views expressed in general strains theory; but what about those
crimes that are not committed in the slum areas?
Another issue not explained by general strain theory is why hate crimes
occur? Why does discrimination occur at all? Why is terrorism occurs? Why
is war occurs
General strain theory states that crimes are committed to improve
individuals economic situation. What about those crimes which are violent
and non-monetary?
General strain theory also fails to explain why it is that females commit
crimes. Agnew, et. al, (2002) and Crenkovich, et. al (2000) found that more
males than females were prone to having the traits of low constraint high
negative emotionality, so why is it that some females still do commit crime.
According to Anderson (2002), general strain theory does not solve its
shortcomings, and only further researches in more diversified areas such as those
mentioned above will be able to improve on the shortcomings of the theory, as is
the case with any theory that has inadequacies. Once these several questions have
answers backed by research, then general stain theory will be able to adequately
explain all areas of crime and deviance as they occur in society.
2.4.2.4. Relative Deprivation Theory
A significant number of scholars have tried to identify the concept relative
deprivation. Haralambos (2005) applies the term reference deprivation to refer to
subjectively perceived deprivation which people actually feel. Schaefer (2003)
defined it as the conscious experience of a negative discrepancy between
legitimate expectations and present activities. Kendall (2003), on her behalf,
agrees with the idea that relative deprivation is the discontent that people may feel
when they compare their achievements with those of similarly situated persons
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and find that they have less than they think they deserve. Karl Marx explained the
idea of relative deprivation as:
A house may be large or small, as long as the surrounding houses are
small; it satisfies all social demands for a dwelling. But, let a palace
arise besides the little houses, and it shrinks from a little house to a hut
(cited in Kendall, 2003: 643).
Therefore, a relative deprived person is dissatisfied because he feels down trodden
relative to some appropriate reference group (Schafer, 2003).
Relative deprivation has been seen as an important cause for some forms of
crimes and delinquency, and social movement. Conklin (2004) has revealed this
condition (relationship between crime and relative deprivation as follows:
Even more important than poverty of unemployment as a cause of crime
may be the poor or unemployed people perceive their situation. Most
poor and unemployed people are law-abiding, and the crime rate of the
poor in many developing nations are lower than the crime rates of
Americans, who have higher absolute standards of living. For instance,
blacks in United States have higher incomes, on the average, than black
Africans, but black Americans have higher crime rates than black
Africans (Conklin, 2004: 147).
Social scientists, especially political scientists and sociologists, have used relative
deprivation as a potential cause of social movement and deviance, leading to
extreme situation to political violence such as rioting, terrorism and civil wars or
social deviance such as crime and delinquency. Individuals engage in some
deviant behaviour when their institutional means do not match cultural goals.
Runciman has identified four preconditions of relative deprivation of object X by
A as follows:
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norms and values that deviate from the mainstream culture of the society. Often
structural and subcultural theories of deviance are combined in Albert Cohens,
Thorsten Sellins, and Walter Millers theories of deviance.
2.4.3.1. Thorsten Sellins Culture Conflict Theory of Deviance
Robert Keel (2005) has discussed that rather than conceptualizing deviance as a
problem of the stress and strain related to a weakening of social control, the idea
rooted in the Marxist image of social inequality and competition, of the social
system being constituted by diverse cultural groups with conflicting interests,
value and norms emerged. Within the conflict perspective, deviance is
conceptualized not as abnormal behaviour brought on by faulty socialization of
normative ambiguity, but as a normal political progress brought about by intergroup struggle for dominance (Kelly, et. al, 2002). Thorstin Sellin (1938) realized
the cultural diversity of modern industrial society. For him, law embodied the
normative structure of the dominant cultural of ethnical group.
The criminal law contains the crime norm, inappropriate behaviour and its
punishment, reflecting the value and interest of the groups successful in achieving
control of legislative process. The conduct norm of others less powerful groups
reflecting their specific social situation and experiences often come into conflict
(culture conflict) with the crime norms. This leads to the production of deviant or
criminal definition surrounding everyday behaviour of individual member of
those less powerful groups. Sellin indicated that a society diversified and became
more frequent conflict; therefore, deviance would increase (Kelly, et. al, 2002).
Therefore, the main focus of Sellin was directed towards the explanation of the
conduct norms which are a unique set of values and behaviours which
characterize a minority within a larger society. In order to see this, Sellin
developed a major premise, i.e., obedience to the norms of their subculture puts
people in conflict with the norms of the dominant culture. According to him,
conduct norms are acquired through childhood socialization, thus, all cultures
establish their own conduct norms. This socialization process will be applicable
both to the subgroups and to the mainstream norms. When laws are enacted, the
will represent the norms, values and interests of the dominant cultural or ethnical
group which may produces broader cultural conflict. When the two cultures
interact and one seeks to extend its influence into the other, each side is likely to
react protectively. If the balance of power is relatively equal, an accommodation
will usually be reached. But, if the distribution of power is unequal, everyday
behaviour of the minority group may be defined as deviant. Therefore, the more
diversified and heterogeneous a society becomes, the greater the probability of
more frequent conflict as subgroups that live by their own rules break the rules of
the other. Hence, as per the idea of Sellin, it can be concluded that crime and
deviant are the products of clash of norms.
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frustrated and classified with their low status in society. They resolve their
frustration not by turning to criminal path to success, as Merton argued, but by
rejecting the success goal of the mainstream culture. They replace them with
alternative sets of norms and values in terms of which they can achieve success
and gain prestige (Macionis, 1997). According to Cohen, the result is a delinquent
subculture which is a collective solution to the common problems of lower
working class adolescents.
The delinquent subculture rejects the mainstream culture and, at the same time,
reverses it. For Cohen, the delinquent subculture takes its norms from the larger
culture but turns them upside down. That is why a high value is placed by this
subculture on activities such as stealing, vandalism, and truancy which are
condemned in the wider society (Haralambos, 2005).
Cohen describes the delinquent subculture in the following way. Throughout
there is a kind of malice apparent, an enjoyment of discomfiture of others, a
delight in the defiance of taboos. (cited in Haralambos, 2005).
Cohen demonstrates this with the example of defecating on the teachers desk.
However, the delinquent subculture is more than an act of deviance, a negative
reaction to society which has denied opportunity to some of its members. It
renders positive rewards. Those who perform successfully, in line with the values
of the subculture, gain recognition and prestige in the eyes of their peers.
Therefore, stealing becomes, as to Cohen, not so much a means of achieving
success in terms of the mainstream goals, but a valued activity to which attaches
glory, progress and profound satisfaction.
Cohen argues that in this way lower working class boys solve the problem of
status frustration. They reject mainstream values which offer them little chance of
success and substitute deviant values in terms of which they can be successful
delinquents do not motivated by monetary rewards.
This is a kind of structural explanation in the same way as it was given by
Merton. Haralambos explained that there is greater pressure on certain groups
within the social structure since there is unequal access to opportunity. However,
he departs from Mertons view when he sees some delinquents as being a
collective response directly by subcultural values.
Cohens delinquent subculture theory does not escape from criticism. David
Bordva argues that Cohen uses the idea of lower class subculture for the purpose
of explaining the educational failure of lower working class boys, with the notion
of cultural deprivation, but he never uses cultural deprivation to explain
delinquency. Thus, whereas cultural deprivation is passed on from generation to
generation, this doesnt seem to happen with the delinquent subculture.
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According to Miller, youth who obey the street rules of lower class life (focal
concern) find themselves in conflict with the dominant culture. It results from
socialization into a subculture with a distinctive tradition.
Miller presents a picture of member of the lower class living in a world of their
own, totally insulated from the rest of the society. They appear to pursue their
focal concern with no reference to the mainstream culture (Haralambos, 2005).
However, many sociologists have criticized Millers theory. They explain that he
disregards the fact that many lower class people actually do conform to societal
norms, they cannot totally be insulated. David Bordva says that the involvements
in lower class culture are so deep and exclusive that contacts with agents of
middle class dominated institutions, especially the school have no impact. Unlike
Miller, most sociologists who use the concert of subculture to explain deviance,
see it as secondary to structural explanations. This theory has also been criticized
for its failure to address female delinquents. It has also been criticized for being
tautological, for example, it is a tautological discussing the idea that delinquents
have focal concerns will result in delinquency.
2.4.3.4. The Differential Opportunity Theory: Cloward and Ohlin
In 1960, American sociologists Richard A. Cloward and Lloyd E. Ohlin combined
and developed many insights of Mertons and Cohens view points. They
proposed a theory of delinquent gang known as differential opportunity theory.
They follow Merton in emphasizing cultural goals and the means with which
people use to reach such goals (Conklin, 2004). While Merton belied that
innovation is the form of deviance occurs when people lack access to the
legitimate means to reach currently approved goals band turn to illegitimate
means to achieve those goals, Cloward and Ohlin accept this theory and added to
it the idea peoples access to both the legitimate and illegitimate means is socially
structured. By the same token, they convinced themselves to the idea that there is
differential opportunity to attain cultural goals by legitimate means but there is
also differential opportunity to use illegitimate means to reach those goals.
Cloward and Ohlin explained that delinquent subculture flourish in the lower
class and take a particular forms so that the means for illegitimate success are no
more equally distributed than the means for legitimate success. They further
explain that there are two kinds of opportunities which are differentially
distributed: access to learning structures and access to performance structures.
Learning structures are appropriate environments for the acquisition of the values
and skills associated with the performance of a particular role whereas
performance structures are opportunities to join with other who share a similar
problem of adjustment and opportunities to gain peer approval for ones
behaviour (Conklin, 2005).
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However, they are criticized for several serious limitations. Conklin (2004)
mentioned that both Cloward and Ohlin offer no evidence that lower class gang
boys are socialized to want to reach those cultural goals, to which they have been
socialized, and no evidence that the discrepancy between goals and legitimate
means is greater for lower class members than for other lower class youths. Like
Merton, they focused on sociocultural factors such as institutionalized access to
opportunities, rather than individual decisions to act. A more complete theory, for
Conklin, might also look at the way people seek out or actually use opportunities
to engage in crime and delinquency.
2.4.4. The Ecology of Deviance: The Chicago School
During the 1920s, a group of sociologist based in Chicago, which later became
known as the Chicago school, developed an ecological approach to the study of
social life. Ecology refers to the relationship between organisms and their
environments. Member of Chicago school applied this concept to the growth of
cities and argued that behaviour could be explained in terms of the urban
environment. Under this subtopic, we are going to treat the ideas forwarded by
several ecological theorists such as Clifford Shaw, Henry McKay, Robert E. Park,
and Ernest W. Burgess.
2.4.4.1. Robert E. Park and Ernest W. Burgess
The sociological research of the Chicago school was mainly inspired by he
teaching and theoretical understandings of Park and Burgess, the most influential
sociologists at the University of Chicago during the social disorganization period
(Orcutt, 2003). They introduced an ecological analysis of crime causation. They
developed the idea of the nature of urban areas which consisted of the concentric
zone which extends out from downtown central business district to the commuter
zone at the fringes of the city. Each zone has its own structure and organization,
characteristics and unique inhabitants. This had been known as Burgesss
Concentric Zone Theory.
Although the organic models of society and other biological analogies were taken
less seriously by Chicago sociologists than they were by the social pathologists.
Park, particularly, made extensive use of ideas adopted from the biological fields
of plant and animal ecology in his theoretical work on the structure and change of
urban community. Without denying the importance of social and cultural aspects
of urban life, Park argued that community organization was additionally based on
nonsocial processes such as the competition for space in urban areas, patterns of
land use and the distribution of population in the urban community were shaped
by an ecological struggle for survival as well as cultural factors (Orcutt, 2003)
Burgess, Parks close colleague, proposed a systematic application of this general
ecological theorizing in his concentric model of urban growth. He used the city of
Chicago as a concrete illustration of graphic model. This model divided the city
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into five concentric zones based on typical patter of land use for commercial or
residential purpose. Zone one, the central business district or loop in Chicago, is
restricted to the commercial uses whereas zone three up to five are residential
areas, ranging from a zone of workingmens home to the suburban commuters
zone. Zone two, the zone in transition, is a mixed area where low rent, slum,
residents are being replaced by businesses and factories (Orcutt, 2003).
While Burgesss model was, in part, an attempt to describe the typical pattern of
urban land use at a give point in time, he believed that it was most useful for
understanding the process ecological change in the city. Ecological transition was
common in urban areas. As a result of ecological competition for space which
originates in zone one, all of the Zones in Burgesss model steadily expand
outward every time.
Although the ecological zone suggests by Burgesss model rippled throughout the
entire urban area, the impact of ecological competition and change was most
marked in zone two, the zone in transition. It was characterized by residential
deterioration, rapid social change, and several social disorganization. People from
radically different backgrounds lived side by side in this impersonal slum
environment. These factors produce an absence of interpersonal relationships and
a braking down of informal social controls, the Chicago sociologists viewed it as
inevitable that this areas would experience a high degree of social disorganization
and high rates of social problems and deviance crime, delinquency, suicide,
mental disorder, divorce, and so forth.
Following Burgesss research, several scholars conducted similar investigations
and came up with the findings which were consistent to Burgesss findings. These
consistent findings from the ecological research by Chicago school researchers
provided the sociology of deviance with its first well-supported empirical
generalizations about the environmental characteristics. The most prominent
scholars who followed burgess footprint include Shaw and McKay discussed
below.
2.4.4.2. Shaw and McKay 1929
Shaw and McKay were researchers at the Chicagos institute for juvenile research
and cooperators with Chicagos sociology department. They were interested in
Park and Burgesss conception of the natural urban area of Chicago, and used this
model for the purpose of investigating the relationship between crime rates and
different urban sections. Thus, Shaw and McKay developed their model of
analysis of deviance and crime based on the ideas of Park and Burgess. They
divided the city into five zones, draw at two mile intervals, and radiating outwards
in concentric circles from the central business district. They examined the rate of
crime for these five zones. Using statistics on male delinquency from the juvenile
court, they discovered that the delinquency rate steadily decreases from zone one,
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the areas covered the central business district, to zone five on the outskirt of the
city.
Shaw and McKay explained their results as follow: zone two, also known as
transition zone, has relatively higher rate of population turnover due to (1) rural
migrants to the city often begin their urban lives in zone two. Since the migrants
have little money, they prefer to dwell in this zone so as to take the advantage of
the cheapest accommodation. Many migrants move out to higher income areas
once they have become established, so making rooms for the new arrivals. And
(2) the expansion of the central business district into the zone of transition. This
produces population movement as the central business district invades the former
residential areas. In addition, other factors such as the prevalence of substandard
housing, limited parental supervision, and intergenerational culture conflict also
characterized the zone.
Based on these conditions, Shaw and McKay argued that the processes of city
growth explain the high concentration of the crime and delinquency in the zone of
transition (Zander Vanden, 1990; and Haralambos, 2005).
A population turnover rate prevents the formulation of a stable community and
results in social disorganization. The indications of social disorganization include
delinquency, prostitution, gambling, illegal drug use, a high consumption of
alcohol, violence and broken families. Such behaviour can flourish, because in an
area of shifting population social controls are weak. Controls such as gossip,
public opinions, public surveillance and parental control are not sufficient strong
to prevent the development of deviant norms and values.
The point of view of the Chicago school has the virtue of linking structural and
substructural theories within theories of community. Shaw and McKay
understood that the rate of delinquency corresponds closely to economic factors.
Income rises constantly from zone one to zone five. Delinquency rates decline
steadily from the inner city slum areas to the tree-lined suburbs. Thus, a part of
their theory echoes Mertons structural view.
Limitations of the Ecological Theories
There are problems regarding the concept of social disorganization and these
problems are what contributed to its decline in importance. These problems are:
It confuses cause and effect. It was locked into a circular argument in their
theorizing about the social disorganization and deviance. Why does the
deviant behaviour occur in the urban slums? Because the slum area is
disorganized. But, how do we know the slum area is disorganized? Because
it has high rate of deviant behaviour. So it goes with no way of
distinguishing the cause from its effect (Orcutt, 2003). Thus, this is the
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tendency for the theory to be tautological saying the same thing twice
over in different words. (Haralambos, 2005).
Social disorganization was rather subjective and judgmental all the while
pretending to be objective. Observers failed to free themselves from biases
and place their own value judgments on social behaviour. The Chicago
sociologists still tend to equate the good life of an organized society with a
stereotypic image of the stable rural community.
It tried to explain crime as an almost entirely lower class phenomenon, and
no way included middle and upper class deviance and crime rates. Thus, it
was biased in that it favoured middle class students. Those in the lower
strata were assumed to have higher levels of crime rates because their
members lived in the most socially disorganized area of the city.
Social change was often confused with social disorganization, and little
attention was paid to explain why some social changes were disorganized
and why others were organized.
What is disorganized? At some times, things may seem like disorganization
but at other times, they may be highly organized systems of competing
norms and values. The concept produces a little ambiguity.
Martin (2005 also argued that ecological theory has had over-reliance on
social structure to explain delinquency and crime. But, other factors such as
anomie or in-migration of criminally inclined people who drive out lawabiding residents can also explain deviance. Thus, it can, however, be
concluded that ecology theory fails to consider other factors contributing to
the behaviour.
The emphasis on social disorganization tends to underplay the degree of
organizations of criminal and delinquent subculture (Haralambos, 2005).
The ecological theory has also been criticized for the tendency to see man
simply reacting to forces outside him and beyond his control. Many
sociologists reject the positivist approach which tends to see man simply
reacting to the external stimuli. Thus, they see man as active actor within the
social system (ibid).
Dear readers, we have found that it is important to address David Matzas
Delinquency and Drift theory here since he has several critical evaluations about
the subcultural and structural theories of deviance.
2.4.4.3. Delinquency and Drift Theory: David Matza
As we have tried to show under subtopic 2.4.2 above, the three sociological
theories namely the structural, the subcultural and the ecological theories mostly
deal with the origin of deviance in general and delinquency in particular. They
tend to see deviant as something produced and directed by forces beyond his
control. In a series of writings during the 1960s American sociologist David
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as the sibling pair, the gang, or the friendship clique. (Kelley, et. al.,
2002, p: 126).
These techniques of neutralization show that delinquents do feel shame i.e.,
partial acceptance of norms and values. If there were a subculture, there would be
no need to neutralize this guilt and shame.
Subterranean Values of Matzas Explanation
Once a person has broken away from constrains of society, delinquency is a
possibility. They may or may not beak the law aka drift. Note that subterranean
values encourage you to be aggressive, enjoy yourself, but at appropriate times
alongside the formal values they would hold.
Matza suggests that delinquents are simply more likely than most of us to behave
according to subterranean values in inappropriate situations. If we all hold
subterranean values; and could all justify our actions if necessary, why is it that
only some young people commit crime? Matza forwarded that youth is a period in
no mans land not yet adult but no linger child. Youth feel that they lack and
control over their own lives, and they long to gain some power over their destiny
(mood of fatalism). This period of drift loosens the adolescents from the
constraining bonds of society, so they are more susceptible to suggestion of
deviant acts by the peer group. This may be due to the preparation; they may, for
example, need or may be needed to be pushed over the dividing line between
deviancy and conformity for the first time.
However, there deviant career is not committed to the way of life of crime, and he
tends to drift in and out of crime, for instance, when a decent job opportunity
presents itself.
Critical Evaluation of Delinquents Drifts
If a youth wishes to gain control over their destiny, why commit a crime? Surely
any act would do. This theory makes no attempt to delinquency in a wider
framework or structural location of economic and social circumstances that drive
male working class youths into greater levels of delinquency than any one else.
Tylor, Walton, and Young raise doubt about the view that those who are
employing the technique of neutralization are never challenging the dominant
values in society. Stephen Box (1981), on his behalf, suggests that evidence
indicated that criminals are remorseful may not be sincere. Cynics have
pinpointed the difficulty in operationalizing the concept of drift.
2.4.5. Control Theories of Deviance
Control theories focus on another aspect of why some people never engage in
deviant behaviour. The main assumption of control theories is that delinquent acts
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result when an individuals bond to society is weak or broken (Kelley, et. al.,
2002; & Adler, 2000). Thus, these theories embrace two highly complex
concepts: the bond of an individual to society. Thus, it may not be surprising that
they have formed the basis of explanations to most forms of unusual behaviour.
Besides, control theories have identified and described the elements of the bond to
society to several ways and conditions. Some of the control theorists are Walter
Reckless, Travis Hirschi, Gresham Sykes and David Matza. However, only the
first two are going to be discussed under this topic, because we have already
discussed Gresham Sykes and David Matzas idea under subtopic 2.4.4.3 earlier.
2.4.5.1. Containment Theory: Walter C. Reckless
Sociologist Walter C. Reckless proposed containment theory of deviance in the
year 1961. This theory explains that delinquency as the interplay between two
forms of control known as inner (internal) and outer (external) containments. His
containment theory assumes that for every individual a containing external
structure as well as external protective structure exist (Kendall, 2003;
Andargachew, 1990). These two containments protect the individuals from
violation of the social and legal norms of a society. Thus, these two containments,
according to Reckless, are responsible to buffer, protect, and insulate individuals
against deviance and delinquency as well as crime. Reckless, however, wanted his
theory to explain not only deviation but also conformity.
For containment theory society produces pushes and pulls that move people
towards deviant behaviours; however, some people insulate themselves from such
pressures by having positive self-esteem and good social group cohesion
(Kendall, 2003). Reckless argued that many people do not resort to deviance
because of these two containments inner and outer.
Inner containments are self components which include self-control, a sense of
responsibility, good self-concept, strong ego, well developed conscience, high
frustration tolerance, and resistance to diversions. These all are strength of ones
personality. On the other hand, outer containments refer directly to ones social
environment or social setting. These are normative constraints in which society
and social groups use to control its members. Thus, outer containments include
belongingness or identification with the group, effective supervision, cohesion
among group members or togetherness, opportunities with achievements,
reasonable limits and responsibilities, alternative ways or means of satisfaction,
reinforcement of goals, norms, values and disciplines. Of these two types of
containments, Reckless suggested, inner containments are more important,
because he believed that it is this containments that form ones support system in
mobile or industrialized social setting of modern life. But, in less mobile or less
industrialized societies, outer containment is much more effective as the clan, the
caste, the tribe, etc. retain their effectiveness. As to Reckless, the stronger ones
inner containments, the least likely one would involve in deviant behaviours
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including crime and delinquency; the weaker ones inner containments, the more
prone to crime one would become.
Generally, Reckless concluded that those with the strongest containment
mechanisms are able to withstand external pressures that might cause them to take
part in deviant behaviours. If, by chance, there are conditions that may lead them
to deviant behaviours, they are negated, neutralized, rendered impotent or paired
by the two containing buffers (Andargachew, 1990).
Reckless identified those pulls and pushes which motivate individuals to
participate in deviant behaviour internal pushes, external pulls and external
pressures. Internal pushes are personal factors which include restlessness,
discontent, rebellion, anxiety, and hostility whereas external pulls include deviant
peers, membership in deviant or delinquent gangs, and pornography. Finally,
Reckless distinguished external pressures as those living conditions which give
rise to crime and delinquency. These include relative deprivation, poverty,
unemployment, insecurity and inequality.
According to Reckless, external containments are found differently in modern and
traditional societies. In industrialized societies, external containments are to be
found in the family and other supportive groups in which individuals actively
participate while in traditional societies the clan, the neighbourhood, the village,
the caste, the tribe, and the sect act as supportive external buffers, in addition to
the family.
According to this theory, the components of the two containments are not causes
of being deviant; rather they are buffers that would assist within standing
pressures, pulls and pushes. When components are weak or are absent, an
individual is likely to deviate from institutionalized social and legal norms
(Andargachew, 1990).
Containment theory is applicable to all types of deviant behaviours along with
some exceptions. The theory is unable to explain biologically or psychologically
impaired individuals. It cannot also explain either those crimes occurring in those
narrowly drawn subcultures or social groups which are organized around a total
commitment to deviant behaviours.
Limitations of Containment Theory
1.
Containment theory did not say about procedures by which one comes either
well or poorly socialized, despite of its focus on the process of socialization.
2. Recklesss containment theory failed to explain that why not everyone who
deviants or commits a crime is treated as a deviant or criminal.
3. Containment theory is committed only to those deviant or criminal behaviours
other than psychopathic, biological and other psychological deviants or
criminals.
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delinquents are (Conklin, 2004). Consequently, he concluded that the closer the
childs relationship with his parents and the more intimate the communication
with them, the less likely that child is to be delinquent.
While examining bonds between a child and school, Hirschi found that an ability
to do well in school is linked with delinquency through a series of chain events.
He argued that academic incompetence leads to poor school performance, which
leads to a dislike to schools, which, in turn, results in rejection of teachers and
authority that finally produces acts of delinquency (Keel, 2005). Conklin
strengthened this view by adding the idea that the most academically successful
students are the least likely to be delinquent for they are most attached to the
school and its community. In relation to the third type of attachment, Hirschi
came up with the idea that delinquents are more likely to have delinquent friends
than non-delinquents are.
This theory of social bond explains that ones attachment to parents and schools
overshadows the bond formed with ones peers. Hirschi revealed that adolescents
who have weak relationship with their parents tend to have weak relationship with
their peers, and those closest to their parents have the greatest number of close
friends. Hirschi, still, has found another fourth dimension of attachment
conventional lines of action. Young people who do not aspire to conventional
lines of action are more involved in adult activities during adolescence. Adult
privilege without adult responsibilities might compensate for a bleak outlook on
the future. Delinquents are more likely than non-delinquents to see their high
school years and the year immediately after as the times in their lives when they
will be the happiest. They are, especially, likely to engage in delinquency because
their lack of orientation towards the future frees them from conventional pursuits
such as education and a career (Conklin, 2004).
According to Hirschi, adolescents who have fewer attachment to family, schools,
peers, and conventional lines of action are more likely to involve in delinquency
because they do not feel societys rules are binding on them and do not fear the
disapproval of others. Refer the following diagrammatical presentation of this
idea.
Figure2.1: Hirschi Model of Delinquency
Lack of attachment to
parents
Lack of attachment to
conventional lines of action
Delinquency
Lack of attachment to
schools
Lack of attachment to
peers
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3. Social control theory fails to take into account possible reciprocal relationship
between social bonds and delinquency, focusing instead on the way that weak
attachments lead to delinquency. Scholars argued that weak attachment to the
family and school caused delinquency, but also that delinquent behaviour
reduced the strength of bonds to family and school, which in turn increased
delinquency.
4. Social control theory wants to explain delinquency, not adult crime per say.
2.4.6. Social Learning Theories of Deviance
Some theory in criminology believe that criminality is a product of socialization,
how individuals have been influenced by their experiences or relationship with
family, peer groups, teachers, church, authority figures and other agents of
socialization. These are known as learning theories, specifically social learning
theories, because criminologist never really embraced the psychological
deterministic inherent in most learning psychologies. They are also less concerned
with the content of what is learnt (like cultural deviance theories). However, it is
not deniable that criminologists are more concerned with explaining the social
process by which anyone, regardless of class, race, gender, or caste would have
the potential to become a criminal. You, too, can learn to be a serial
killer.(Robert Hale, 1998). Social learning, social control, differential association
and labeling theories are all examples of social process theories.
Learning is defined as habits and knowledge that develop as a result of
experiences with the environment as opposed to instincts, drives, reflexes and
genetic predispositions. The history of learning has a long tradition in human life.
Associationism (developed by Aristotle, Hobbes, Locke and Hume) is the oldest
learning theory. It was based on the idea that mind organizes sensory experiences
in some ways, and is called cognitive psychology today. It is relied upon the idea
that mind require a physical response by the body in order to organize sensory
associations. Imitation sometimes called contagion, is the oldest social learning
theory developed by Gabriel Tarde (1843-1904), a sociology who argued that
crime begins as fashion and later becomes a custom.
Under social learning theories, theories such as the Law of Imitation (Gabriel
Tarde), Differential Association Theory (Edwin Sutherland), Differential
Identification Theory (Daniel Glaser), and Differential Reinforcement Theory
(Akeres and Burgess) are going to be discussed.
2.4.6.1. The Law of Imitation: Gabriel Tarde (1843-1904)
The root of the learning theory perspective in sociology can be dated back to the
era of Gabriel Tarde. He gave much more emphasis on the social learning of
crime which is the cornerstone of the present-day sociological theories of crime
and deviance. The bodies of Tardes criminological theories are found in two of
his works La Criminalite Comparee in 1886 and La Philosophie Penale in 1890.
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Tarde was totally dead against the positivist criminology of Cesare Lombroso
which held that criminality was inherited and that someone borne criminal
could be identified by physical defects (refer to 2.3.1.2 on page 23. Instead, Tarde
proposed that the social environment is crucial both in the development of
criminal behaviour and its control.
Revealing a much more positive response in USA than in Europe, Tardes work
has had a long impact on sociology, criminology, and social psychology fields of
study which seek to better understand the social nature of human beings and,
thus, to assist the development of healthy societies.
Jean-Gabriel Tarde believed that the discipline that three distinctive, yet
interrelated processes characterize human society invention, imitation and
opposition. He observed that only one percent of people could make creative
association in their minds, and can, thus, be regarded as gifted or inventive.
According to him, invention is the source of all human progresses. Opposition,
for Tarde, takes place when two or more inventions come into conflict with one
another, or when new and old ideas collide. Opposition may be associated with
social groups, like nations, regions, or social classes, or may remain inside the
minds of individuals. The outcome of opposition is often an adaptation.
The third process which was very much important for the emergence and
development of learning theories of human behaviour was imitation. Tarde
explained that imitation is widespread in society. Most people are not inventive,
but only copy what they see from other people. Imitation, therefore, refers to the
engagement in behaviour after the direct or indirect observation of similar
behaviour by others (Akers and Jensen, 2003). Whether or not the behaviour
modeled by others will be imitated, is affected by the character of the models, the
behaviour observed and the observed consequence of the behaviour the
behaviour can either be prosocial or antisocial (deviant and criminal).
Tarde identified three laws of imitation the law of close contact, the law of
imitation of superiors by inferiors, and the law insertion. Tardes influence in the
area of criminology and sociology of deviance is observable through these three
laws of imitation. He formulated a theory of imitation and suggestion through
which he tried to explain criminal and deviant behaviours. According to him, the
origin of deviance is similar to fashions and fads, and that his three laws of
imitation can explain people engage in crime and deviance. These three laws are
explained as follows:
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1. The law of close contact: explains that people have a higher inclination to
imitate or copy the fashions or behaviours of those around them. Thus, if one
is constantly surrounded by deviant behaviour, he is more likely to imitate that
type of behaviour than other, of which that person knows little. This implies
that direct contact with deviance fosters more deviance. Tarde convinced
himself with the idea that as people becomes denser; they will start to imitate
each other more. He suggested that the mass media played a key role in
proliferation crime as criminals copied each others style which they learn
about through the media. Dear readers, what do you think about Ethiopian
media pertaining to this issue?
2. The law of imitation of the superiors by the inferiors: is Tardes second law
of imitation which explains that the poor or the young or the powerless imitate
the rich or the more experienced or the powerful, and that crimes among the
poor are in fact their attempts to imitate wealthy, high-status, and powerful
people. Here, you can recall the condition exists between contemporary
Ethiopians and American rappers and film actors.
3. The law of insertion: is the third law. It says that new behaviours are
superimposed on older ones and subsequently either reinforce or extinguished
previous ones. If criminals, for instance, start to use a new type of weapon,
then they will intend to use the older one anymore.
Therefore, Tardes laws of imitation exposes the idea that deviant behaviours are
like those normal behaviours which are learned by contacting people. According
to him, in order for the deviant act to be imitated or copied, they must be new and
owned by superiors. Thus, close contact with these newly created superiors
behaviours accelerates the chance to be copied.
Tardes three laws of imitation had an enormous impact on the later study of
deviance and social control.
2.4.6.2. Differential Association Theory: Edwin Sutherland
Edwin Sutherland, in his work Principle of Criminology in 1939/47, developed an
important sociological theory known as Differential Association Theory.
Sutherland is most influential criminologist of the 20th century. His theory is more
of social psychological. Differential association theory changes focus from
structure to process due to the fact that it is the process of social learning in which
criminals/delinquents and law-abiding people learn their behaviour from their
associations with others.
The main focus of differential theory was all criminal or negative deviant
behaviours. It is established upon the premise people learn to commit crime or to
deviate from normal through exposure to antisocial definitions. By the same
token, differential association theory states that people have a greater tendency to
deviate from societal norms when they frequently associate with individuals who
are more favourable towards deviance than conformity (Kendall, 2003).
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According to this theory people imitate or otherwise internalize the quality of this
association. Delinquency and criminality are learned behaviours that are acquired
from interaction with others who participate in criminal life-style, so that the
difference between offenders and non-offenders lines in individual choices . . .
offenders and non-offenders strive for similar goals, but they choose different
avenue to achieve these goals. These choices are based on the lesson they take
from exposure to certain kinds of life experience. . . . (Martin, 2005: 84).
Since those structural theories of deviance and crime were severely criticized for
their failure to explain all forms of deviance and crime, differential association
theory rejected them, and appears as important theory for the 20th century crime
causation and explanation of deviance. Differential association theory is generally
constructed upon the following postulates:
1. Criminal/deviant behaviour is learned: According to Sutherland, criminal
behaviour is not inherited, as such; also a person who is not already
trained in crime does not invent criminal behaviour, just as a person does
not make mechanical inventions he has had training in mechanics.
2. Criminal behaviour is learned in interaction with other people in process
of communication: This communication can either be verbal or nonverbal.
3. The principal part of the learning of criminal behavior occurs within
intimate personal groups: This shows the claim that crime is learned in
face-to-face interaction in small groups. This argument rejects the
possibility that such behaviour is learned from the media. Negatively, this
means that impersonal agencies of communication . . . movies and
newspapers play a relatively unimportant part in the genesis of criminal
behaviour. (Adler, 2000: 75).
4. When criminal behaviour is learned, the learning includes: a) techniques
of committing the crime which are sometimes very complicated,
sometimes very simple. b) The specific directions of motives, drives,
rationalization, and attitudes. Conklin (2004) further explained this
principle when he says that little or no skill is needed to commit some
crimes. The murder of spouse requires little skill. However, embezzlers
have to learn verbalization that allows them to use their accounting skills
for illegal ends, but they do not need to learn specific techniques of
embezzlement.
5. The specific directions of motives and drives are learned from definitions
of the legal code as favourable or unfavourable: this statement assumes
that people orient their actions towards the law. In other words, the law is
not irrelevant to any individual who is deciding how to behave. As to
Sutherland, some situations are defined as favourable to violation of the
law; for example, an unattended bicycle may be seen as an opportunity for
theft. However, the same situation can also be defined as unfavourable to
violation of the law with the unattended bicycle being seen as a chance to
alert the owner to the risk of theft.
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the individual are basically relevant for Glaser, to the extent that they can be
shown to affect the choice of behaviour.
Orcutt (2002) argued that it was not clear where Glaser inclines to reverse
differential association theory completely or only to substitute his brief statement
of differential identification for some of the statements in Edwin Sutherlands
theory. The writer further explained that differential identification theory is less
specific than differential association theory, particularly pertaining to the nature
and content of social learning process. Even though Glasers theory was less
deterministic than Sutherlands, it was less sociological than differential
association theory. In other words, contrary to Sutherlands focus on the variation
in the social relationships and cultural meanings to which an individual is actually
exposed, Glasers explanation shifts attention to psychological phenomena
variation in the individual identification with other persons, whether those persons
are real or imaginary.
2.4.6.4. Differential Reinforcement Theory Roland Akers and Robert
Burgess
During the 1950s and 1960s there had been a number of nut breaks of new
theories in the sociology world. In 1965, Roland Akers and Robert Burgess came
together to introduce a new learning theory. They published an article on
differential reinforcement theory of criminal and deviant behaviour. It was the
re-formulation of differential association theory by combining it with elements of
psychological learning theory. In other words, Akers and Burgess tried to
incorporate the psychological principles of operant conditioning which includes
most social behaviours.
According to the reinforcement theory, both deviant behaviours and conventional
behaviours are learned through the same process (Kendall, 2003). Akers argued
that people learn to evaluate their own behaviour through interaction with
significant others. If the person and the groups that a particular individual
considers most significant in his life define deviant behaviour as being right that
individual is more likely to engage in deviant behaviours. . . . (ibid: 207).
Similarly, if those significant other consider or define deviant behaviour as
wrong the person is less likely to engage in that behaviour.
Akers believed that people are first indoctrinated into deviant behaviour by
differential association with deviant peers because those deviant peers are
significant others responsible to define deviant behaviour as being right. Then
through differential reinforcement, they learn how to reap rewards and avoid
punishment by reference to the actual and expected results of behaviours. These
consequences are the social and non-social reinforcements that provide a support
system for those with criminal careers or persistent criminality.
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we are not going to discuss these two theories of the self in a detail here. Some
important interactionist thinkers whose ideas are going to be treated include:
Frank Tannenbaum, Edwin Lamert, Howard S. Becker, Aaron Cicourer, and
Ervin Goffman. Now, lets begin with Tannebaums point of view presented as
follows:
2.4.7.2. The Dramatization of Evil - Frank Tannenbaum
Frank Tannenbaum discarded all previously seen theories of crime and deviance
in 1938 in favour of a broad multidisciplinary approach to these social facts. He
was profoundly affected by the time in which he was writing. It was the middle of
the Great Depression and society was suffering a lot. These troubled times were
reflected in the Dramatization of Evil which states that results from an
individuals relationship with society (Davenport, 2004).
Tannenbaum was interested in Herbert Meads idea upon which he based his
concept dramatization of evil. In 1938, Tannenbaum wrote Crime and
Community. In this book, he saw that there was a conflict between a delinquent
and community. For him, when an act is committed, there exist different
definitions of the situation. Tannenbaum explained this idea as:
In the conflict between the young delinquent and the community [,] there
develop two opposing definitions of the situation . . . the definition of the
situation by the young delinquent may be in the form of play, adventure,
excitement, interest, mischief, fun . . . . To the community, however, these
activities may and do often take on the form of nuisance, evil, delinquency,
with the demand for control, admonition, chastisement, punishment, police
court, truant school (Tannenbaum, 1938, cited in Kelly, et.al, 2002:
2004).
This conflict over the situation is one that arises out of a divergence of values
there are different emphases over the situation on behalf of the two. As the
problem develops, as to Tannenbaum, the situation gradually becomes redefined.
The attitude of the community hardens definitely into a demand for suppression
the community defines the actor only one way, but the juvenile defines in other.
Then, there is a gradual shift from the definition of the specific acts as evil to the
definition of the individual as evil, so that all his acts come to be called upon with
suspicion. (ibid: 205).
From the community point of view, the individual who used to do bad and
mischievous things has now a bad and unredeemable human being. At the same
time the individual believed that there has taken place the same change. The
young delinquent becomes bad because he is defined as bad because he is
believed if he is good. (ibid: 205).
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Only one or a few youth are caught when gang does something wrong;
This singles out one for attention; and
What use to be just fun, things everybody you hung with did, are now
presented to you indifferent light, you are bad.
Therefore, Tannenbaum argues that the dramatization of evil the first label is
important than any other experience in making the criminal. The youth becomes
what he is described as being. He further expressed that it doesnt matter the
attention of the label, punishment or help.
Tannenbaum suggests the following two points when we engage in treating
criminals and delinquency:
The way out is through a refusal to dramatize the evil. The less said about
it is the better. The more said about something else, still better.
The attack must be on the whole group; for only by changing the attitude,
ideas, interests and habits. Punishment must not be for the purpose of
retribution, but to change the character.
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Tannenbaum rejects all assumptions that would impute crime to the individual
the assumption that crime is caused by any sort of inferiority (physiological or
psychological) is here completely and unequivocally repudiated.
Generally, Tannenbaums argument can be summarized as,
The social audience creates deviance and deviants by so defining the act
and actors that way.
A process of transference takes place, the label is easily transferred from
act to actor.
The label related to the conduct norms and the behaviour but the
connection is a very loose one.
Frank Tannenbaums theory it not without limitations, though few they are.
However, the dramatization of evil, better known as labeling theory, is still alive
and very popular today (Davenport, 2004). One major criticism lays in its
simplicity. This theory is based upon the changes that occur within the labeled
individual and how these changes cause the individual to further their criminality.
However, tannenbaum and his successors paid no attention to the impact of the
label. No attention is given to the changes that were actually occurring in the self,
how this might be affected by other individual characteristics.
Another criticism sets upon the tradition of subjective observation and definitions.
Scientists have always relied on objective definitions so that experiments could be
duplicated. For instance, within a subjective tradition, it would be impossible to
measure deviance of the rich and the poor using the same guideline. The method
is very controversial.
2.4.7.3. Primary and Secondary Deviation Edwin Lamert
This is another variety of labeling theory. Lamert emphasizes the importance of
societal reaction (the reaction of others to the deviant) in his explanation of
deviance. He identified two types of deviations: primary and secondary. Primary
deviation comprises of deviant acts before they are publicly labeled. There are a
number of causes for it, but it was not as important as those causes of secondary
deviation to discuss them due to:
1. Samples of deviants are based upon those who have been labeled and
are therefore unrepresentative; and
2. Many so-called deviants may be so widespread as to be normal in
statistical terms. Thus, most males may at some time commit a
homosexual act, engage in delinquent activities and so on.
According to Lamert, not only is the research for the causes of primary deviation
largely fruitless, but also primary deviation itself is relatively unimportant
(Haralambos, 2005). Thus, the old deviant act, for Lamert, has little effect on the
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individuals self-concept on his status in the community, and does not prevent his
from continuing a normal and conventional life (ibid).
primary deviation,
social penalties,
secondary deviation,
stronger penalties,
further deviation with resentment and hostility towards the punishers,
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smoke cigarette nearby you. Whom will you most probably label
deviant?).
iii. Who feels that he/she has been harmed by the act (some rules are
enforced only when they result certain consequences. Who is, in
Ethiopian case, going to be regarded as deviant, of having
illegitimate child? Unmarried woman or unmarried man? )
So far, Becker has discussed that deviance is not a quality that lies in behaviour
itself, but in interaction between the person who commits an act and those who
respond to it. Therefore, Becker become very much interested in the idea that
being branded as deviant has important results for ones further social
participation and self-image. The most significant consequence is a drastic change
in the individuals public identity involves status change from the kind he was
supposed to be labeled a fair, dope fiend, nut, or lunatic and treated
accordingly.
In analyzing the consequences of assuming a deviant identity, Becker largely
consumed Hughess distinction between master and auxiliary status traits. For
Hughes, people often have the master status traits, but lacks some of the auxiliary,
informally expected characteristics (Hughes, 1945; cited from Adlers, 2000).
Hughes deals with this phenomenon in regard to statuses that are well thought of,
desired and desirable. Becker uses some aspects of this process in the case of
deviant and statuses. Possession of one deviant trait may have a generalized
symbolic value, so that people automatically assume that its bearer possesses
other undesirable traits allegedly associated with it. (Adlers, 2000: 81). To be
labeled a criminal, one needs only commit a single criminal offense. Yet, the term
carries a number of connotations specifying auxiliary traits. For example, a man
who has been convicted for housebreaking and thereby labeled criminal, as to
Becker, is presumed to be a person likely to break into other houses. Furthermore,
he is considered likely to commit other kinds of crime as well, because he has
shown himself to be as person without respect for the law.
Becker also borrowed Hughess analysis for the difference between master and
subordinate statuses. Hughes believed that some statuses in any society override
all other statuses and have a certain priority. Gender is a good example for
Ethiopian society. Membership in the female gender will override most other
status considerations in most other situations being a doctor or political leader
will not protect one from being treated as female first. According to Becker the
status of deviance, depending on the kind of deviance, is a kind of master status.
Thus, one, after being labeled, will be identified as a deviant first, before other
identifications are made (Adlers, 2000). Becker also explains that after being
labeled deviant, the actor may begin to act in accordance with the expectation
associated with his label. This process is known as self-fulfilling prophecy, in
which the person labeled deviant is cut off from others in appropriate way for the
type of deviance; and he or she moves into an organized deviant group.
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Why does deviant, once being labeled and engaged in a self-fulfilling prophecy,
moves into organized deviant?
Because, being member of an organized deviant group has the following functions
for the labeled person, Becker answered:
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His possession a further symbol of identity may be taken away and stored
for the duration of his stay. He may be washed disinfected and his hair
cut. He may be then issued with a new identity kit such as regulation
clothes and toilet articles. (Haralambos, 2005: 436).
Such standardized items tend to remove individuality and define the inmate
simply as a number of uniform mass (ibid).
After the entry phase has been completed, the inmate settles down to an endless
round of mortifying experience. Everyday is strictly programmed into a set of
forcefully done activities directed and controlled by the staff. Throughout his stay,
according to Goffman, his actions are assessed by the staff pertaining to the rules
and regulations set by the institution. Many of the regulations are degrading.
Goffman summarized that,
In the mental hospitals, the setting and the house rules press home to the
patient that he is, after all, a mental case who has suffered some kind of
social collapse on the outside, housing failed in some overall ways, and
that here he is of little social weight, being hardly capable of acting like a
full-fledged person at all. (cited in Kelly, 2002: 461).
Goffman discovered that inmates become anxious in treatment institutions when
their way of release approaches, because, for one thing, they have not been
prepared for life on the outside, and they have accepted the institutions definition
of themselves as hopeless, hopeless deviants, for other thing. However, the effects
of the institution upon the majority of inmate are not usually lasting, since there
will be a period of temporary deculturation. But, Goffman argued that the most
lasting and important consequence is the label ex-mental patient or ex-convict.
This, more than the experience of being inside, makes re-entry into conventional
society difficult.
Therefore, Goffman comes to the conclusion that many social control institutions
(treatment institutions) seem to function merely as storage dumps for inmates.
Like societal reaction, in general, treatment institutions serve to re-enforce rather
than reducing deviance.
Critical Evaluation of Interactionist View of Deviance
The interactionist perspective of deviance has already been criticized by several
scholars for several shortcomings. These include the following ones:
1. Interactionists fail to explain the origin of deviant behaviour. For example,
labeling theory fails to explain the behaviour of the individual before he
was labeled deviant. Moreover, deviant behaviour simply created by the
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label. For instance, why do certain individuals chew Khat in the first
place while others do not?
2. Interactionist idea that deviants do not have awareness that his action
could be seen as deviant until he is stopped in his track by a label is
criticized. However, many deviants are aware that their behaviour is
regarded by others as deviants. Thus, they actively make decision to break
norms of a society. They are not passive, blinkered creatures, suddenly
waked from blissful ignorance as a label is slapped upon them
(Haralambos, 2005). Critics furthered their idea that, indeed, many
individuals are not only aware of their deviance, but also they are proud of
it.
3. Jack Gibbs severely criticized the interactionists tendency to give the
impression that members of society do not see behaviour as deviant until it
is officially labeled as such. He further argues that the interactionists tend
to lose sight of the fact that there are social norms that deviance is a
behaviour that breaks them and that members of society perceive reality in
terms of such norms. Thus, social norms also have power to label an act as
deviant.
4. It is also argued that the interactionists fail to fully explain societal
reaction to deviance. For example, in Cicourls study, why do the police
and juvenile officers have particular meanings and definitions of deviance
that lead them to label some individuals and not others? Why some
activities regarded as deviant in a particular society and not others? This
related with the definition of power and the nature of decision making in
society that is going to be addressed by conflict theories of deviance under
subtopic 2.4.8.
Important Contributions of Interactionist Perspective on Deviance
1. They have shown that the definition of deviance is not a simple process.
For example, the legal authorities do not simply arrest, try and punish
deviants.
2. They have drawn attention to important consequences which stem from
the labeling process.
3. They have also drawn the attention to the fact that deviance results from
interacting situations in which differences in power between the
participants can have an important effect upon the outcome.
2.4.8. Conflict Theories of Deviance
2.4.8.1. Introduction
The basic premises underlying conflict perspective is that the life experience of
groups are generally shaped by those who have power over them (Kelly, et. al.,
2002). Conflict theorists generally see deviance as a result of conflict between
individuals and groups (wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 2008). This conflict,
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at the bottom of the social structure ladder. Several conflict thinkers have
contributed for the development of this perspective. Some are Alexander Liazos,
William Chambliss, and Richard Quinney. Now, we have found better discussing
the ideas of these thinkers one after the other.
2.4.8.2.1. Alexander Liazos: Nuts, Sluts and Perverts
In his work The Poverty of Sociology of Deviance, Alexander Liazos points out
that the term deviance brings to mind nuts, sluts and perverts who share the
tradition of powerlessness. He further argued that bar-ladies (not tax evaders) and
unemployed men on street corners (not those who profit from wars) carry the
stigma of deviance.
Alexander Liazos examined textbooks of sociology of deviance and found a
number of biases. Out of these biases, their focus on lower level power folks that
ignores the real power breakers was the prominent one. Thus, for him, those
textbooks really ignore power. As to Liazos, most prisoners are political prisoners
in as much as their actions are the result of social and political actions. He asked
how do the powerful deviants view themselves? Did they have identity
problems?
According to Liazos, because one group does not have the power to define the
behaviour as deviant not enforce a label does not change the objective essence of
the behaviour, it still is a social fact; the corporal world kills and hurt more people
every year than street crime.
Thus, Liazos argues that we need to understand and deal with the difference
between individuals and institutional forms of racism, sexism, violence, theft, etc.
Need to focus on real power brokers, the top dogs, who makes the laws? Who
defines acceptable social orders? Acceptable for whom?
Finally, Alexander Liazos concluded that in a fundamental unjust society, even
the most important professional, efficient enforcement of the laws by the police
cannot result in justice.
2.4.8.2.2. Richard Quinney: The Social Reality of Crime
Richard Quinney believed that a theory that helps people begin to understand the
legal order critically is the one he calls the social reality of crime (Adlers,
2000). Understanding this theory, helps us to think of crime as it is affected by the
dynamics which shape the societys social, economic and political structures. As
to him, everything that makeup crime is very much related to the established legal
order. For him, the social reality of crime is constructed on conflict in our society
(ibid). The theory of the social reality of crime is formulated as:
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definitions of crime, and within this context people engage in actions that
have relative probabilities of being defined as criminal. Various
behaviours, as per the idea of Quinney, represent patterns within society.
All persons act in reference to normative system learned in relative social
and cultural settings. Thus, a behaviour which is defined as criminal is
related to the behaviour patterns of the class that formulate and apply the
definitions. As a result, Quinney argues that people whose bahaviour
patterns are more likely to act in ways that will be defined as criminal than
those who formulate and apply the definitions.
The establishment of behaviour pattern with regular trend helped individuals
to have a guideline for creating personal action patterns. People, according
to Quinney, construct their own patterns of action in participating with
others. Thus, the probability that persons will develop action patterns with
a high potential for being defined as criminal depends on:
Structured opportunities,
Learning experiences,
Interpersonal associations and identifications, and
Self-concept.
Furthermore, Quinney argues that those who have been defined as criminal
begin to conceive of themselves as criminal. As they adjust to the definitions
imposed on them, they learn to play the criminal roles. (Quinney, 1965: cited
in Adlers, 2000: 66). As a result of others reactions, therefore, people may
develop personal action patterns that increase the likelihood of their being
defined as criminal in the future.
v. Constructing the Ideology of Crime: An ideology of crime is constructed
and diffused by the dominant class to secure its hegemony over those
subordinate groups. People behave in reference to the social meaning they
attached to their experiences. Among the conceptions that develop in a
society are those relating to what people regard as crime. Images
developed about the relevance of crime, the offenders characteristics, the
appropriate reaction to crime, and the relation of crime to the social order.
Communication is very important in the construction of the ideology of
crime. This ideology is, thus, diffused throughout the society.
vi.
Constructing the Social Reality of Crime: Quinney agues that the social
reality of crime, the development of behaviour patterns in relation to these
definitions, and the construction of the ideology of crime. In other ways,
the above five propositions are collected here into a final composition
proposition constructing the social reality of crime.
Sociology of Deviance
Application of
Definitions of Crime
Formulation of
Definition of
Crime
Development of
Behavior Patterns in
Relation to
Definitions of Crime
Construction of the
Ideology of Crime
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just engaging in youthful highjinks (boys will be boys) (Adlers, 2000 and Henslin,
1997).
According to Chambliss, the local police saw the saints as good boys who were
among the leaders of the youth in the community. Rarely, the boys might be
stopped in town for speeding or for running a stop sign. When this happened, the
boys were always polite, contrite, and pled for mercy. Then they receive the
mercy they asked for (Adler, 2000).
The roughnecks are a group of six lower class boys who engage in lots of fighting
(mostly among themselves or with other lower class boys) and stealing, who are
often arrested, and whose image in the community is terrible. From Chambliss
point of view, although the two gangs of boys were the same age, and both groups
engaged in an equal amount of wild-oats sewing, everyone agreed that the not-sowell-dressed, not-so-well managed, not-so-rich boys were leading for trouble
(Henslin, 1997).
Here, Chambliss raises two important questions: why did the community, the
school, and the police react to saints as though they were good, upstanding, nondelinquent youth with bright futures but to the roughnecks as though they were
tough, young criminals who were headed for trouble? Why did the roughnecks
and the saints, in fact, have quite different careers after high schools careers
which, by and large, lived up the expectations of the community? (Henslin, 1997
and Adler, 2000). Differential treatment, as to Chambliss, was possible due to the
fact that one group of boys was more delinquent than the other, irrespective of
the reality. The saints behaviour had at least as much potential for community
harm as the behaviour of the roughnecks. But, it is the roughnecks who treated as
delinquents by the community and the law enforcement agents. The saints were
bad when they were sober atrocious when drunk, and their vandalism included
moving street assigns to create dangerous situations for motorists and watch the
fun. But, they never go labeled, and they ultimately all went to college, got
degrees, and pursued respectable careers, whereas the opposite is true for the
roughnecks. In Chambliss words:
In sheer number of illegal acts the saints were the more delinquent. They
were truant from school for at least part of the day almost everyday of the
week. In addition, their drinking and vandalism occurred with surprising
regularity. The roughnecks, in contrast, engaged sporadically in
delinquent episodes. While these episode were frequent, they certainly did
not occur on a detail or even a weekly basis (Chambliss, 1997, cited in
Adlers, 2000: 186)
Therefore, Chambliss concluded that even though crime and delinquent occur
throughout all social strata, power, in the form of money and influence, is the key
factor which determines who gets arrested and who does not (Haralambos, 2005).
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Proposition 2: Conflict is more probable the more organized are those who have
an illegal attribute or engage in an illegal act.
Proposition 3: Conflict is more probable the less sophisticated the subjects.
The probability of enforcement can be conditionalized as:
Proposition 4: The probability of enforcement of legal norms increases as the
congruence between the cultural and behavioural norms of
authorities increases. If law enforcers find the subjects legally
prohibited behaviour to be greatly offensive, the subjects are
more likely to be treated as criminals.
Proposition 5: The lower the power of the resisters (subjects), the higher the
probability of the enforcement. Compare between middle class
and working class or white-collar and street crimes.
Proposition 6: The lower the realism of the norm violators or resisters, the higher
the probability of enforcement. This places limitations on the use
of brute forces and a desire to follow the letter of the law.
Subjects achieve realism by concealing violation, decreasing
the offensiveness of visible violations, and avoiding behaviours
which unite authorities.
Turk represents a picture of crime and deviance in a modern complex and
heterogeneous society as an ongoing struggle. Thus, he saw that equilibrium is
difficult, if not completely impossible to achieve. As to Turk (1969), the
behaviour of any group, and perhaps most importantly, the cultural meaning and
significance attached to the behaviour is destined to provoke a negative reaction
from another group. In particular, authority groups will continuously strive to
maintain and expand their control over societal resources by defining the
activities of subject group as threatening (therefore deviant and/or criminal), to
the existing order (implicit here is the idea that the existing order, the only
legitimate order).
Turk believed that some conflict is beneficial to society since it encourages
society to consider whether the current consensus is justified. Conflict is inherent
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crimes committed by the poor are greatly recognized by the criminal justice
system, because the justice system works for the good will of the rich.
According to Bonger, the poor mostly commit street crimes for the purpose of
survival; they find that they cannot afford the necessities, such as food, clothing,
shelter and health care. Therefore, some crimes present a rationale response by the
poor to the unequal distribution of resources in a capitalist society a class
society based on capital.
2.4.8.3.2. Stephen Spitzer: the Production of Deviance in Capitalist Society
Since Spitzers idea is going to be seen merging with structural Marxism, let us
see the main view of those structural Marxists first. Colvin and Pauly are two
prominent structural Marxist. They tried to relate deviant behaviour with the
social structure of a society. As to them, majority of parents in capitalist societies
are alienated due their class position and work place control. Thus, alienated
parents develop a coercive family structure which is responsible for the
production of alienated juvenile. Juveniles from a coercive family structure are
more likely to be in coercive (lower class) school environment. This is a further
alienation to these juvenile. Subsequently, those doubly alienated juveniles have
the chance to involve and establish gangs.
Steven Spitzer argued that there are the features of the capitalist mode of
production important for his discussion: (1) as a mode of production, it forms the
foundation or infrastructure of our society. Thus, understanding of the economic
organization of capitalist societies and the impact of the organization on every
aspect of social life is necessary; and (2) the contradictions that reflect the internal
tendencies of capitalism. These contradictions are important because they explain
the changing character of the capitalist system and the nature of its impact on
social, political, and intellectual activities. In his own words, Spitzer says,
The formulation of Marxist perspective on deviance requires the
interpretation of the process through which the conditions of capitalism
are expressed. In particular, the theory must illustrate the relationship
between specific contradictions, the problem of capitalist development,
and the production of a deviant class (cited in Kelly, 2002 p: 57).
He saw the superstructure, a product of the infrastructure in class societies,
preserves the hegemony of the ruling class through a system of class controls.
These controls, being institutionalized in the family, church, private associations,
media, schools and the state, provide a mechanism for coping with the
contradictions and achieving the aims of capitalist development. Spitzer argued
that the regulation and management of problem population is the most important
function served by the superstructure. This problem population supplies war
materials for deviance production; but are by no mean synonymous with deviant
populations. Problem populations tend to share a number of social characteristics;
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but most important among these is the fact that their behaviour, personal qualities
and/or position threaten the social relation of production in capitalist societies
(Kelly, et. al., 2002).For him, population becomes generally eligible for
management as deviant when disturb, hinder, or call into question of any of the
following:
1. Capitalist modes of appropriating the product of human labour. For
example, when the poor steal from the rich.
2. The social condition under which capitalist production takes place. For
example, those who refuse are unable to perform wage labour.
3. Pattern of distribution and consumption in capitalist society. For example,
those who use drugs for escape and transcendence rather than sociability
and adjustment.
4. The process of socialization for productive and non-productive roles. For
example, youth who refuse to be schooled or those who deny the validity
of family life.
5. The ideology which supports the functioning of the capitalist society. For
example. Proponents of alternative forms of social organizations.
As to Spitzer, problem populations are created in two ways either directly
through the expression of fundamental contradictions in the capitalist mode of
production or indirectly through disturbances in the system of class rule. For
example, relative surplus population is a problem population produced
indirectly.
Problem populations, according to Spitzer, are also generated through
contradictions which develop in the system of class rule.
The institutions . . . of capitalist society originate and are maintained to
grant the interest of capitalist class. Yet these institutions [superstructure]
necessarily reduce, rather than resolve, the contradiction of the capitalist
order . . . (Kelly, et. al., 2002 p: 60).
Steven Spitzer has identified some factors by which the rate at which problem
populations are converted into deviants. This rate, that reflects the relationship
between these populations and the control system, is likely influenced by the:
a. Extensiveness and intensiveness of state control deviance processing is
more likely to occur when problem management is monopolized by the
state. This increases the proportion of official deviants.
b. Size and level of threat presented by the problem population the larger
and more threatening the problem population, the greater the likelihood
that this population will have to controlled through deviance processing
rather than other methods.
c. Level of organization of problem population when and if problem
populations are able to organize and develop limited amount of political
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d.
e.
f.
g.
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Social conflict theorists assume that laws and other cultural norms are created
directly by the rich and the powerful. This is an oversimplification since many
segments of our society influence, and benefits from, the political progress. Laws
also protect workers, consumers and the environment, sometimes in opposition to
the interest of capitalists (Macionis, 1995).
Chapter Three: Urbanization and Deviance
3.1. Introduction
Urbanization has been defined in several ways. It is seen as a process by which
rural areas become transformed into urban areas. Thus, urbanization refers to the
changes in the proportion of the population of a nation living in urban areas and to
the process of moving to cities or other densely settled areas. The term is also
used to describe the changes in social organization that occurs as a consequence
of population concentration. Macionis (1995) backed up this idea when defining
urbanization as the process of concentration of human population into cities. The
writer further explains that this process both redistributes the population with a
society and transforms many aspects of social life.
In demographic terms, urbanization refers to an increase in population
concentration. This definition of urbanization is concerned with the number of
population dwells in urban areas as well as the level of population density in
urban areas. For example, 16.2% of Ethiopian population, out of 75,067,000, was
urban in 2006 (MoFED, 2007).
A specialized field of sociology called urban sociology studies social, economic,
political and psychological aspects of the city. According to urban sociologists, a
city is a relatively dense and permanent settlement of people who secure their
livelihood primarily through non-agricultural activities (Kendall, 2003). The
influence of urban mode of life, according to Zander Vanden (1990), extends far
beyond citys boundaries.
For Kendall (2003), only about 3% of the worlds population lived in cities two
hundred years ago, as compared with almost 50% of todays. In this contemporary
world, estimates suggest that 2 out of 3 people around the world will live in urban
areas by 2050 (ibid). Hence, there is a possibility to explain that the process of
urbanization continues on a global basis; and the present-day cities are not
something that raises like a phoenix from its ashes, rather they have undergoes
through a long evolutionary history.
Several sociologists tried to identify other concepts related to urbanization. A
densely populated areas containing two or more cities and their suburbs refers to
the cluster of cities or megalopolis. And urban region classified as megalopolis
when it has a density of 500 inhabitants per square mile (and many more of such
arbitrary). A type of megalopolis cities oriented to international trade rather than
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domestic trade and commerce are known as global cities, for example, London,
Paris, Zurich, New York, etc.
Suburbs, exurbs, edge city and sprawl are also other some concepts come along
with urbanization. Suburbs are settlements which developed around the center
city (Mooney, 1997); and are established for different purposes like commercial,
industrial, residential and so on. Such suburbs together with the city are called
metropolitan. Exurbs on the other hand, are recent phenomena which come after
the suburbanization. They are parts of the urban pattern since their inhabitants
have the same life style to the residents of the center city. Exurbanites are
affluent, well-educated, professionals, urban seeker people who seek to reside in
rustic settings. Edge cities encompass offices, dwellings and all sorts of urban
resources, without, containing a historical downtown core. They appear as a
cluster of urban activities along the highways that circle large cities which
accounts for the edge in the term. Sprawl is unbridled, poorly planned, lowdensity spread out, auto oriented and dependent residential development that
spread out from the center of communities, occurs and usually expands
dramatically faster than population growth, common ills include traffic
congestion, air pollution and massive destruction of natural environment,
common leapfrog commercial and residential development.
Generally, the development of urbanization is a continuous process which has
been bringing about several social, economic, psychological, and political
consequences. As modern form of life, urbanization is a latent outcome of
industrialization. Deviant behaviours have come out along with this change in life
as its unexpected product. Deviance, as a social behaviour, is directly and/or
indirectly correlated with urbanization through its unique characteristics such as
the occurrence of subcultures, material-oriented way of life, individualism and the
prevalence of slum areas which are a fertile ground for the emergence of
deviance. Conklin (2004) explains that the 19th century rural people were
generally honest, but the urban poor who were nearer to great wealth and
temptation were more prone to crime.
This correlation between urbanization and deviance is going to be addressed
under subtopic 3.4. But, now it is found worthwhile discussing the historical
development of cities which, in turn, helps us identifying several socio-economic
and cultural conditions of cities over time.
3.2. Historical Development of Cities
This subtopic is dealt with the evolution of urban areas. Cities are relatively recent
social phenomena in the history of mankind. They are new inventions when
compared with the history of human society. The earliest human are believed to
have emerged anywhere between 40,000 and one million years ago, and
permanent human settlements are believed to have begun first about 8000 B. C.
(Kendall, 2003: 610). However, scholars do not come to a consensus on the exact
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date when the first urban settlement came out. Even though disagreements about
the exact date of the emergence of the first city are persistent, it is most likely to
be believed that cities began sometimes after human history due to several
reasons.
Scholars accepted the argument that cities were possible due to the available of
such factors as favorable ecology, advanced technology, and a well developed
social organizations. Upon their emergence, several dimensions of people were
changed. Therefore, urbanization is a social change accompanies other
developments.
Andargachew (1976) argued that social change and development are often
accompanied by social problems of various kinds. The social, technological and
economic changes that have been going on since the beginning of urbanization
have had noticeable effect on the social structure. The gradual shift from
subsistence economy to a money economy and the improvement of roads and
means of communication have brought changes in the population structure.
People from rural areas started pouring into expanding towns and urban areas, for
example, rural migration, according to Andargachew (1976), was at its highest
between 1935 and 1944 when urbanization was at its powering stage the trend
was noticeable in many parts of the developing world.
Urbanization has various consequences for different section of society. People,
young and old, have been being uprooted from the closed static patterns of rural
life and are being thrust into uncertain turbulence of the city where every man is a
stranger. They are forced to learn survive in an environment that is completely
artificial. They do not know how to regain the sense of community they have lost
in the transitional process.
The problems the newcomers encountered are limitless. There is lack of
employment coupled with marketable skills. There is the problem of unmet
physical needs such as housing. People feel loneliness in the middle of a huge
crowd. There is the problem of family breakdown because of new situation and
strains. All these pressures may eventually boil up into various social illnesses
including the problem of youth and juvenile delinquencies. Young people
permanently thrown into the free competition of the labour market eventually end
up either on the streets or in unsuitable types of work because of insufficient
training. This situation is aggravated by a too quickly gained independence which
too often is a stepping stone for the development of a street culture.
3.3. Urbanism as a Way of Life
Sociologist Lous Writh, as it is cited in Schaefer (2003), argued that urbanism is a
distinctive pattern of human behaviour which is resulted from a relatively large
and permanent human settlement. It refers to a distinctive social and
psychological patterns of life typically found in the city (Kendall, 2003). It is,
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Weber suggested that cities are linked to larger processes, for example, economic
or political orientations, instead of city itself being cause of distinguishing
qualities of urban life, i. e., different cultural and historical conditions will result
in different types of cities, same as with Marx and Engels who argued that human
condition of cities was a result of economic structure.
To sum up, all the above discussions on urban life tried to forward their own
arguments in a more or less different way. However, it is possible to conclude that
the way of life in urban areas in totally different from those rural cultures. The
following table can summarize this difference.
Table 3.1: rural-urban cultural differences
Point of Difference
Occupation
Environment
Community size
Density
Uniformity
Level of differentiation
Social mobility
System of interaction
Social control.
Rural Life
Agriculture which needs
joint effort
More natural near to
nature
Small population
dispersed in large areas
Sparsely distributed
Highly homogeneous in
terms of norms, values,
etc.
Undifferentiated
similar economy and
limited job opportunity
Narrow income gap
among groups
Closed mobility because
social status is ascribed
Primary form of
interaction
Informal
Urban Life
Industry and trade
increased rationalization
Artificial or man-made
Large population in a small
area- complex
Densely populated
Highly heterogeneous
Highly differentiated
extreme socio-economic
differences. Increased gap
of income between social
groups.
Open social mobility due to
the existence of achieved
status individuals are free
to achieve their status at
whatever cost.
Secular form of interaction
formal
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Therefore, formal social control is always expressed through law as statutes, rules,
and regulations against deviant behavior. It is conducted by government and
organizations using law enforcement mechanisms and other formal sanctions such
as fines and imprisonment. In democratic societies the goals and mechanisms of
formal social control are determined through legislation by elected representatives
and thus enjoy a measure of support from the population and voluntary
compliance.
Control, under formal social control, is based around the idea of formal, legal,
norms (or laws) of behaviour. That is, rules of behaviour that are written down
and, in societies such as our own, that apply equally to everyone (not all societies
apply formal rules equally). Where laws are involved, it is usual to find a group of
people, normally employed by the government, whose job is to enforce the law. In
our society, for example, the main agency of formal social control is the police
and the judiciary (courts), although the armed forces can, on occasions, be used to
perform this role.
Not all formal norms are laws, however. When you are accepted into an
organization (such as a school or college for example), you agree to abide by the
formal rules governing behaviour in this institution. In this example, if you do not
attend classes then you will be punished in some way.
In general terms, formal rules and social controls exist to tell everyone within a
society or social group what is and is not acceptable in terms of behaviour. Such
formal controls usually exist where a group is very large and its members are not
in day-to-day contact with each other.
Prisons and remand homes are the most common forms of social controlling
mechanisms in most contemporary societies. In modern time, the influence of
informal social controls becomes low. The action of members of the society is not
open to face-to-face contacting of people. Although face-to-face contact of the
people in modern time is very high, it is superficial and shallow. Interaction is
based on a functional interdependence. People are dependent one another, but this
dependency is not based on emotional and deep feeling of sense of belongingness.
Rather it is done on the basis of a rational calculation of cost and benefit of the
interaction (Zander, 1990).
Therefore, in the absence of informal social controls, formal social controls
become very necessary. That is why modern societies have several forms of
formal organizations working as social control mechanisms of a society. For
example, in our country, the police, the courts, and the military are the most
commonly employed formal social control organizations and institutions.
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derived, the 1930 penal code lacked a comprehensive approach to the disposition
and treatment of offenders.
In 1958 a Swiss legal expert drafted a revised penal code to meet the needs of a
developing nation. A 1961 criminal procedures code, drafted by a British jurist,
augmented the 1930 penal code. The former was based on the Swiss penal code
and many secondary sources; the latter reflected the influence of English common
law.
For virtually every offense listed in the revised penal code, there were upper and
lower limits of punishment. The effect was to stress acceptance of the concept of
degrees of culpability, as well as the concept of extenuating and aggravating
circumstances. Separate provisions existed for juveniles. Nevertheless, the
commission appointed to approve the revision repeatedly expressed the traditional
view that "punishment should remain the pillar of Ethiopian criminal law."
Following the 1974 revolution, a normal legal process theoretically was in effect
for dealing with criminal offenses. Existing parallel to it was a "revolutionary"
system of neighborhood justice. In practice, it was impossible to distinguish
between criminal acts and political offenses according to the definitions adopted
in post-1974 revisions of the penal code.
A November 1974 decree introduced martial law, which set up a system of
military tribunals empowered to impose the death penalty or long prison terms for
a wide range of political offenses. The decree applied the law retroactively to the
old regime's officials who had been accused of responsibility for famine deaths,
corruption, and maladministration and who had been held without formal charges
since earlier in the year. Special three-member military tribunals sat in Addis
Ababa and in each of the country's fourteen administrative regions.
In July 1976, the government amended the penal code to institute the death
penalty for "antirevolutionary activities" and economic crimes. Investigation of
political crimes came under the overall direction of the Revolutionary Operations
Coordinating Committee in each awraja. In political cases, the courts waived
search warrants required by the criminal procedures code. The government
transferred jurisdiction from the military tribunals, which had been inactive for
some time, to kebele and peasant association tribunals. Political trials constituted
the main business of these tribunals well into 1978.
More generally, the 1976 revision of the penal code empowered association
tribunals to deal with criminal offenses but limited their jurisdiction to their urban
neighborhood or rural area. Elected magistrates, without formal legal training,
conducted criminal trials. Procedures, precedents, and punishments varied widely
from tribunal to tribunal, depending on the imperatives of the association
involved. Peasant association tribunals accepted appeals at the wereda (district)
level. Appellate decisions were final, but decisions disputed between associations
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could be brought before peasant association courts at the awraja level. In cities,
kebele tribunals were similarly organized in a three-tier system. Change of venue
was arranged if a defendant committed an offense in another jurisdiction.
The judicial system was designed to be flexible. Magistrates could decide not to
hear a case if the defendant pleaded guilty to minor charges and made a public
apology. Nonetheless, torture was sometimes used to compel suspects and
witnesses to testify. Penalties imposed at the local association level included fines
of up to 300 birr, compensation to victims in amounts determined by the tribunal,
imprisonment for up to three months, and hard labor for up to fifteen days.
Serious criminal cases were held over, depending on their gravity, for association
tribunals sitting at the awraja or wereda level, which were qualified to hand down
stiffer sentences. In theory, death sentences were reviewed by government
officials, but little effort was made to interfere with the administration of local
justice. Tribunal decisions were implemented through an association's public
safety committee and were enforced by the local People's Protection Brigade.
Without effective review of their actions, tribunals were known to order indefinite
jailings, during which their suspects sometimes disappeared, as well as summary
executions. On rare occasions, the government would condemn association
officials for murder and torture committed in the course of dispensing
"revolutionary justice."
The 1976 revision of the penal code also created new categories of so-called
economic crimes. The list included hoarding, overcharging, and interfering with
the distribution of consumer commodities. More serious offenses concerned
engaging in sabotage at the work place or of agricultural production, conspiring to
confuse work force members, and destroying vehicles and public property.
Security sections of the Revolutionary Operations Coordinating Committee
investigated economic crimes at the awraja level and enforced land reform
provisions through the peasant associations. These committees were empowered
to indict suspects and hold them for trial before local tribunals. Penalties could
entail confiscation of property, a long prison term, or a death sentence.
In 1981 the Amended Special Penal Code replaced the Special Penal Code. This
amended code included offenses against the government and the head of state,
such as crimes against the state's independence and territorial integrity, armed
uprising, and commission of "counterrevolutionary" acts (these provisions also
were in the earlier Special Penal Code); breach of trust by public officials and
economic offenses, including grain hoarding, illegal currency transactions, and
corruption; and abuse of authority, including "improper or brutal" treatment of a
prisoner, unlawful detention of a prisoner, and creating or failing to control
famine.
The Amended Special Penal Code also abolished the Special Military Courts and
created new Special Courts to try offenses under the Amended Special Penal
Code. Special Courts consisted of three civilian judges and applied the existing
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criminal and civil procedure codes. Defendants had the right to legal
representation and to appeal to a Special Appeal Court.
B. Prisons
Detailed information on Ethiopia's prison system was limited. Only generalized
data were available on prison installations.
Although the imperial regime achieved some progress in the field of prison
reform, most prisons failed to adopt modern penological methods. Governmentpublished figures on prison populations since 1974 were considered incomplete
and misleading. Amnesty International, the London-based human rights
organization, and a few individuals who survived detention and escaped from the
country have described prison conditions in a critical light.
The administrator of prisons managed the national penal system. Each
administrative unit--including kifle hager (region), awraja (subregion), and
wereda (district)--had at least one prison. Addis Ababa's Akaki (or Central)
Prison, considered Ethiopia's most modern penal facility in 1974, was the central
prison for Shewa. Akaki had separate facilities for female political prisoners. The
largest number of political prisoners, approximately 1,500 in 1989, was housed in
Akaki's maximum security section. Reportedly, the government had jailed
political dissidents at numerous other prisons in Addis Ababa, including Fourth
Division headquarters; the Third Police Station, which also served as national
police headquarters and an interrogation center; and the Grand (Menelik's) Palace.
Asmera, another center for political prisoners, had penal facilities at three
locations. Most police stations and army garrisons also had jails. Each kebele and
peasant association operated a jail in its jurisdiction. Association headquarters in
each wereda and awraja also had prisons.
A prison farm at Robi in Arsi provided facilities for about 850 prisoners. In 1978
the government proposed a plan for deploying large numbers of inmates
imprisoned for minor offenses to work on minimum-security state farms as part of
the agricultural development plan. A single institution oversaw the rehabilitation
of male juvenile criminal offenders. There was no comparable facility for female
juvenile offenders, who usually were placed in the custody of their parents or
guardians. In exceptional pre-1974 cases, the authorities jailed juveniles in larger
prisons. After the emergence of the Marxist regime, a large but unspecified
number of youthful political detainees of both genders were held in prisons and
association jails. Many were released after a period of "political rehabilitation."
Historically, prison life in Ethiopia was gloomy and for political prisoners
extremely brutal. The so-called process of rehabilitation often consisted of severe
beatings, exhausting work and calisthenics, and political indoctrination. A public
confession normally was proof of rehabilitation; in some cases, a political
detainee's willingness to torture fellow prisoners was regarded as an indication of
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his penitence. Recreational facilities were rare, and no program existed to assist
prisoners after their release. Punishment was the major concern of prison officials.
Conditions in smaller, more remote prisons were worse than in the prisons of
Addis Ababa, and peasant association jails were worse yet. As part of a program
in the late 1970s to expand and improve the Ethiopian prison system, the Cuban
government reportedly constructed new prisons that included facilities for solitary
confinement.
In its 1978 report on human rights violations in Ethiopia, Amnesty International
stated that Ethiopian prisons had failed to abide by UN regulations for the
treatment of prisoners. A large number of prisoners might share a common cell. In
the Central Prison's maximum security section, for example, Amnesty
International reported that as many as fifty prisoners shared cells measuring four
meters by four meters. Ad hoc committees--organized in each cell for selfimposed discipline, food distribution, care of the sick and aged, and orientation of
new inmates--often communalized food and luxuries, such as tea and tobacco,
donated by relatives. Complaints reported to Amnesty International that cells
were infested with pests and were unventilated and lacking the most basic sanitary
facilities. Medical attention was generally inadequate and not even available at all
facilities. Even seriously ill prisoners rarely received hospital treatment, and many
died of natural causes aggravated by their imprisonment. Cell mates viewed death
as a means of relieving the gross overcrowding typical of facilities housing
political prisoners during the late 1970s. The authorities usually informed families
of the death of their relatives by telling them "food is no longer necessary."
Although conditions in Addis Ababa's Central Prison improved somewhat by the
late 1980s, most prison facilities remained substandard. In 1989 Amnesty
International reported that individuals incarcerated in government-operated
prisons were held in poor and sometimes harsh conditions. However, the report
noted that prisons were subject to formal regulations, and there were few reports
of torture.
The human rights organization also indicated that conditions in the Central Prison,
which Menelik II had built in the nineteenth century, had improved in the 1980s.
The prison's 4,500 inmates were allowed regular family visits, and relatives were
permitted to send food, laundry, books, medicine, and other "comfort" items to
jailed family members. Although the Central Prison provided basic medical
treatment, the authorities authorized prisoners to see an independent physician or
to seek treatment at local hospitals. During daylight hours, prisoners were free to
associate with each other. The Central Prison opened a shop where small items
were sold; a nursery and a primary school were established for children who
stayed with their imprisoned mothers; and a secondary school was created where
prisoners taught or studied. Additionally, prisoners were free to open their own
recreational and educational facilities. Despite these findings, however, Amnesty
International concluded that the Central Prison suffered from "inadequate medical
care, poor hygiene, delays in obtaining professional medical or hospital treatment,
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Rehabilitation perspective,
Nonintervention perspective,
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Justice perspective,
Retrospective justice perspective, and
Due process perspective.
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The rehabilitation policy of crime control focuses of the view that it may be fairer
to offer offenders an opportunity for rehabilitation rather than harsh criminal
punishment whereas restitution or equity policy claims that sanctions based on
equity seek to compensate individual victims and the general society for their
losses due to crime. Here, a convicted criminal must pay back their victims for
their loss (ibid).
4.3.3. The Juvenile Justice System
Senna and Siegel (2001) reported that a juvenile justice system is the system of
agencies and organization that deal with youths who commit acts of juvenile
delinquency (crime under a given age) and acts of noncriminal behaviours
(truancy and incorrigibility). It is a system that particularly concerned with
addressing those deviant and criminal acts committed by young offenders and
deviants who cannot be treated in the justice system established for the treatment
of adult offenders.
The modern practice of legally separating adult and juvenile offenders can be
traced to two developments in English custom and law: the development of poor
laws and the Chancery courts. Both were designed to allow the state to take
control of the lives of the needy but not necessarily criminal children. They set the
precedent for the later American development (Senna & Siegel, 2001: 469).
A person defined by a statute as juveniles and alleged to be delinquent or status
offenders will most probably be taken to the court called juvenile court which has
original jurisdiction over the treatment of offends committed by the juvenile
delinquents. Conklin (2004) has presented this issue as follows:
People who violate the law but who are not legally adults defined as
those below the age of eighteen, in many states can be taken to juvenile
court, an institution that is about a century old, and be adjudged
delinquent rather than convicted of a crime. These delinquents might
have committed an act that would be a crime if done by an adult. The
designation juvenile delinquent is also applied to those who commit status
offenses, acts such as underage drinking, running away from home, or
truancy, which are violation only because those who engage in them are
below the age of majority (ibid:5).
4.3.4. Similarities and Differences between Juvenile and Adult Justice System
The following points on the similarities and differences of juvenile and adult
justice system have been directly taken from the works of Senna & Siegel
(2001:477).
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Juveniles have no constitutional right to a jury trial. Adults have this right;
Juveniles can be searched in without probable cause or warrant;
A juveniles record is generally sealed when the age of majority is
reached. The record of an adult is permanent; and
A juvenile court comment sentence juveniles to country jails or state
prisons; these are reserved for adults.
Chapter Five: Major Deviant Acts: Victimless Crimes
5.1: Introduction
Numerous social thinkers have forwarded their own understanding about what
really victimless crimes are. Senna and Siegel (2001) defined victimless crime as
an act that is in violation of societys moral code and therefore has been outlawed.
Some of the victimless crimes such as drug abuse, gambling and prostitution are
interdependent and interlinked because, although they have not external victims,
they are considered harmful to the social fabric of the society in which they
appear.
The, term crimes without victims was first coined by Edwin Schur in 1965. His
focus was on drug addiction, homosexualism and abortion. But, in present-day
world it includes prostitutions, sexual deviance (gaysm and lesbianism), drug
abuse and dealing, alcoholism, gambling, vagrancy and so on (Conklin, 2004).
Because no one complains to the police about being victimized, making arrest and
prosecuting the culprit are difficult. Usually crimes have identifiable victims who
suffer from the criminal behaviour. But, in victimless crimes, only the offenders
themselves are likely to suffer all round (ibid). Similarly, Andargachew (1990)
argued that some forms of crimes such as prostitution, drug abuse gambling,
homosexualism, drunkerdness and disorderly conduct and vagrancy are victimless
crimes since they are group of offences. Here, there is no one is injured with a
possible exception of those persons involved in these acts.
There are arguments and counter arguments whether victimless crimes should be
labeled victimless or not. In other words, social thinkers have been debating over
the criminalization and decriminalization of victimless crimes. Some activists are
moving heaven and earth so as to decriminalize many of those illegal practices
categorized under victimless crimes. They argued that these activities should be
taken out of the statute books because the prosecution of victimless crimes is the
invasion of individual rights by the state. This is so due to the fact that what
governments consider vices are always determines by the powerful segment of the
society (Andargachew, 1990). This point of view reminds us of the important
insights of labeling and conflict theories presented under chapter two. These two
theories have given much consideration on addressing on two basic questions: (1)
who has the power to define behaviour as crime? And (2) who has the power to
label such behaviours as victimless?
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For clinical and research purposes, formal diagnostic criteria for alcoholism also
have been developed. Such criteria are included in the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, published by the American
Psychiatric Association, as well as in the International Classification Diseases,
published by the World Health Organization.
Alcoholism is a term with multiple and sometimes conflicting definitions to
describe the detrimental effects of alcohol intake.
In common and historic usage, alcoholism refers to any condition those results in
the continued consumption of alcoholic beverages despite health problems and
negative social consequences. Modern medical definitions describe alcoholism as
a disease and addiction which results in a persistent use of alcohol despite
negative consequences. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, alcoholism, also
referred to as dipsomania described a preoccupation with, or compulsion toward
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It is common for a person suffering from alcoholism to drink well after physical
health effects start to manifest. The physical health effects associated with alcohol
consumption may include cirrhosis of the liver, pancreatitis, epilepsy,
polyneuropathy, alcoholic dementia, heart disease, increased chance of cancer,
nutritional deficiencies, sexual dysfunction, and death from many sources. Severe
cognitive problems are not uncommon in alcoholics. Approximately 10% of all
dementia cases are alcohol related making alcohol the 2nd leading cause of
dementia.
B. Mental Health Effects
Long term misuse of alcohol can cause a wide range of mental health effects.
Alcohol misuse is not only toxic to the body but also to brain function and thus
psychological well being can be adversely affected by the long-term effects of
alcohol misuse. Psychiatric disorders are common in alcoholics, especially
anxiety and depression disorders, with as many as 25% of alcoholics presenting
with severe psychiatric disturbances. Typically these psychiatric symptoms
caused by alcohol misuse initially worsen during alcohol withdrawal but with
abstinence these psychiatric symptoms typically gradually improve or disappear
altogether. Psychosis, confusion and organic brain syndrome may be induced by
chronic alcohol abuse which can lead to a misdiagnosis of major mental health
disorders such as schizophrenia. Panic disorder can develop as a direct result of
long term alcohol misuse. Panic disorder can also worsen or occur as part of the
alcohol withdrawal syndrome. Chronic alcohol misuse can cause panic disorder to
develop or worsen an underlying panic disorder via distortion of the
neurochemical system in the brain.
The co-occurrence of major depressive disorder and alcoholism is well
documented. Among those with comorbid occurrences, a distinction is commonly
made between depressive episodes that are secondary to the pharmacological or
toxic effects of heavy alcohol use and remit with abstinence, and depressive
episodes that are primary and do not remit with abstinence. Additional use of
other drugs may increase the risk of depression in alcoholics. Depressive episodes
with an onset prior to heavy drinking or those that continue in the absence of
heavy drinking are typically referred to as "independent" episodes, whereas those
that appear to be etiologically related to heavy drinking are termed "substanceinduced".
C. Social Effects
The social problems arising from alcoholism can be massive and are caused in
part due to the serious pathological changes induced in the brain from prolonged
alcohol misuse and partly because of the intoxicating effects of alcohol. Being
drunk or hung over during work hours can result in loss of employment, which
can lead to financial problems including the loss of living quarters. Drinking at
inappropriate times, and behavior caused by reduced judgment, can lead to legal
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Cocaine
Khat
Other Drugs
5.3. Homosexualism
There are several forms of sexual orientations in the world. The term sexual-orientation
refers to the classification of individuals as heterosexual, bisexual, or homosexual
based on their emotional and sexual attractions, relationship, self-identity and lifestyle.
(Mooney, et. al., 2005: 230). Heterosexuality, according to the writers, refers to the
predominance of emotional and sexual attraction to persons of the other sex whereas
bisexuality is all about the predominance of emotional and sexual attraction of both
sexes. Homosexuality, on the other hand, includes lesbians and bisexuals. They are
sometimes referred collectively to the concept lesbigay population. They are also be
considered as part of a larger population called transgendered community which
includes a range of people whose gender identities do not conform to traditional notion
of masculinity and feminity (ibid).
Therefore, homosexuality, as a form of sexual orientation, is defined as a sexual
relationship with members of the same sex, be it male or female. It can be categorized
as gaysm (among male) and lesbianism (among females).
Sexual behaviour like any other human behaviour can be acceptable or unacceptable
depending upon the functioning of the culture of a society. In our world the most
acceptable and supported sexual norms is heterosexuality, that is, sexual relationship
between people of opposite sexes. However, various forms of sexual deviations are
practically observed in all societies though the degree of prevalence and seriousness
differ.
5.3.1. Theories on Homosexuality
There are different explanations for the causes of being a homosexual. The difference
of the explanations is due to the presence of differences in terms of fields of studies in
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Female prostitution is, therefore, an indiscriminate sexual relationship for pay with
unlimited number of men. Thus, a prostitute is a woman who engages in an unlimited
heterosexual relationship (promiscuous) for pay and is emotionally indifferent.
As long as the history of prostitution is concerned, it is as old as the history of human
society. In ancient Greek and Romans, prostitution was one of those socially dignified
behaviour as it was associated with religion. But, in modern world, there is no good
attitude towards prostitution.
5.4.1. Some Explanations on the Reasons for Why Prostitution
Several scholars from different fields of study have forwarded variously different
explanations on the reasons for the prevalence of prostitution across different times in
human history. Biologists and psychologists claims that the physical structure of human
female is conducive for prostitution unlike other animal species since it is sexually
receptive all the year round. Sex is a permanent element of human behaviour. However,
most studies conducted in Europe and North America failed to prove that prostitutes are
physically and psychologically different from nonprostitutes women.
Economic explanation of prostitution, on the other hand, argued that prostitutes mainly
come from the lower economic strata of a given society. This argument claims that
women will be resorted to prostitution if their economic conditions get worst.
Nevertheless, poverty cannot be the only cause for prostitution. There are women who
join prostitution for the sake of luxury it brings compared to the normal employment,
especially in poorly paid jobs. Thus, prostitution, in this sense, is a matter of rational
calculation of costs and benefits for the prostitute whether to join prostitution or not to.
Besides, this point of view couldnt address those prostitutes coming from developed
nations who are better off in terms of their economic conditions. There are also people
who are capable of looking at the functional dimension of prostitution. Social
functionalists suggest that prostitution satisfies needs of patrons that may not be readily
met through more socially acceptable forms such as courtship or marriage. The buyer
receives sex without any responsibility for procreation or sentimental attachment; at the
same time, the seller makes a living through this exchange. Furthermore, prostitution
reduces the degree of conflicts of sexual rivalry by presenting sexual services to those
who have no legal or normal access to sex. Therefore, prostitution does perform certain
social functions that society seems to need. However, this is not to suggest that
prostitution is a desirable or legitimate form of social behaviour. Thus, it can be seen as
a necessary evil (Andagachew, 1990; Mooney, et. al, 2005; and Schaefer, 2003).
Finally, according conflict theorists, prostitution is one of the general conditions of
prostituting of labour in capitalism. It is an exploitation of women by men which is a
parallel to the exploitation of the working class by the capitalist class.
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construction in urban areas that attracted rural migrants leaving their wives
behind;
The pervasiveness of unemployment and underemployment in rural areas was
intolerable for some segment of women who finally migrated to urban areas;
Urbanization became a fertile ground for the persistence and mushrooming of
prostitution in Ethiopia in the 20th century;
Gradual change in the socio-economic system of the country; and
The prevalence of early and child marriage, forced marriage, and higher rate of
divorce.
According to Andargachew (1990), when we compare the 1940s and 1950s peoples
attitude towards prostitution with that of the present-day, people have come more
tolerant of prostitution today than ever before. Currently, people can go in and out of
places of prostitutes without any shame of being seen in those areas.
Prostitutes have indirectly been formally recognized by the government. They have
been made registered and pay taxes by law, for example, bar prostitutes. Therefore,
prostitution has been institutionalized in the county since a long period of time.
According to several researches conducted by different individual in the country, there
are different types of prostitutions along with several corresponding social vices.
However, we do not waste time in mentioning of all the types of the prostitutions in the
country in a very detail manner. Dear readers, if you are interested to know all the types
of prostitutions identified by Andargachew; please refer to his book The Crime
Problems and Its Correction on pages 302 312.
5.4.4. Harmful Effects of Prostitution
Prostitution, with no doubt, has various negative consequences on the society and on
the individuals as well as on the country at large. Some of these negative effects
include:
It leads to moral degradation;
It undermines the marriage institution which finally resulted in family
disorganization;
It leads to identity crisis illegitimate children;
It forces prostitutes to be socially outcasts personal disorganization;
It wastes a big potential man power;
It increases corruption and embezzlement;
It accelerates the rate of crime and other related social vices; and
It is the main cause for public health problems transmission of STDs such as
AIDS.
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5.5. Gambling
Gambling can be classified into two: illegal and legal. Illegal gambling are those forms
of gambling which are not recognized and registered by the concerned body of the
government of a nation. The legalization of some forms of gambling helps the nation to
raise the revenue through taxation. Thus, legal gambling is responsible to pay the stated
amount of tax.
Our argument to view illegal gambling as a victimless crime is that several countries
now permit some forms of legal gambling, such as on-track betting, off-track betting,
casino games, and lotteries. If those forms of gambling are not defined as crime, why
then should betting with a cookie on sporting event or playing the numbers be treated as
crime? The variation from nation to nation in defining what kind of gambling is no
uniform consensus on treating gambling as a crime (Conklin, 2004).
5.5.1. Costs of Illegal Gambling
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. . . deviations from the normal way of behaving may be occurred either to the positive or the negative
direction. Those behaviours which deviate from the normal to the negative direction are known as
negative deviance, whereas those which are positive achievements and positive actions beyond the
normal (average) behaviour are known as positive deviance.