Unit 3 - Asp
Unit 3 - Asp
Unit 3 - Asp
Research on bystander intervention (Darley & Latané, 1968; Latané & Nida,
1981) has shown that various factors influence a person’s decision to assist in an
emergency situation, including the ambiguity of the situation and the perceived
similarity of the victim to the potential helper. Another factor is the number of
bystanders who witness the emergency. There is considerable research evidence
of a phenomenon known as the bystander effect, which states that people are
less likely to help in an emergency when other bystanders are present. One
explanation for the bystander effect is that the presence of others lowers the
individual bystander’s sense of responsibility. The drivers who passed by the
Toronto park and heard Matti’s cries that evening might not have intervened
because they thought that, given the busy road nearby, others would intervene.
Moreover, this diffusion of responsibility (i.e., the diminished sense of
responsibility a person feels when he or she believes that others would or should
intervene) is more likely to occur when a bystander can remain anonymous (the
driver may remain in his or her car and continue driving without much notice),
when there are relatively few victims (only Matti’s voice was heard screaming),
and when the victim is perceived to be dissimilar to the potential helper (Russian
words were heard).
Research on deindividuation (i.e., a diminished
sense of self-awareness) suggests that people, under the cover of anonymity in
which their identities are concealed, may deliberately choose to engage in
behavior about which they might otherwise be inhibited, including aggression.
The notion of social facilitation (Zajonc, 1965)
informs us that a person’s performance on a well-learned task will be enhanced
by the heightened arousal caused by the presence of others.
According to the frustration–aggression
hypothesis (Berkowitz, 1989), frustration—defined as anything that blocks a
person from attaining a goal—may have been a trigger for their aggressive
behavior in the presence of a new set of potential victims.
although deindividuation and social facilitation are good examples of some of
the proximal variables (i.e., those occurring close in time to the event) that can
influence criminal behavior, there is another set of factors that also is important,
referred to as distal variables (i.e., those occurring in the distant past relative to
the event). As we will see, a comprehensive social psychological theory of
criminal behavior should include both sets of determinants.
Biological Theories
Biologically based theories view criminal behavior as the result of genetics,
psychophysiology, neurological functioning, and biochemistry. Studies of
genetic influences, for instance, have noted a greater preponderance of criminals
among sons whose biological parents also were criminals (Lytton, 1990). The
well-documented finding that males have a greater propensity for physical
aggression than do females has been attributed to higher levels of testosterone
(Dabbs, Carr, Frady, & Riad, 1995) and the presence of an extra Y chromosome
(XYY) (Crowell, 1987), although the latter observation has been disputed
(Mednick, Moffitt, Gabrielli, & Hutchings, 1986). In addition to these inherited
biological characteristics, acquired biological deficits may influence criminal
behavior. Even before birth, factors may conspire against the developing fetus,
predisposing it to impulsive, hyperactive, or aggressive behavior. For example, a
lack of proper nutrients during critical periods of prenatal development or pre- or
postnatal exposure to toxic agents (e.g., alcohol, cigarettes, lead, drugs) may
result in mild or severe deficits in cognition (e.g., learning disabilities, social
information-processing deficits) and behavior (e.g., poor motor coordination,
poor self-control) (Hodgins, Kratzer, & McNeil, 2002)—factors that are known
to be markers of aggressive behavior in children.
Sociological Theories
Some of the most enduring theories of crime are those that are based on
sociological principles. These traditional theories (e.g., anomie, strain, control,
subculture), although widely diverse, attempt to explain crime in relation to
various factors in society such as social class, poverty, and social inequity. Thus,
a person’s socioeconomic status, determined by education, occupation, income,
and neighborhood characteristics, explains substantial variability in criminal
behavior. Lower socioeconomic status is associated with a higher rate of crime.
However, the causal mechanisms purported to connect these variables will differ
depending on the particular theory. For example, according to strain theory
(Cohen, 1960), criminal behavior is caused by undue strain (frustration)
experienced as a result of pathological social structures (e.g., social inequality,
poverty) that prevent a person from achieving the middle-class expectations for
material success. The strain leads the person to engage in socially deviant
behavior, such as crime, to attain goods and social prestige. Subculture theory
(Wolfgang & Ferracuti, 1981) states that individuals who engage in criminal
activity are merely conforming to the hedonistic, hostile, and destructive values
of lower-class culture. Indeed, in the deviant subculture, the nonconformists who
do not engage in theft, drug use, and gang affiliation are said to be the true
deviants (Andrews & Bonta, 2010).
Social Psychological Theories
Theories of criminal behavior from a social psychological perspective tend to
consider the influence of both dispositional and situational factors. For example,
as Hoge (2001) noted, social ecological models explain crime as a function of
the interaction among multiple “forces operating at the level of the individual,
their immediate social environment, and more distal factors within the larger
social environment” (p. 58).
Recall that according to Bandura’s (1977) social learning theory
criminal activity represents learned behaviors that develop
through a person’s interactions and experiences with the social environment.
This learning takes place as a result of various processes, including observing
and imitating the criminal behavior of others, receiving positive consequences
for engaging in criminal behavior (e.g., peer approval), realizing that such
behavior can effectively lead to desired outcomes (i.e., have instrumental value),
and developing a high sense of self-efficacy in using antisocial means to achieve
one’s aims. As we will see, these notions have greatly influenced the
development of current social psychological theories of crime.
This subsection focuses on the general personality and social psychological
model of criminal behavior developed by Andrews and Bonta (2010).
According to Andrews and Bonta, the likelihood that a person will engage in
criminal behavior is increased by the presence of risk factors in his or her life.
Eight categories of risk factors—some personal and some environmental—are
proposed:
1. An early age of onset for antisocial behavior
2. Temperamental and personal characteristics that are conducive to criminal
activity (e.g., impulsivity, aggressive energy, weak problem-solving
abilities)
3. Antisocial attitudes, values, and beliefs
4. Association with procriminal peers and isolation from noncriminal
associates
5. Negative parenting and family experiences (e.g., harsh and abusive
discipline, poor parental monitoring and supervision, low family cohesion)
6. Low levels of school or vocational achievement
7. Poor use of leisure time and low levels of involvement in prosocial leisure
pursuits and recreational activities
8. Abuse of drugs and/or alcohol
In addition, characteristics of the immediate situation are considered to
interact with characteristics of the individual to increase the likelihood of
criminal activity.
The factors in Andrews and Bonta’s (2010) model are viewed from a
developmental perspective, either appearing early in a person’s life (e.g.,
temperamental factors, family factors) or emerging over time through middle
childhood and into adolescence (e.g., antisocial attitudes, negative peer
influences).
Antisocial attitudes and criminal behavior. The study of attitudes, including
antisocial attitudes, and their relation to behavior is an important endeavor in
social psychology. Attitudes are generally thought of as evaluative judgments
that a person makes about an issue, an object, an event, or a person. Thus, a
person’s attitudes toward crime may be relevant to his or her tendency to commit
a crime.
Antisocial peer group and criminal behavior. Studies have shown that
offending behavior, particularly among adolescents, is apt to be deeply
embedded within an antisocial peer group, the second element (i.e., risk factor)
of Andrews and Bonta’s (2010) model on which we are focusing. The influence
of the peer group can come about in one of two ways: (1) through a relatively
casual and time-limited association with delinquent peers or (2) through a clearly
indoctrinated, long-term affiliation with other antisocial youths, such as
membership in a street gang. Adolescents who follow the first path are identified
as the adolescence-limited group, and those who follow the second path are
identified as the life-course-persistent group (Moffitt, 1993).
For adolescence-limited individuals, antisocial behavior is limited, as the
name implies, to the teen years. The onset of their problem behaviors is largely
explained as resulting from an association with delinquent peers. These
individuals experience few developmental risk factors (e.g., harsh and punitive
parenting, academic problems) and include as many females as males. Their
criminal behavior is typically mild in nature, involving primarily nonviolent
offenses (e.g., property damage, drug use, and shoplifting) rather than violent
offenses. The criminal activity tends to end within a few years of onset.
For the life-course-persistent group, the influence of the delinquent peer
group follows a more lengthy and complex developmental pathway (Moffitt,
1993). This precocious antisocial group, comprising fewer than 10% of
adolescents, is more likely to consist of males than females, experience many
developmental risk factors, and show an early age of onset for problem
behaviors (i.e., before 12 years). These individuals tend to engage in a wide
variety of antisocial acts (e.g., violence, drug use, vandalism) referred to as
“versatility.”
Treatment Implications
In keeping with the general personality and social psychological approach, the
effective treatment of antisocial behavior involves targeting the factors that
support or maintain the criminal behavior. As outlined in the model, this includes
targeting factors such as antisocial attitudes, beliefs, and peer associations as
well as family factors. For example, treatment programs that target antisocial
thinking as one component of a rehabilitation strategy have been shown to yield
positive effects in reducing the risk of reoffending or recidivism (Coates, Miller,
& Ohlin, 1978).
One successful intervention strategy, the Multisystemic Therapy (MST)
program for seriously violent youths (Henggeler, Schoenwald, Borduin,
Rowland, & Cunningham, 2009), attempts to influence the multiple social
systems in which young people are embedded (e.g., family, school, peer,
neighborhood, justice system) to bring about a decrease in criminal behavior.
Goals of Prison: