1 / 9

Chapter 8: Deviance & Social COntrol

Objectives: Define deviance and explain why it is relative. Why are norms necessary and why do we create a system of social control Explain Positive and Negative Sanctions Why do people violate norms. Chapter 8: Deviance & Social COntrol. Deviance : the violation of rules or norms

gratia
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 8: Deviance & Social COntrol

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Objectives: Define deviance and explain why it is relative. Why are norms necessary and why do we create a system of social control Explain Positive and Negative Sanctions Why do people violate norms Chapter 8: Deviance & Social COntrol

  2. Deviance: the violation of rules or norms can be minor (driving over speed limit) can be serious (murdering someone) ”It is not the act itself, but the reactions to the act, that make something deviant” (Howard Becker) what is deviant to some is not deviant to others (Read Thinking Critically pg. 203) Crime: violation of norms written into law Stigma: “blemishes” that discredit a person’s claim to a “normal” identity What is Deviance?

  3. Norms make social life possible by making behavior predictable example pg. 201 (purchasing milk) Norms prevent social chaos Lay out basic guidelines for how we should play our roles and interact with others social order: a group’s usual and customary social arrangements, on which its members depend and on which they base their lives Deviance undermines this order humans develop social control: a formal or informal means of enforcing its norms How Norms make Social Life Possible

  4. Negative Sanctions: expression of disapproval for breaking a norm ranges from a mild, informal reaction (frown) to a formal reaction (prison sentence) Positive Sanctions: a reward or positive reaction for following norms ranges from a smile to a prize The severity of the sanction depends on your perspective Sanctions

  5. Shaming is an example of a negative sanction effective within a primary group examples: Hester Prynne in The Scarlet Letter ; Arizona sheriff making inmates wear pink underwear Degradation Ceremony: an attempt to remake the self by stripping away an individual’s self-identity and stamping a new identity in its place  perp walks; shaving head for military Shaming and Degradation Ceremonies

  6. Biological look for answer within the individual something in the individual’s makeup leads him/her to be deviant Genetic Predispositions: inborn tendencies (to commit deviant acts) biological explanations: 1) intelligence— low intelligence crime 2) “XYY”—extra Y chromosome in malescrime 3) body type—people with “squarish/muscular” bodies more likely to commit street crime like mugging, rape, burglary  These explanations don’t hold up very well Explaining Deviance…3 perspectives

  7. Psychological Look for answer within the individual Personality disorders: the view that a personality disturbance of some sort causes an individual to violate social norms subconscious motives drive people to deviance like: suppressed anger, suffocating mothers, absent fathers no inevitable outcome of any childhood experience; deviance is not associated with any particular personality Explaining Deviance…3 perspectives

  8. Sociological  Search for factors outside of individual look for social influences that “recruit” people to break norms ie: socialization, group membership, subcultures, social class Explain deviance using the 3 sociological perspectives (Symbolic Interactionism, Fuctionalism, and Conflict) Explaining Deviance…3 perspectives

  9. Due Friday: (either hand in or by email) --see examples: improv everywhere (frozen grand central station) Gather 1 example of deviance in the news or on the internet. This can be a newspaper article/magazine story/news video/youtube video Write a paragraph explaining the act of deviance you have discovered and why it is a deviant act. Assignment…

More Related