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Chapter 6 Social Structure Theory

Chapter 6 Social Structure Theory. Criminology 9 TH Edition Larry J. Siegel. Questions. What is a stratified society ? What is the culture of poverty ? How do these two issues affect class, race, and culture?. Social Structure Theories. Criminal Behavior Patterns Are Affected By:

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Chapter 6 Social Structure Theory

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  1. Chapter 6Social Structure Theory Criminology 9TH Edition Larry J. Siegel © 2003 Wadsworth Publishing Co.

  2. Questions What is a stratified society? What is the culture of poverty? How do these two issues affect class, race, and culture?

  3. Social Structure Theories Criminal Behavior Patterns Are Affected By: • Places - Places not people cause crime, i.e., deteriorated lower-class areas. • Socioeconomic placement in society can influence the potential for criminal behavior, i.e., unable to attain social or economic success.

  4. Social Structure Theories:The Underlying Premise • The real crime problem is a lower class phenomenon. • Those that live in equivalent social environments tend to behave in a predictable fashion. If the environment did not affect human behavior, then crime rates would be dispersed equally across the social structure.

  5. The Three Branches of Social Structure Theory

  6. Social Disorganization Theory

  7. MAJOR PREMISE Crime is a product of transitional neighborhoods that manifest social disorganization and value conflict. STRENGTHS Identifies why crime rates are highest in slum areas. Points out the factors that produce crime. Suggests programs to help reduce crime. Social Disorganization Theory:Concentric Zone Theory

  8. Shaw and McKay’s Concentric Zones Map of Chicago

  9. Factors That Affect CrimeThe Social Ecology School • Transitional neighborhoods • Community deterioration • Poverty concentration • Employment opportunities • Community fear, i.e., race, gangs, mistrust. • Community change • Collective efficacy, i.e., informal, institutional, and public social control

  10. Social Disorganization Theories

  11. Question According to social disorganization theory, how does fear affect a ‘disorganized’ neighborhood?

  12. Strain Theories Crime is a direct result of the frustration and anger of the lower-class to achieve culturally defined goals, i.e., wealth, success, power; however, the means to acquire these goals are stymied by the stratification of class and status in society.

  13. The Basic Components of Strain Theory

  14. Anomie • Durkheim: Norms have broken down because of rapid social change, i.e., traditions and values. • Merton: Culturally defined goals and socially approved means for obtaining them have broken down, i.e., education and hard work. • Messner and Rosenfeld: The American Dream as a goal and a process. Crime becomes the strategy for attaining wealth.

  15. Question Why would Durkheim suggest that crime may be beneficial to society?

  16. Major Premise People who adopt the goals of society but lack the means to attain them seek alternatives, such as crime. Strengths Points out how competition for success creates conflict and crime. Suggests that social conditions and not personality can account for crime. Can explain middle- and upper-class crime. Strain Theory: Anomie

  17. Elements of General Strain Theory

  18. Major Premise Strain has a variety of sources. Strain causes crime in the absence of adequate coping mechanisms. Strengths Identifies the complexities of strain in modern society. Expands on anomie theory. Shows the influence of social events on behavior over the life course. Strain Theory:General Strain Theory

  19. Sources of General Strain(Individual) • Social: peer or social group. • Community factors: ecological, i.e., goals, economic deprivation, interaction of frustrated individuals. • Negative affective states: failure to achieve goals or expectations, the loss of positive stimuli, i.e., friend or family member; and, presentation of negative stimuli, i.e., abuse. Causes: fear, anger, depression, frustration, and disappointment.

  20. Relative Deprivation Theory • Perceptions of economic and social inequality lead to feelings of envy, mistrust, and aggression • Lower-class people feel both deprived and embittered • Minorities feel relative deprivation more acutely than non-minorities

  21. Strain Theories

  22. Questions How would trait theories interact with strain theories? Could strain theories explain chronic offending? If so, in what way?

  23. CULTURAL DEVIANCE THEORYICombines the Effects of:STRAINandSOCIAL DISORGANIZATION

  24. Question What are the elements of cultural deviance theory?

  25. Elements of Cultural Deviance Theory

  26. STRENGTHS Identifies the aspects of lower-class life that produce street crime. Adds to Shaw and McKay’s analysis. Creates the concept of culture conflict MAJOR PREMISE Obedience to the norms of their lower-class culture puts people in conflict with the norms of the dominant culture. Cultural Deviance Theory:Sellin’s Culture Conflict Theory

  27. Questions According to Walter Miller, what are the “focal concerns” or values that affect lower-class culture. How do these “focal concerns” affect the lower-class and crime?

  28. Cultural Deviance Theories

  29. Those who believe they are valid point to: high crime and delinquency rates in inner-city slums each branch seems to support and amplify the others appearance that the concepts may be interdependent Those who believe they are invalid point to: lower-class crime rates may be artifacts of bias a significant number of people living in the slums are not criminal it’s questionable whether a distinct lower-class culture actually exists Are Social Structure Theories Valid or Invalid?

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