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PSYCHOLOGY AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR

PSYCHOLOGY AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR. Concepts and Definitions. Defining the Subject Matter. Crime Delinquency Deviance

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PSYCHOLOGY AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR

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  1. PSYCHOLOGY AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR Concepts and Definitions

  2. Defining the Subject Matter • Crime • Delinquency • Deviance ‘Although often lay people feel they can easily identify crime and criminals, deviants and deviance, there are in fact unclear boundaries bordering legality and illegality, normality and deviance’ (Holdaway 1988:8).

  3. Variability of Deviance and Crime • Definitions of deviance and crime are historically and culturally variable • They are socially defined and constructed • They are not inherent in actions or the characteristics of individuals

  4. Deviance • Deviance: the recognized violation of cultural norms. • Crime:the violation of norms a society formally enacts into criminal law. • Deviance: range of acts of nonconformity, from variations in hair styles to murder.

  5. Deviance • Non conformity to a given norm, or set of norms, which are accepted by a significant number of people Norms: • Prescriptive (Sanctioned or authorized by long-standing custom or usage). • Proscriptive (prohibition) Sources of norms • Social consensus • Social conflict • Folkways and mores (group habits that are common to a society or culture and the accepted traditional customs and usages of a particular social group).

  6. John Hagan’s 3 Dimensions • Evaluation of social harm • Severity of social response • Agreement about the norm

  7. Types of Deviance and Crime Consensus crime: wearing samurai hair style in medieval Japan Conflict crime: growing a long beard in early 17th century Russia Social deviation: wearing long hair in John Lie’s high school Social diversion: dyeing your hair purple in the U.S.A. today High agreement Confusion, apathy Relatively harmless Very harmful Severe Mild Agreement about the norm Evaluation of Severity of Social Harm Social Response Source: Hagan (1994).

  8. Social Control • Deviant people are subject to social control: how members of a society try to influence each other's behavior. • Informal Social Control: mild, raised eyebrows, gossip, ostracism… • Formal Social Control: breaking laws

  9. Crime and delinquence • Crime - defined by Criminal Law. • A Juvenile delinquent is a young person (in Lithuania, under the age of 14) who has engaged in criminal behaviour.

  10. Seriousness of Deviance and Crime • Social diversions: mild acts of deviance • Social deviations: more serious, institutional sanctions and large portion of pop. agree they are bad • Conflict Crimes: state defines as illegal, but the definition is controversial in the wider society • Consensus Crimes: widely recognized to be bad in themselves

  11. definitions: • The legal definition: The criminal is the person who breaks the law. • The role definition: The criminal is the individual who sustains a pattern of delinquency over a long period of time and whose life and identity are organised around a pattern of deviant behaviour (commitment to deviant role and lifestyle) • The societal response definition:According to this definition in order for an act and/or an actor to be defined as deviant or criminal, an audience must perceive and judge the behaviour in question

  12. Classification • Crime and the criminals who engage in it make up a rich bundle of activities and persons • Theoretically meaningful taxonomies of crime forms and offender types • Two different lines of classification activity: • Crime centered – attempt to identify distinct forms of crime, along with correlates • Criminal centered – distinct patterns or types into which real life offenders can be sorted • Our interest lies with the latter

  13. Chaiken and Chaiken, 1982 • Behavioural versatility rather than specialization in particular crimes is most common among repeat offenders • Attempt to distinguish classes of criminal acts or criminal actors • Typing may entail negative and stigmatising labelling • Denies individual uniqueness • Focus on commonalities serve good value – communication; decision making; prediction • Classes are identified by a few prototypical features shared by most but not all offenders

  14. CRIME CENTERED CLASSIFICATION • McKinney (1966) – based on: criminal career of the offender, group support of criminal behaviour, correspondence between criminal behaviour and legitimate behaviour patterns and societal reactions • Violent personal crime – murder, assault and forcible rape • Occasional property crime – auto theft, shop lifting, check forgery and vandalism • Occupational – crime from workplace • Political crime • Public order – drunkenness, vagrancy, disorderly conduct, prostitution, traffic violations, drug addiction • Conventional crime – robbery, burglary and gang theft • Organized crime – organised prostitution, organized gambling, control of narcotics • Professional crime – confidence games, forgery, counterfeiting

  15. Farr and Gibbon’s Classification (1992) 7 crime categories Property harms • Property predatory crime- burglary, robbery, auto theft • Property fraudulent crime – embezzlement, forgery, fraud and bribery Personal harm • Interpersonal violence general – homicide and assault • Interpersonal violence – sexual – rape, sexual abuse and other crimes of sexual violence Harms against the social order or social values • Transactional –offences involving a willing exchange of goods or services, such as prostitution, gambling and drug sales • Order disruption – escape, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct • Folk mundane crime – violations of technical rules • Distinguish between criminal activities carried on by formal or complex organizations, by offender networks and by individuals acting alone

  16. Classification of Crime • The Criminal Code distinguishes between crimes and contraventions, the former being of a more serious nature. • Crimes include willful homicide, bodily harm, theft, receiving stolen property, misappropriation, assault and resistance against police officers, bribery, abuse of power, rape, prostitution, indecent assault, defilement of minors, forgery, fraud, perjury and many others. • Contraventions include disturbance of public peace, swearing, unlawful betting, various traffic offenses, dumping of garbage, failure to pay maintenance, drunkenness, vagrancy, minor assault, and threatening.

  17. CRIMINAL CENTERED CLASSIFICATION: • The development of offender typologies • When we sort offenders into behavioural types, we invent conceptual schemes that allow us to see common threads or characteristics that identify groups of similar offenders • Classifications are needed for three main purposes • management decisions in the penal system • to facilitate treatment decisions • theoretical understanding

  18. Gibbon’s role-career typology distinguishes criminal roles according to the • offence behaviour, • its interactional setting – alone, organised criminal network, subculture • The self concept of the offender • role related attitudes e.g. towards conventional life, work, police, social control agencies, gents of socialisation • Role career – development in terms of criminality

  19. PSYCHOLOGICAL CLASSIFIACTIONS

  20. A: theoretically derived Stage theories inspired by social psychological theories on social perspective taking Development in terms of increasing involvement with people and social institutions Progressively more differentiated perceptions of the world, the self and others

  21. Interpersonal maturity level (Warren, 1983) Palmer (1974) • 7 stages of integration • Fixation at a particular level determines relative consistency in goals and expectations and a working philosophy of life • Those progressing beyond the 1-4 level are assumed to be less likely to be in conflict with society and most criminals fall in 1-2, 1-3, 1-4 levels

  22. classifications • B. Empirical classifications: Eg MMPI based classifications • C. Psychiatric classification Eg - paraphilias - personality disorders

  23. Criticism of typologies • Loose fit between typologies and the real world • Studies of inmates E.g. Garabedian (1964): social types exist but there is less regularity in inmate behaviour than is implied by typologies • McKenna (1962) many real life offenders cannot be assigned to the categories of role career schemes with much precision

  24. What is criminal psychology? • To study the psychological factor of the criminal. Mainly based on study on the motivation of crime, thus to examine the character, environment of the criminal and the process of the criminal behavior. • Using psychological method to explain crime itself and then bring evidence of a crime to light in order to help investigation, justice, and correction.; a psychology in order to hold back crimes.

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