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Today’s Agenda. Review Social Disorganization Central Concepts, Policy Implications Anomie / Strain Theories . Modern Social Disorganization Theory. Review of Social Disorganization. Macro (Neighborhood) level theory Explains why certain neighborhoods have high crime rates
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Today’s Agenda • Review Social Disorganization • Central Concepts, Policy Implications • Anomie / Strain Theories
Review of Social Disorganization • Macro (Neighborhood) level theory • Explains why certain neighborhoods have high crime rates • Theory of “Places,” and not “People” • Not all people who live there are “crime prone,” in fact most are law-abiding
Race and Crime • Explanation for high crime/victimization rates in minority neighborhoods • Economic, social, and political reasons for interrupted flow out of neighborhoods • Cultural legacy • Code of the Streets • Cognitive Landscape
Social Ecology Policy Implications ▪ Chicago Area Projects (CAP) ▪ Mobilize local informal social organization and social control—creating “community committees” ▪ Overcome influence of delinquent peers and criminal adults ▪ Assign detached local adults to neighborhood gangs ▪ Recreational programs designed to provide youth with associations with conventional peers and adults ▪ Improve sanitation, traffic control, and physical decay ▪ Produced mixed results
Social Ecology Policy Implications ▪ Neighborhood watch programs ▪ Only successfully implemented in neighborhoods that are cohesive • Rob Sampson: the more (and more diverse) non-profit programs the better • After school programs, recreation, churches… ▪ Urban-renewal projects ▪ Cabrini Green and other high rise “projects” • New “mixed” ownership (section 8, partial subsidy, private ownership)
Social Ecology Policy Implications ▪ Implications for criminal justice system ▪ Community policing ▪ Active role working with neighborhood residents to identify and solve community problems ▪ Reduces fear of crime ▪ Little evidence of reduction in criminal behavior ▪ Limit the Damage of Mass Incarceration ▪ High levels of incarceration within a neighborhood might contribute to social disorganization: recent research = may have maxed out on any benefits
GROUP WORK • Watch for all elements of social disorganization • Ecological • Collective Efficacy • Cultural Values • Return to class when finished
Anomie or “Strain” Theories Merton Agnew Messner and Rosenfeld
Durkhiem’s Legacy Rapidly Changing Society “Industrial Prosperity” Anomie (Norms are Weakened) Human Nature as Insatiable; must therefore cap or control Social Ties Important The Anomie/Strain Tradition The Social Disorganization and “Informal Control”
Robert K. Merton • Social Structure and Anomie (1938) • From Durkheim: Institutionalized norms are weakened in societies that place an intense value on economic success • Applied this to the United States • The “American Dream”
Conflict: Means and Goals • Cultural Goal in U.S.? • This goal is universal • (The American Dream) • Institutionalized Means? • Due to the social structure in the U.S., the means are unequally distributed • Segment of society with no way to attain goal
MODES OF CULTURAL INSTITUTIONALIZED ADAPTATION GOALS MEANS 1. Conformity + + 2. Innovation + - 3. Ritualism - + 4. Retreatism - - 5. Rebellion +/- +/- Strain Theory (Micro Level)
Criticisms of Merton’s Strain Theory • Is crime a “lower class” phenomena? • Cannot explain “expressive” crimes • Weak empirical support • Why do people “adapt” differently?
Agnew: General Strain Theory • Overhaul of Merton’s Strain Theory • Three sources of strain • Failure to achieve valued goals • Removal of valued stimuli • Can’t escape noxious stimuli
Agnew (GST) • StrainNegative Affective States • Anger, fear, frustration, depression • In lieu of “Coping Mechanisms,” anger and frustration can produce delinquency • StrainNeg EmotionalDelinquency
Agnew (GST) • Tests of GST are more favorable • Is this theory a theory of “Strain” (in a sociological sense) or a theory of “STRESS?” (in a psychological sense)
CRIME AND THE AMERICAN DREAM Messner and Rosenfeld
The Legacy of Merton • In “Social Structure and Anomie”: • “Modes of Adaptation” (micro) • Discussion of why U.S. might be crime prone (macro) than other countries • Messner and Rosefeld, in the 1980s, revisited the macro part of the theory
Elements of the “American Dream” • Achievement • Individualism • Universalism • The “fetishism” of money • These elements encourage “Anomic conditions”
THE AMERICAN DREAM PRODUCES ANOMIE • MERTON: Pursuit of financial success is “limited only by considerations of technical expediency.” • Lombardi: Winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing.
Institutions in Society • Social institutions as the building blocks of society. • The Economy • The Polity • The Family • Education
Key Issue for M & R • These institutions sometimes have conflicting goals and values. • All societies can therefore be characterized by their distinctive arrangements of institutions • The U.S.? Economy Dominates: we are a “MARKET SOCIETY”
Indicators of Economic Dominance • Devaluation of non-economic institutional functions and roles • Accommodation to economic requirements by other social institutions • Penetration of economic norms into other social domains
Implications of Economic Dominance • Weak institutional controls • Family and School are handicapped in efforts to promote allegiance to social rules • Single parent families • Poorly funded schools • “Weak institutions invite challenge”
Culture, Social Structure, and Crime Rates CULTURE The American Dream ANOMIE SOCIAL STRUCTURE Economic Dominance Weak Institutional Controls HIGH CRIME RATES