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Profile Documents Logout
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File - Numbers 1-30
File - Numbers 1-30

... • Crime is the result of individuals with low selfcontrol encountering situations or opportunities in which crime will produce immediate gratification with relatively low levels of risk. • Argue that the cause of all crime is low-self control and that this characteristic is stable across the life co ...
Social Learning Theory-
Social Learning Theory-

... Ph.D from University of Chicago, 1913 Focused on Chicago School question: how are delinquent cultures “transmitted” across generations? Published and revised in his textbook from 1934-1947 ...
Social Learning Theory-
Social Learning Theory-

... Focused on Chicago School question: how are delinquent cultures “transmitted” across generations? Published and revised in his textbook from 19341947 ...
Why Crime Happens: Sociology
Why Crime Happens: Sociology

... rich and poor, management and labor, whites and minorities Assumes that society is based primarily on conflict between competing interest groups and that criminal law and the criminal justice system are used to control subordinate ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... Deviance ...
Social Structure I
Social Structure I

... Disorganization • Macro (Neighborhood) level theory – Explains why certain neighborhoods have high crime rates Ecological Social Crime Characteristics Control Rates ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... Street Gangs • Ecological features of Zone of Transition: – Crime rate – Economic depression – Physical deterioration (housing) – Single parent households – High % of renters (vs. owners) – Heterogeneity (a.k.a ethnic diversity) – Spatial Mobility ...
Notes 11
Notes 11

... Street Gangs • Mapping incidents of Delinquency (55,000 over 30 years) • Shaw & McKay observe spatial patterns in places where delinquency is clustered • Spatial pattern of crime is stable ...
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Social disorganization theory

In sociology, the social disorganization theory is one of the most important theories developed by the Chicago School, related to ecological theories. The theory directly links crime rates to neighborhood ecological characteristics; a core principle of social disorganization theory is that place matters. In other words, a person's residential location is a substantial factor shaping the likelihood that that person will become involved in illegal activities. The theory suggests that, among determinants of a person's later illegal activity, residential location is as significant as or more significant than the person's individual characteristics (e.g., age, gender, or race). For example, the theory suggests that youths from disadvantaged neighborhoods participate in a subculture which approves of delinquency, and that these youths thus acquire criminality in this social and cultural setting.Larry Gaines and Roger Miller state in their book Criminal Justice in Action that ""crime is largely a product of unfavorable conditions in certain communities."" According to the social disorganization theory, there are ecological factors that lead to high rates of crime in these communities, and these factors linked to constantly elevated levels of ""high school dropouts, unemployment, deteriorating infrastructures, and single-parent homes"" (Gaines and Miller). The theory is not intended to apply to all types of crime, just street crime at the neighborhood level. The theory has not been used to explain organized crime, corporate crime, or deviant behavior that takes place outside neighborhood settings.Up to the beginning of 1970s, this theory took a back seat to the psychological explanation of crime. A recent overview of social disorganization theory, including suggestions for refining and extending the theory, is a journal article by Kubrin and Weitzer (2003).
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