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Edited 3/31/01 Soc 100 C7 Deviance Deviance and Social Control 1 • “Society prepares the crime; the criminal commits it” • Billy Wagner Introduction 1 Two types of deviance Deviance (chapter 7 1. Personal and patterned deviance within an institutional framework--Deviant acts survey Collective Behavior (chapter 17 ) 2. Social behavior directed toward changing social institutions 2 Chapter 7 Deviance and Social Control 0. Introduction* Answer deviance questions-in workbook 1. What is Deviance * 2. Theories of Deviance * 3. Crime and The justice System * 3 0. Introduction Beer Crisis of 1621: Pilgrims and other settlers drank beer. It was felt safer then the water in European cities but there was limited supplies on the Mayflower. After negotiation the captain shared the ship’s beer, vital for the trip home, with the settlers. All, even children drank with meals. Today much of this would be felt to be deviant. Text page 227 Models and Deviance: some examples (1) Push--biological reasons, phrenology, body types, XXY chromosomes, etc. (2) Mixed/WW--Freud would see repression, regression, stuck at a stage or parent-child relationship (uncaring, arbitrary and/or punitive). (3) Religious--original sin, “sinners who had succumbed to temptation or …been taken over by evil spirits or the devil” (p239 6th ed.) (4) Legal--violation of formal rules 4 1. What is Deviance: Sociological Sociologically: "breach of social order, violation of social rules and expectations, elicits disapproval" (1) deviance is universal --not in 6th edition * (2) the definition [content] of deviance is highly varied --not in 6th edition * (3) the functions of deviance --not in 6th edition * (4) deviance and social control * (5) irony of social control --not in 6th edition * Absolutist position deviance lies within the act, viewed as a transgression against god. Examples: “right to life”, “animal rights” as well as lots of ethnocentric beliefs. 5 (1) deviance is universal • People universally differentiate between acceptable and unacceptable behavior • Responses to deviance vary with intensity from disgust to outrage • Though social definitions creating deviance are universal specific behaviors defined as deviance are highly varied Examples of variations historically and cross culturally are “Drinking in America” and “International Trends in Alcohol Consumption” (text page 229-235) 6 (2) the definition [content] of deviance is highly varied -place -time -actor Belgium & Netherlands MJ legal, Arabs hash hish ok, alcohol no; Hindus beef no Muslims & Jews pork no; Eskimos sex hospitality ok Opium in 1900 ok; marihuana 1930's "Reefer Madness" marihuana 60's 0k; marihuana 1992 no; Coca-Cola ["dope"-cocaine] 1903 ok; valium 1992 OK; desert storm Dexedrine and relaxants OK child temper tantrums ok; MD "take off clothes" ok sharp military commands ok; authoritarian teacher "rude" rape by black of white in old south death ; rape by white of black in old south not a crime -situation -audience -power 7 claim to be Napoleon; theater ok ; at home mental illness killing: self defense ok; protect weak ok; war ok; in an argument Murder rowdy, noisy behavior; party & drinking ok, work or school bad parents, friends, coworkers, other students drug types and SES, rape SES, roles (prostitute, husband, date) Examples of time and place in US Where and how you get your “drugs” makes the difference between legal and illegal (3) the functions of deviance. Not in text -Establish boundaries Labeling certain behavior and people as outside the limits of the group (marriage, friendship) -Promote internal stability Norms are not concrete, thus censure reaffirms norms and establishes the limits of acceptable behavior 8 Pornography X Violence Not in text • studied since 60's • no scientific evidence sexually explicit material cause sex crimes • limited evidence pairing of violence and sex may indirectly shape attitudes for some • Denmark, as hard core pornography became available (legal) sex crime rate decreased • some research finds child molesters, rapists had less contact with sexually explicit material as adolescents than non-offenders • among non offenders extensive exposure to "pornography' leads to boredom • exposure of male college students to deceptions of sexual violence against women increased their saying they would commit rape if no risk Kensey Report May 19, 92 SFC 9 (4) deviance and social control* Social Control; any efforts to prevent or punish deviance Sanctions; specific reinforces to obtain conformity (a) Positive sanctions; pat on the back, "good boy" (b) Negative sanctions; failure on a test, rejection (c) Formal sanctions and Formal social controls; (institutional, laws, official rules, promotions, firing, scholarships) results are advances, fines, jail... (d) Informal sanctions, gossip, pat on the back, smile.... Effectiveness; [MOST] internalized-> informal->formal [LEAST] 10 (5) irony of social control Not text "Social controls can contribute to deviance" Gary Marx 1981 (a.) escalation; defines, upgrades violence e.g. riots, traffic chase, drugs more profitable, air conditioning fluid (b) nonenforcement, defines behavior as OK e.g. allowing gambling, prostitution informants, observing illegal without action (c) covert facilitation, (deliberately encourage) e.g. pose as easy prey (old, tourists...) send illegal porno mail (Iowa man) Set up decelerate illegal operation ( abscam, fence operations) 11 2. Theories of Deviance * Psychological theories----why certain individuals deviate (1) Biological/Psychological theories "Born to be Bad”, regression or repression... Sociological theories------circumstances promoting deviance (2) Social theories a. Social learning * b. Labeling * c. Anomie * d. Control theories e. Social Structure * f. Cultural Transmission * 12 g. Conflict theories 2. Social theories of deviance a. Social learning-most general sociological position “Social learning”; The overall Sociological deviance position --all is learned to a sociologist. --people are not “Born to be Bad” People learn to break laws (drugs, prostitution, etc.) just as they learn everything else ( also S-R model ) -individual psychological explanations fail to account for patterns and change -deviance is related to the consensus or lack of consensus about the social order 13 b. Labeling Moral entrepreneurs; the labelers (e.g. Ms. Manners, MADD, Ask Beth, Rush, Dear Abby, Dr. Laura... Labeling theory; deviance is seen as a social creation Rule makers define deviance and label deviants Basic characteristics of the labeling process as observed by labeling theorists: Primary-Act Secondary - Label =master status exaggeration--------assume deviant behavior is typical centrality-------------deviance is central to person persistence----------once a deviant always a deviant dichotomizing------either you are or are not homogeneity--------all are alike clustering------------deviance's go together Thus develops; deviant ID, deviant career, deviant subculture Neutralization of label: denial of responsibility or injury, condemn condemners, appeal to higher loyalties 14 c. Anomie Durkheim Anomie; a condition of normlessness or loss of accepted social rules (wars for losers, crisis and natural disaster, dramatic social change). Durkheim traced to breakdown of small close-knit communities and rise of urban, modern changing social structures Anomie--Control theory 4 elements ( Hirschi ) of Anomie (1) degree of attachment, e.g. family, friends, etc. (2) commitment to conventional (e.g. education, career) (3) involvement in conventional activities "idleness is the Devil's workshop" (4) beliefs extent of one's agreement with social rules 15 d. Control Theories Refinement of Durkheim's Anomie Theory (Travis Hirschi) Juvenile Delinquency found related to: Criticism (1) what causes a person (1) Attachment (or lack of) to parents (2) Dislike of school (3) Number of friends (4) Lack of conventional aspirations w/o these characters to act defiantly (2) deviance possibly a cause rather than consequence (3) deviance may be reciprocal influence (5) Unlikely to defer gratification--live for the present • Thus JD related to family, friends, environment, values 16 •Hirschi saw as set in childhood, lead to weak self control but others see self control as related to life occurrences (employment, divorce, etc.) •others see possibly that deviance occurs then 1-5 follows e. Social Structure Merton; Our desires are created by the by the sociocultural system, inconsistencies between social goals( ends) and social means to obtain the goals create deviance. Americans have high value on material success and means are hard work but for many that success is not obtainable through hard work. Mode of Adoption Cultural Goals Cultural Means Example Conformist X X most Innovator X (new) Ritualist (new) X Milkin, Boesky "good poor" Rebels (new) (new) Religious cults Also Clinard and Ohlens "availability of illegitimate opportunity" e.g. stockbroker (Boesky, Milkin), banker, government official performed “white collar crime” not drug sales 17 f. Cultural Transmission Edwin Sutherland; deviance is conformity, but to a subculture Differential association; exposure to more criminal than conformist culture The most important things are exposure and association 18 g. Conflict Theories Based on Marx's Theory economic = power POOR; commit crimes to obtain what has been denied and to express anger and frustration RICH; commit crimes to maintain or enhance their position and have more influence in making the rules FOCUS; law makers rather then law breakers (e.g. Drugs: legal (UC partake) vs illegal (UC not use) Crime street (robbery, murder) vs. White collar and corporate crime Example: (a) The politics of prohibition seen as a control over immigrants. (b) The changing importance and definition of rape with the change in power and income of women. © Laws over lower class crimes (street crimes, drug possession (crack vs cocaine powder) prostitutes vs. johns in prosecutions... 19 3. Crime and The justice System (a) Types of Crimes (b) Crime in the US (c) Equal Justice? (d) Goals of the CJ System Crime; the violation of a codified law that is backed Types ; by official authority (1) Common crimes; violent, property (p246) (2) White - Collar* (p247) (3) Corporate Crime (249) (4) Organized crime (p251) (5) Crimes without victims (p252) 20 NOTE Laws not = norms norms not= laws laws not=deviance (1) Common crimes; violent, property (p246) Estimate 2/3 of business loss is due to employee theft not shop lifters, thieves etc. 21 • Violent crimes: murder, rape, robbery and assault, direct confrontation • Property crimes burglary, larceny, pick pocketing • African American and Latino males typical victim • most criminals do not travel far from home • Most violent crimes attacker and victim are acquainted • One in 4 aggravated assaults occur in the home • Large % of murders are committed by family members (2) White - Collar Crime* (p247) Violations of the law committed by upper and middle class mostly more typically white people in the course of their business and social life-10 billion year cost estimate. Examples: Many of the losses from the S& L crises estimated to exceed the cost of all crimes reported to cost $1000 a year for each adult and child in the US police for next 30 years $250-$500 billion. Characteristics of a typical white collar Boesky, Milkin... criminal:Professional, business owner, or a low level employee, white average Sample Types: age 40 -Ripping the company Employee theft (2-4% of product cost) Computer crime -Fraud and deception: false advertising, consumer fraud, financial fraud -Conflicts of interest: lobbyist and spec interests -Bribery and corruption (state legislature) -Manipulating the marketplace 22 * Coleman, James William The Criminal Elite: The Sociology of White -Collar Crime 1994, St. Martin's Press (3) Corporate Crime (249) Crimes committed by the corporation on behalf of the corporation. ---Highest cost of all crimes--- • sell defective products • polluting environment • discrimination • negligence • bribery (1) Deaths as a result of asbestos exceeds "murders" for last 10 years. (2) Archer Danials Mcmillan monopoly of citric acid market in 90s (3) Tobacco companies and cancer deaths and related illnesses 23 (4) Organized crime (p251) Focus on organizations that exist primarily to profit from providing illegal goods and services • Sale of forbidden goods and services is primary (drugs, prostitution) • provide goods and services where legit businesses won’t work (loan sharking, cigarette smuggling) • providing legal goods and services but illegal means (control of garbage or taxis in some big cities) • Typically involvement is new immigrant and minority groups not as stereotyped, Italian immigrants only. 24 (5) Crimes without victims (p252) Activities declared illegal because they offend public morals not because they cause direct harm • Pornography, illegal sex acts between consenting adults, sale and use of illegal drugs, public drunkenness, illegal gambling • Those favoring criminalization of these activities believe that society has obligation to protect people against themselves and their victims, the individual and indirect effects (sex transmitted diseases, traffic accidents...) • recent trend has been decriminalization of these acts (gambling, legal prostitution in Nevada, non enforcement of sodomy laws...) Victims without crimes; someone injured or suffering a loss in situation where no crime has been committed, aids victims, land mine injuries, etc. The question is whether or not we should and can legislate morality 25 Crime in The US US is one of the most violent nations in the world, why? (1) Economic stress--gap between rich <-> poor (2) Social disintegration--divorce, cultural heterogeneity, (3) Demography--% of age group (16-28?) and gender(M) most likely to commit crimes (4) cultural context, wars, executions, violent culturally accepted (TV, movies, sports…) U.S. is one of the most violent nations (see clocks page 255) Crime rate has a pattern (see graph page 256) Most crimes are not reported (see table page 257) (Note Uniform Crime Report from FBI shows absolute and rate of crimes has decreased) 26 Types of Crimes Type I; homicide, aggravated assault, forcible rape, robbery, burglary, larceny-theft, vehicle theft •Type II; white collar, victimless crimes. These not counted by FBI, no arrests and white collar handled as civil •Absolute number of crimes; actual number of crimes •Crime rates; the number of crimes per 100,000 population UCR: Uniform Crime Report created by the FBI from reported crimes in the US NCV: National Crime Victimization Survey of approximately 60,000 American households to determine non reported crime 27 Crime Pays--Approximate % at each level --not in 6th edition Not same in text Estimate of total crimes committed =100% Crimes reported to the police =37% Persons arrested =12% Convictions =6% Incarcerated =1% 28 See similar data in text 6 ed. page 258 Equal Justice: The System Police Courts Prisons Who’s more likely to enter the CJ system: poor, minorities, young, males Police Police involvement occurs when they witness a crime, uncover a crime in an investigation, private citizen complaint. Police are selective about crimes they investigate Most crimes are not solved by police but by witnesses Many recent charges of racial discrimination. Evidence mixed, some support and some counter evidence.* 29 Racial discrimination • Black juveniles more likely arrested then white juveniles • Black juveniles more likely to be stopped and questioned • Complaints from black adults about black juveniles more likely then whites to demand arrest • Latinos disadvantaged in the system • Location of crime, social makeup of community affects treatment • Minorities more likely to be treated harshly in suburbs • African Americans higher chance of receiving death penalty 30 Courts Courts become involved after arrest or grand jury indictment • Charge suspects • Bring suspect to trial • Determine penalties • Prosecutor decides yes or no on bringing to trial and specifics of charges • 90% of cases are “plea bargains” • Likely trial cases (1) have attracted public attention and (2) are likely for prosecutor to win • Poor at a disadvantage in court with court appointed attorney vs prosecutors office • 9 of 19 defendants found guilty in criminal trial 31 (a) Do Prisons Work -- not in 6th edition Not in text We imprison more people than the rest of the modern world U.S. imprisons more then USSR(old #1), S. Africa (old #2) US rate imprisoned black males 5X SA U.S. rate 400 per 100,000, Rest of "civilized" world 40 per 100,000 Relationship; number imprisoned X number of crimes 1980-present imprisoned 3X increase 1980-1990 crime rate not significantly different 1990 to 1996 decrease in crime rate, increased incarceration by 19% to 1.7 million Issues mandatory terms, lower class crimes vs. upper prisons , an education for crime, capital punish 32 (b) Do Prisons Work Why increase in prison; (1) drug offences not counted but increased prison sentencing (2) Longer sentencing (3) Fewer released on parole (4) Alternative, crime down because criminals in jail 33 •Serving time in jail is almost as common as military service when US had draft system. More common for black male to be incarcerated then in college in some areas of US. •Prison system diverts money from other uses. In California higher Education has gone from 12.5% to 8 % of budget while corrections share has gone from 4.5% to 9.4% (1) Goals of the Criminal Justice System • Retribution, force criminals to pay back society for crimes they committed. • “Eye for an eye”, “Just desserts”, punishment should fit the crime. • Difficulty in use because of context of crime (battered women vs wife abuser kills spouse) • Mandatory-minimum specified period of sentence for specified crime regardless of context. Lots of circumvention by prosecutors, judges and juries and racism 34 (2) Goals of the Criminal Justice System • Incapacitation, protect society by confining criminals or preventing from committing further crimes. • Three strikes law quite popular (second offence with prior violent or serious gets 2 times sentence, third offence 25 to life) Rand study said full compliance would decrease crime 22% but costs 4.5 to 6.5 billion a year, might increase court trials in desperation, might result in shootouts if three timer and would result in needless imprisonment of older prisoners unlikely to commit further crimes, impossible to imprison all 4 million convicted each year. 35 (3) Goals of the Criminal Justice System • Deterrence, using a sentence to set an example to keep others from crime • Specific deterrence using penalties to convince specific people not to further transgress • General deterrence, penalizing certain offenders to reducing desire in general public • Problem; rests on assumption humans are rational and calculate costs and benefits. Possibly true for instrumental crimes (robbery, embezzlement, white collar crimes..) but not emotional or street crimes) • Studies indicate certainty of punishment has more impact then severity of punishment • Police action, number , etc seems to have little effect 36 (4) Goals of the Criminal Justice System • Rehabilitation, belief society helped in creating criminal so society should help in correcting criminal behavior by providing practical skills • 1960’s prisons renames “correctional facilities” and guards “correctional officers” • Crime rates rose in 70s and rehabilitation declared a failure • Some argue prison encourages criminal behavior by socializing to new criminal skills and secondary labeling. Evidence for this position is weak • High rates of recidivism may be result of judges releasing to probation first time offenders • General public believes at least some can be rehabilitated 37 (5) Goals of the Criminal Justice System: Capital Punishment • Capital Punishment, ultimate form of control, taking the life of the criminal • Supreme court in1972 “cruel and unusual punishment” ( black vs white) executions • 1976 court ruled states with clear standards death penalty constitutional • Currently increasing executions but still rare (56 in 1995) • Location of crime big determiner of death penalty (but 19 were in Texas in 1995) • Race of perpetrator and victim related to death penalty • No significant pattern found between deterrence and recent publicized execution • No evidence of decreased homicide in countries with death penalty • Argument against is possibility of innocent person executed (since 1972 --23 known innocent executions and 48 on death row found innocent, other data page 266) • Widespread international view against capital punishment • Widespread US public opinion for capital punishment (77% favor) • Why American view (1) high level violent crime (2) violent crime and death penalty 38 product of violent culture Executions in The US 1608-1991 Not in text METHOD OF EXECUTION 10000 8000 6000 2000 C R E ED THTT D OBE NE S IB O IN G G E HA D U NC BL I G N EL U E H H W G D IN NE AK R E BU BR G IN SS E N S PR TIO -GA C N JE IO IN IAT N YX O T TI PH OCU AS SHO TR E EL AN 0 H Frequency 4000 G IN G MET HOD OF EXECUTION *EXECUTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES, 1608-1991: THE ESPY FILE (ICPSR 8451) Executions in The US 1608-1991 Not in text SEX OF OFFENDER 16000 14000 97.5% 12000 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 2.5% 0 MALE FEMA LE SEX OF OF FENDER *EXECUTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES, 1608-1991: THE ESPY FILE (ICPSR 8451) Frequency Executions in The US 1608-1991 Not in text RACE OF OFFENDER 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 WHITE NATIV E AMERICAN BLACK HISPA NIC ASIA N-PACIFIC IL OTHER RACE OF OFFENDER *EXECUTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES, 1608-1991: THE ESPY FILE (ICPSR 8451) Executions in The US 1608-1991 Not in text AGE AT EXECUTION 400 300 200 100 0 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 68 72 76 83 AGE AT EXECUTION *EXECUTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES, 1608-1991: THE ESPY FILE (ICPSR 8451) Group Discussion Chapter 6 --Deviance (0) In your own words define the vocabulary words on page 269 and where possible think of an example not mentioned in the text. (1) What is deviance and what are the variables involved defining deviance (examples where possible) (2) What are the theories and the evaluation of these theories of deviance? (3) Is the criminal justice system in the US fair? Support your reason. (3) What is the criminal justice system in the US and does it work? Support your answer with data. (4) Should we have capital punishment for crimes? Support your reason. 39 Current Estimates on Costs • $30,000 per year costs for a prisoner paid for by state • $11,241 last year CSUB student costs paid for by state Deviant Acts by Students Not in text Total Deviant Acts Committed-Old Data i 100 s T N V M M M M M M 9 0 80 5 0 0 0 60 0 40 20 Std. Dev = 5.32 Mean = 11.0 N = 289.00 0 0.0 5.0 2.5 40 10.0 7.5 15.0 12.5 20.0 17.5 Total Deviant Acts Committed 25.0 22.5 30.0 27.5 Deviant Acts by Males-Old Data Not in text Total Deviant Acts Committed: Males i 20 8 0 6 0 0 0 0 s T N V M M M M M M 10 Std. Dev = 4.87 Mean = 16.0 N = 38.00 0 5.0 7.5 10.0 12.5 15.0 17.5 20.0 22.5 25.0 27.5 Total Deviant Acts Committed Deviant Acts by Females--ld Data Not in text Total Deviant Acts Committed 50 i s T N V M M M M M M 5 40 0 8 0 0 30 0 0 20 10 Std. Dev = 4.65 Mean = 10.4 N = 125.00 0 2.5 7.5 5.0 42 12.5 10.0 17.5 15.0 Total Deviant Acts Committed 22.5 20.0 27.5 25.0 Observations from deviance survey data • Space; what is deviant in Georgia is not deviant in California • What was deviant 20+ years ago is not deviant today • We all commit deviant acts regardless of sex, ethnicity, social class, etc • Occurrence of deviant acts are related to other variables, age, gender, opportunity… 42a Don’t Print Next Assignments NEXT SOCIAL INEQUALITY 8, 9, 10 Next Class Quiz Chapter 8 possibly 9 43 Interesting facts Practice Quiz • Highest $ cost type of crime (p249) • Age, Race, Gender of typical high $ criminal? (247) • Age, Race, Gender of typical violent criminal? (247) • “Burden of Proof” for criminal charge? (246) • “Burden of Proof” for civil charge? (247) • Typical criminal experiencing capital punishment?(WB) • Relation between education and prisons in California (260) • How many convicted of capital punishment 1900-1985 have been later found innocent. Don’t Print Interesting facts Practice Quiz Answers • Highest $ cost type of crime (p249) #Corporate • Age, Race, Gender of typical high $ criminal? (247) #Ed budget down –1 new CSU • Age, Race, Gender of typical violent criminal? (247) • “Burden of Proof” for criminal charge? (246) • “Burden of Proof” for civil charge? (247) • Typical criminal experiencing capital punishment?(WB) • Relation between education and prisons in California (260) • How many convicted of capital punishment 1900-1985 have been later found innocent. Quiz C7 Pt a Answers At Top: Name, Quiz C7, School, Group Don’t Print 1. Hirschi concluded that the reason for most people who committed crimes was their lack of attachment to others. This theory is called? 2. Give me one behavior that is unacceptable in our society but acceptable in another society and identify the society. 3. Which type of crime costs the most in human and financial costs? 4. The least effective method of social control is_____________ 5. One way in which social control can increase deviance is by______ 6. One sociological theory of deviance? 7. A poor inner-city person who had the traditional American beliefs and values but looted TV's and other goodies he/she could not normally afford. This is an example of Merton’s ________________. 8. Those people who take it upon themselves to define good. evil, right, wrong, appropriate, inappropriate are called what by sociologists? 9. Approximately what % of crimes result in incarceration? 10. What are two characteristics of “criminals” if we focus on crimes that cost45 1. Hirschi concluded that the reason for most people who commited Don’t crimesPrint was their lack of attachment to others. This theory was called? Anomie or more precisely Control theory 2. Give me one behavior that is unacceptable in our society but acceptable in another society and identify the society. Hashhish Arab, Long walk-Eskimos 3. Which type of crime costs the most in human and financial costs? Corporate Crime 1/2 for whit collar 4. The least effective method of social control formal 5. One way in which social control can increase deviance escalation, non enforcement, covert facilitation 6. One sociological theory of deviance Social learning Anomie, Social Structure, Cultural Transmission, Labeling 7. A poor inner-city person who had the traditional American beliefs and values but looted TV's and other goodies he/she could not normally afford. This is an example of Merton’s innovator. 8. Those people who take it upon themselves to define good. evil, right, wrong, appropriate, inappropriate are called what by sociologists? Moral entrepreneurs 9. Approximately what % of crimes result in incarceration 1% 10. What are two characteristics of “criminals” if we we focus on crimes costing 45 most? White, Mid age, MC Males, UC the Answers Alternative Quiz Chapter 6 Name_____________________ Don’t Print School____________________ 1. Scientific studies have pretty much shown pornography is related to crime rates ______ 2. The most effective method of seeing that behavior conforms to norms (social control) is internalization,_________________ 3. Normlessness in a society leads to suicide (Durkheim) and crime. This state is called _____________ 4. At the broadest level deviance for Freud is________________ 46 Grader__________________ alternative Deviance Quiz Answers Don’t Print 1. Scientific studies have pretty much shown pornography is related to crime rates NO 2. The most effective method of seeing that behavior conforms to norms (social control) is internalization, socialization, primary 3. Normlessness in a society leads to suicide (Durkheim) and crime. This state is called Anomie 4. At the broadest level deviance for Freud is 47 1. Biological/Psychological theories--not in 6th edition Don’t Print Actually no longer simply "Born to be Bad" but rather: 1. Bio deficiency stigmatized -> Poor performance in school, -> lead to deviant behavior 2. The "criminal mind" personality traits and pattern of "faulty, irrational thinking" fond in criminals Mollification Cutoff Entitlement Power orientation 50 Sentimentality Superoptimism Cognitive laziness Discontinuity XXXIntroduction 2 Don’t Print Chapter 6 Deviance "behavior that violates widely held social norms" Measuring deviance-workbook "Deviant Acts Survey" Uncommon commonness of deviance Incest the unthinkable: -16% surveyed adult women were victims -not confined SES, ethnicity, etc. -most frequently ,stepfathers, uncles -most traumatic :biological fathers 51 New Prison Populations and Crime What will be the effect of 3 strikes laws Using the sociological Imagination Population age distribution X crime rate San Francisco Chronicle 52 Don’t Print Redo W02Calendar for Rest of Quarter Soc100 Thursday 5/17 Don’t Print C7 _________________________________________ Tuesday 5/22 Thursday 5/24 C8 C9 _________________________________________ Tuesday 5/29 Thursday 5/31 Monday Schedule C10 _________________________________________ Tuesday 6/5 Thursday 6/7 C12 & Final Hints Final (at CSUB) 3:30-5:30 Redo W02Calendar for Rest of Quarter LS492 Thursday 5/17 Don’t Print C10 _________________________________________ Tuesday 5/22 Thursday 5/24 C12 A06 Exam _________________________________________ Tuesday 5/29 Thursday 5/31 Memorial_Day Ed 128 Web Proj A05ab due ____________________)____________________ Tuesday 6/5 Thursday 6/7 Ed 128 Web Proj Ed 128 Web Proj Tues 6/12 Web proj? Final Exam as scheduled –Web Project Evaluation