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Explanations of criminal behaviour

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Statistically delinquency peaks at 16-17 years of age, then declines. However, the vast majority of offences are minor ones. ... Irene Frieze, Ph.D. college students. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Explanations of criminal behaviour


1
Explanations of criminal behaviour
  • Individual and Cultural Differences in Criminal
    Behaviour

What are these differences? Why? Brainstorm
2
Individual differences
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Ethnicity

3
Age
  • Statistically delinquency peaks at 16-17 years of
    age, then declines.
  • However, the vast majority of offences are
    minor ones. A random sample of around 1,500
    13-16-year-old London boys found that 70 had
    stolen from a shop (quoted in Moir and Jessel,
    1995).

4
Age
  • Aggressive individuals are rejected by their
    peers and end up with other aggressive
    individuals (Pepler and Slaby, 1994).
  • Alternatively, rejected children seek out and
    associate with other children with similar views
    on life (Cairns and Cairns, 1991). 

5
Two areas of research interest
  • The existence of specific causes for juvenile
    delinquency like Attention Deficit Hyperactive
    Disorder (ADHD) and Conduct Disorder (CD)
  • Whether juvenile delinquency persists in
    offending as adults.

6
ADHD
  • ADHD revolves around three principles
    inattention,. impulsivity and hyperactivity.
  • A physiological explanation is an under-aroused
    frontal cortex.
  • Another explanation could be that ADHD is a
    convenient social label for difficult children.

7
Conduct disorders
  • This includes behaviours like stealing,
    fire-starting and running away from home as a
    teenager.
  • It is estimated that 9 of American males under
    eighteen show this behaviour (Farrington, 1991).

8
Farrington, D.P. (1996)
  • The Development of Offending and Antisocial
    Behaviour from Childhood to Adulthood.
  • A KEY STUDY.

9
Results (Farrington 1996)
  • By the age of 32, 37 per cent of the males had
    committed criminal offences.
  • The peak age was 17.
  • Nearly three quarters of those convicted as
    juveniles were reconvicted between the ages of 17
    and 24.
  • Nearly half of the juvenile offenders were
    reconvicted between the ages of 25 and 32.

10
Results (Farrington 1996)
  • Offending was very much concentrated in families.
  • Just 4 per cent of the 400 families accounted for
    50 per cent of all convictions.
  • The worst offenders tended to be from
    large-sized, multi-problem families.

11
Results (Farrington 1996)
  • The most common crimes in late teens were
    burglary, shoplifting, theft of and from
    vehicles, and vandalism. All of these declined in
    the twenties, but theft from work increased
  • Self reports showed that 96 per cent of the males
    had committed at least one crime that might have
    led to conviction, so criminal behaviour was not
    deviant.

Need to combine this with KEY STUDY - Farrington
2002. See booklet.
12
Predictors of crime at age 810
  • Antisocial child behaviour including
    troublesomeness, dishonesty and aggression.
  • Hyperactivity-impulsivity-attention deficit.
  • Low intelligence and poor school attainment.
  • Family criminality.
  • Family poverty, including low family income,
    large family size and poor housing.
  • Poor parental child-rearing techniques, poor
    supervision, parental conflict and separation
    from parents.

13
Gender
  • The most evident indicator of crime is being
    male, on a ratio of 91 (which has remained
    constant for many decades).
  • Why? Give reasons.

14
Dennis and Erdos
  • Dennis and Erdos have argued that young men,
    particularly in areas of high unemployment, are
    in a state of permanent boyhood and never grow up
    ('Wot U Lookin' At', 1993).

15
Box (1987)
  • Box (1987) explains female crime in terms of
    poverty and unemployment.
  • Womens usual response to lack of opportunity and
    school failure, he argues, is to blame themselves
    rather than society so they are less likely to
    turn to crime.

16
Violence by women is increasing.
  • When Auburn University sociologist Penelope
    Hanke, Ph.D., reviewed records from an Alabama
    prison from 1929 to 1985,
  • She discovered that 95 of the cases where women
    murdered strangers occurred after 1970, along
    with 60 of slayings of friends and relatives.

17
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18
Domestic Violence
  • Murray Straus, (19751985)
  • Total of 8,145 married and cohabiting couples
  • 12.4 of women have assaulted their spouses,
    compared to 12.2 of men.
  • When it comes to severe assaults, the numbers
    were 4.6 for women and 5 for men. 

19
Domestic Violence
  • Irene Frieze, Ph.D.
  • college students.
  • 58 of women had assaulted their dates, compared
    to 55 of men.
  • The men don't take the violence seriously

20
Domestic Violence
  • Straus admits that when it comes to the most
    brutal domestic assaults, the domain is still
    men's--they commit six times the number women do.

21
Violence on the Street
  • The statistics show that arrests of women for
    violent crimes increased 90 between 1985 and
    1994, compared to 43 for men.
  • Only in the case of murder did men widen their
    lead a 13 rise for men compared to a 4 drop
    for women.

22
Sentencing bias
  • A Florida-based study showed that men were 23
    more likely to be imprisoned than women who
    committed the same crime.

23
Social Learning Theory
  • Albert Bandura conducted a series of experiments
    in which children watched adult models hitting
    inflatable Bobo dolls
  • The children were then offered the opportunity to
    imitate the behaviour.

24
Social Learning Theory
  • Under normal circumstances, the boys knocked down
    the dolls far more often than the girls did.
  • When the models got rewarded for knocking down
    the Bobos, the boys and girls became almost
    equally aggressive.

25
Socialisation
  • Sutherland 1939
  • Boys are more likely to become delinquent than
    girls because they are less strictly controlled
    and are taught to be aggressive and active risk
    seekers
  • Evaluation - Now girls are being encouraged by
    the media, etc to be violent - could explain rise
    in female crime.

26
Physiological
  • In a 1980 study (quoted in Moir and Jessel, 1995)
    of 50 violent female London prisoners, 44 of
    their crimes had been committed during
    paramenstruum (four days before menstruation).
    This is often called 'premenstrual tension' (PMT)
  • Only 3 to 4 of women are affected

27
Ethnicity and crime
  • UK Home Office figures show that more Afro
    Caribbean youths are arrested as a percentage of
    the Afro-Caribbean population compared to white
    youths.
  • For example, in London in 1984 52 of the
    arrests for street robbery were of
    Afro-Caribbeans, while non-whites only make up
    14 of the London population.

28
Ethnicity and crime
  • Feldman (1993) points out that if there is a
    generalizable difference, then it is that
    Afro-Caribbeans commit more single 'casual'
    (opportunist) offences while whites are
    'high-rate offenders'.
  • However 'white collar' crimes are 'white crimes'
    because non-whites are not usually in the
    position to commit them.

29
Percentage in Prison
30
Percentage in Prison
  • Ethnic minorities represent 10.3 of the English
    prison population, compared with 6.93 of the
    population aged 1624 years, and 5.5 of the
    total population (Home Office, 1991).

31
Stop-and-Search
  • Police stop-and-search powers have been shown to
    be used disproportionately against young black
    males (NACRO, 1997)
  • However Wilbanks (1987) believes the differential
    in imprisonment rates is actually the result of
    higher crime rates among black people

32
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33
Sentencing
  • Crawford (2000) explored the effects of race on
    over 1,100 habitual female offenders in Florida
  • African-American women were given harsher
    sentences than their white counterparts.
  • Similarly, when crime seriousness, crime type and
    prior record are controlled for, black males
    receive harsher sentences than white males do
    (Crawford et al., 1998).

34
Commentary
  • Almost all of this research is again concentrated
    on males. Rice (1990) calls this 'macho centric'
    (male centred), and it ignores the experiences of
    black females.
  • In general,much of this research is ANDROCENTIC
    having a focus on men to the exclusion of women.

35
Evaluation key points
  • For top marks you need statistics of frequency of
    occurrence of crimes
  • For evaluation consider, weaknesses of biological
    explanations for age and gender and ethnicity.
  • Again most research is correlational or
    longitudinal. No Cause Effect.

36
Examination Question
  • (a) Outline one study of individual or cultural
    differences in criminal behaviour. (6)
  • (b) Evaluate the approaches to explaining the
    differences in criminal behaviour. (10)
    Jan. 2004
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