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Crime and Economics

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Title: Crime and Economics


1
Crime and Economics
  • Understanding Criminology
  • Sunday, 20 December 2020

2
Question
  • Can economic factors be used to explain crime?
    How?
  • Are you thinking about crime in general, or more
    specific types?

3
(No Transcript)
4
Lecture Outline
  • Key concepts in relating crime and economics, and
    how has criminology used these
  • Economic change
  • Social Exclusion and The Underclass
  • Social Class in the operation of the criminal
    justice system

5
Economics
  • Concerned with the production and distribution of
    income, wealth, and resources
  • How does this impact on crime?
  • Propensity to Offend
  • Vulnerability to Victimisation
  • Formal and informal social control

6
Key Related Concepts
  • Consumption level of spending on consumer goods
    in any one year
  • Recession a downturn in a national economy
  • Unemployment and Welfare
  • Deprivation
  • Absolute deprivation
  • Relative Deprivation
  • Social Class
  • Social Exclusion

7
Theoretical Links between Crime, Unemployment and
Poverty (1)
  • Strain Theory
  • Anomie thwarted ambition
  • Am I worse off than I expected to be?
  • Inequalities -gt relative deprivation
  • Am I worse off than others like me?
  • Status Frustration (Albert Cohen)
  • Social class is a clear example of constrained
    opportunities
  • Crime represents an alternative means of gaining
    status and prestige
  • Not (necessarily) property crime

8
Theoretical Links between Crime, Unemployment and
Poverty (2)
  • Control Theory Travis Hirschi
  • Offending is more likely when a person has
  • Low attachment to others
  • No strong commitment to the future
  • No strong beliefs in conventionality
  • Recession and poverty can undermine
  • Family and community attachments
  • Commitment to the future (education)
  • Morality

9
Theoretical Links between Crime, Unemployment and
Poverty (3)
  • Labelling Theory
  • Those who fit the criminal stereotypes pose
    least trouble for the CJS to process
  • Higher rates of criminalisation for police
    property
  • Growing mutual distrust a growing sense of
    injustice may push potential deviants into actual
    crime

10
Fordism -gt Post-Fordism
Up until 1960s 1970s 1980s -gt
Low Unemployment rates 1.4 of workforce Quick Re-employment UK Industrial Production key High Unemployment 15 of workforce Income Inequalities grew UK Industrial Production in decline Restructured Economy UK Service-based employment 403030 society (Will Hutton) Structural Unemployment for some Core and periphery workforce
1960 around 1,000,000 crimes per year
around 20,000 people in prison
1990 around 5,000,000 crimes per year
around 60,000 people in prison
11
So What?
  • Right wing / conservative commentators
  • The growth in unemployment, and the growth in
    imprisonment are coincidences
  • Unemployment caused by wage increases, resulting
    in uncompetitive industry
  • Imprisonment caused by rise in crime rates,
    caused in turn by problems of moral regulation
  • Unemployment is neither an excuse, nor a
    justification for crime

12
So What?
  • liberal commentators
  • Material circumstances do have an influence on
    behaviour
  • Poverty gt Crime gt Prison
  • Poverty can trigger both property and violent
    crime
  • Dorie Klein sexual warfare a stand-in for
    class and racial conflict
  • Coser status frustration leading to aggression
    against self or others

13
Longitudinal Studies
  • Do people who are unemployed go on to commit
    crime in the future?
  • Thornberry and Christenson Philadelphia cohort
    study of boys born in 1945
  • Strongest links in the more socially
    disadvantaged groups the effect of unemployment
    in triggering a criminal response is much greater
    amongst the poor

14
How do levels of consumption affect crime?
  • Simon Field macro level analysis
  • Reduced personal consumption / spending (i.e.
    recession) is associated with a growth in
    property crime
  • Increased personal consumption esp. on alcohol is
    associated with a growth in personal crime

15
(No Transcript)
16
What is Social Exclusion?
  • Social Exclusion is
  • Diverse people excluded from political, social
    and economic resources
  • A social problem, not an individual problem
  • The Underclass not simply poor

17
Competing Explanations for Social Exclusion
  • Motive, capacity and opportunity
  • Individualistic Lack of individual motivation
    driven by welfare dependency self-exclusion from
    society (Charles Murray)
  • Structural A failure of the economy to provide
    enough jobs for everyone lack of positive role
    models social isolation from job opportunities
  • Deliberate The active exclusion of the
    underclass by the powerful in society
    stigmatizing stereotypes the criminal poor

18
Social Exclusion in the Official Construction of
Crime
  • Processes by which social groups are identified
    as problems
  • Policing discretion
  • Policing strategies
  • Judicial decisions
  • The social construction of social problems
  • Political focus on dangerous classes

19
Jeffrey Reiman The Rich Get Richer The Poor Get
prison
  • Social class processes can be observed in
  • How the laws are written
  • Who is arrested/charged
  • Who is tried/convicted
  • What sentences are given out
  • The most harmful crimes fail to receive
    appropriate criminal justice responses

20
A Riddle
  • What type of criminal behaviour results in 1500
    deaths a year, where
  • Policing is carried out by under-funded,
    separate organisation, outside of the Home Office
  • Less than 1 in 8 cases result in prosecution
  • Of those, the response is a fine (around 60,000)
  • Offenders are consulted about changes to
    legislation

ANSWER
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