Title: Durkheim Anomie
1Durkheim Anomie
- Anomie
- normlessness, lack of normative regulation
- failure of society to regulate human needs and
actions - Micro-level
- Anomie a social-psychological state of
individuals within a society - Macro-level
- Anomie a feature of a society
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2Durkheim Social solidarity
- Integration social cohesion individuals bound
to each other - Regulation social constraint individuals
bound to norms - Collective conscience shared consensus of
beliefs and values
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3 Pre-industrial vs. Industrial
- Differentiated, dependent social groups
- Diversity of functions
- Forced, highly differentiated division of labor
(due to stratified class system) - Organic solidarity
- Diminished collective conscience
- Weakened integration and regulation
- Greater individualism
- Restitutive law
- Isolated, self-sufficient groups
- Uniformity of circumstances
- Spontaneous and minimal division of labor (based
on merit) - Mechanical solidarity
- Strong collective conscience
- Strong integration and regulation
- Subordination of individual to the group
- Repressive law
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4Durkheim - human nature
- Insatiability
- Humans incapable of regulating aspirations
- Reflection
- Human capacity to always imagine more or better
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5Durkheim social control
- Must be external to the individual
- Society provides moral force superior to the
individual - Social control attachment to society through
societal institutions - roles and role obligations
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6Durkheim Suicide
- Egoistic suicide weakening of bonds between
individuals and society - Excessive individualism
- Protestants the unmarried the childless
- Anomic suicide - sudden crises (/-), abrupt
changes in economic or familial life - Sudden poverty or wealth
- Divorce death of spouse
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7Durkheim Crime
- Crime
- Acts that offend the collective conscience
- Acts subject to prescribed punishment
- Criminal law is the strongest form of pressure
against diversity - Function of the criminal law/punishment
- Maintain social solidarity
- Reaffirm values of the collective conscience
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8Durkheim Crime
- Crime is normal
- A social fact
- Occurs in all societies
- Crime is inevitable
- Inevitable diversity of behavior
- Criminal law changes over time
- Pressure for conformity always some form of
criminal sanction - Crime is useful
- Maintains social solidarity
- Necessary for evolution of morality
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9Volume of crime
- Durkheim volume of crime tends to increase
- As societies evolve from lower to higher phases
- With rapid social change
- With modernization breakdown of social norms
- Alternatively
- Increases in property crime
- Increased economic inequality
- Increased opportunities to commit crime
- Decreases in violent crime
- Increased sensitization to violence
- Increased internal/external controls on aggression
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10Shaw McKay Chicago School context
- Rapid change urbanization, industrialization,
immigration -
- Political battle over restricting immigration
- Progressive reform spirit
- Rejection of Social Darwinism and biological
determinism - city was the source of evil
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11Concentric zone model(Park Burgess)
- Urban ecology humans competing for space
- City expands radially from CBD
- Spontaneous differentiation of space, population
and function - zones - Central Business District (CBD)
- Zone of Transition
- Zone of Workingmens homes
- Residential Zone
- Commuter Zone
- Natural areas small, homogeneous enclaves
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12Shaw McKay 1942
- What is the spatial distribution of delinquency
in the city? - What are the social characteristics associated
with high delinquency areas? - Combined methods urban mapping social
anthropology fieldwork - Statistics
- Observation
- Interviews
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13Shaw McKay - findings
- Delinquency was highest directly next to the CBD
steadily declined toward outer areas the lowest
rate was farthest from the CBD - distribution was fairly consistent over a 40-year
period - Delinquency rates remianed high in the Zone of
Transition regardless of what immigrant group
lived there - Delinquency rate for any group was the same as
the rate for the overall area - foreign or native, recent or older immigrant,
black or white - Delinquency rates for immigrant children declined
as they moved out to better areas
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14Shaw McKay - findings
- High delinquency rates were correlated with
- Physical deterioration economic segregation
high population turnover high IMR high rates of
mental illness TB illiteracy non-intact
families adult crime - These characteristics highest at the Zone of
Transition and declined steadily outward - Life history data
- Bonds between older and younger unsupervised play
groups poor relationships with parents parental
approval of crime
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15Social disorganization
- Breakdown of community informal social control
- No social cohesion, solidarity, cooperation,
community spirit, inability to achieve shared
values - Ineffectiveness of conventional institutions
- families, schools, churches, clubs
- Cultural transmission of delinquent values and
pressures - Absence of control in families
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16Social disorganization delinquency
- Lack of control and supervision of children by
neighborhood institutions and especially by
parents - Formation of unsupervised play groups -
opportunities for delinquency - Transmission of delinquent norms and values
- Established delinquent subcultures belonging to
the area
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17Shaw McKay Chicago Area Projects
- Reform optimism mobilize communities
- Reduce unemployment
- Improve housing
- Improve schools
- Strengthen supervision recreation programs
- Improve supervision of youth gangs and adult
offenders cooperation among local residents,
schools, police, courts - Difficult to measure effect on delinquency
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18Shaw McKay - evaluation
- Does not account for origin of the criminal
culture - Less able to account for crimes of passion acts
not attached to deviant norms/values - Attention to understanding crime in its social
context - Attention to notion of weakening of controls
- Attention to group nature of delinquency
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19Shaw McKay time space
- Concentric Zone Model
- Product of its time and place
- American cities in a particular time
- Post WWII urban ecology
- Urban renewal
- Suburbanization
- Urban deindustrialization
- Gentrification
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20Community informal social controlSampson
Groves 1989
- Community supervision of teenage peer groups
- Percentage of residents reporting that disorderly
teenage peer groups were a very common
neighborhood problem - Local friendship networks
- Average number of friends living within a
fifteen-minute walk of the respondents homes - Rate of participation in community organizations
- Percentage of residents who had participated in
meetings the week before the interview
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21Sampson Groves findings, conclusion
- Communities characterized by weak friendship
networks, unsupervised teenage peer groups, and
low organizational participation, had
disproportionately high crime victimization rates - The most significant effect - community
supervision of teenage peer groups - Variations in community social disorganization
mediated the effects of community structural
characteristics (low SES, residential mobility,
ethnic heterogeneity and family disruption)
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22Sampson - Collective Efficacy 1997
- Combined methods observation (SSO), community
survey, key interviews, various statistics - Collective Efficacy
- Shared expectations for social control
- Social cohesion trust
- Organizations voluntary organizations
- Social ties/networks
- Measures of poverty/disadv. immigrant
concentration residential stability pop.
density ratio of adults to children - Victimization survey - violence, burglary, theft
- Police recorded incidents homicide, robbery,
burglary
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23Sampson... Collective Efficacy
- Collective efficacy partially mediated the
effects of neighborhood concentrated
disadvantage, immigrant concentration, and
residential stability on violence - reduced the size and/or significance of effects
of negative community characteristics
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24Sampson... Collective Efficacy
- Working trust, collective responsibility
- Belong to local organizations aimed at bettering
the community - Work together on common neighborhood-wide issues
- Norms of action
- Get along somewhat with one another
- vs. close personal bonds
- Take steps to supervise activities of youth or
teens taking place in the immediate area
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25Social structure anomieMerton (193868)
- Culture consensus
- Societys central values/goals
- Societys institutionalized means for achieving
them - Social structure
- Distributes access to means for achieving success
goals - based on class position.
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26How is crime produced?
- Malintegration of goals and means - Anomie
- Excessive cultural emphasis on success goals
- Deemphasis of means
- Explains differences in overall rates of crime
across societies - Lack of fit between culture and social structure
- strain - Unequal distribution of opportunities/means to
achieve goals - Explains differential distribution of crime rates
by social class in a given society
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27Malintegration of goals means
- American society is highly individualized
- Attainment of the American Dream is strongly
institutionalized - Legitimate means for achieving it are less
institutionalized - Deviance from means is tolerated more than
deviance from goals - Use whatever means necessary, most technically
efficient means
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28Unequal distribution of means
- Class stratification of American society
- Unequal access to educational and occupational
opportunities - Certain groups especially blocked from
opportunities - Lower classes
- racial/ethnic minorities
- women
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29Merton - typology of adaptations
- Mode of adaptation Goals Means
- Conformity
- Innovation -
- Ritualism -
- Retreatism - -
- Rebellion
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30Merton - typology of adaptations
- Conformity accept conventional goals and
- (limited) legitimate
means - Innovation strive for monetary success
- turn to any means even illegal
- Rebellion alienated from goals and means,
- substitute new ones
- Ritualism rejects the goals (gives up)
over-conforms, avoid risks - Retreatism reject both cultural success
- goals and conventional
means, drops out
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31Cloward and Ohlin - Strain lower class
delinquent subcultures 1960
- A problem of adjustment for members of the lower
classes - A greater gap between aspirations and
expectations - A greater sense of frustration associated with
the gap between aspirations and expectations - A collective solution to the problem of adjustment
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32Cloward and Ohlin
- Blame society
- Sense of injustice
- Unjust deprivation its who you know
- Obvious barriers race, class and gender
- Alienation from an unjust society, withdraw
legitimacy from social norms - Form the delinquent subculture with new status
criteria
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33Cloward and Ohlin
- Differential access to learning opportunities
- Criminal subculture
- Easy movement between criminal and conventional
- Well-organized neighborhood network
- Conflict subculture
- Disorganized slum neighborhood
- Violence as alternative means to status
- Retreatist subculture
- Drug use often not solitary
- Double failure legitimate illegitimate worlds
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34Cohen Strain and lower class delinquent
subculture 1955
- A problem of adjustment, status deprivation for
lower class youth - inability to compete in middle class oriented
schools - Status in school
- ascribed characteristics (social class position
of parents) - achieved characteristics (the middle class
measuring rod/Protestant work ethic)
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35Cohen value conflict and delinquent subculture
- Group solution to the status problem
- emergent solution, participants convert each
other - Rejection of middle-class values, inversion into
delinquent values - Attack what middle-class values
- Destruction of property, senseless stealing,
mindless violence - Reject the thing that rejects them
- reaction-formation exaggerated overreaction
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36Cohen - content of the delinquent subculture
- Non-utilitarian non-rational
- Malicious for the discomfort of others
- Negativistic not really an organized subculture
with its own value system - values opposite to
those of the middle class - Short-run hedonism immediate gratification
- Versatility no specialization
- Group autonomy loyalty, solidarity
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37Cohen - solutions to strain
- Delinquent subculture
- Advantage gain status and avoid failure since
success defined in different terms. - Disadvantage Crime
- Corner boy most common (some minor delinquency)
- Adv some (high) degree of success in lower class
terms - Disadv still a feeling of failure
- College boy least likely
- Adv success in middle-class terms
- Disadv turn back on roots low probability of
success
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38General Strain Theory (GST) Agnew 1992
- Failure to achieve positively valued goals
- Gap between aspirations/expectations actual
achievement - Failure due to blocked opportunities
- Failure due to inadequate skills/abilities
- Gap between view of fair outcome actual outcome
perceive unfair treatment
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39GST - Valued goals
- Money
- Lower class with blocked opportunities
- Theft, drug sales, prostitution
- Good grades
- Young people
- Underage drinking, cheating in school
- Status/respect
- Masculine status
- Assault, robbery
- Autonomy
- Youth members of lower class
- Underage drinking/sexual intercourse, stealing
for financial independence stealing for material
gain
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40GST - Agnew
- Removal of positively valued stimuli
- Loss of someone of great worth
- Loss of an opportunity to engage in something
valued - Confrontation with negative stimuli
- Abuse or victimization verbal, sexual, physical
- Negative school, work or family experiences
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41GST - Agnew
- Stressful life situations (strain) can be related
to delinquency - Strain results in greater likelihood of
experiencing negative emotions - Anger, frustration, anxiety, depression
- Pressure for corrective action, crime is one
possible response - Noncriminal response is more common
- Cognitive coping strategies
- Behavioral coping strategies
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42GST - Response to strain is conditioned
Criminal Non-criminal
- Availability of other goals
- Fear of punishment
- Strong social bonds
- Denial of access to illegal means
- Low self-control
- Delinquent peers
- Blame others for strain
-
- Anti-social beliefs
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43Strain Theory Policy implications
- Open up legitimate opportunities to all
- Education, job training to disadvantaged groups
- Cloward Ohlin - Mobilization for Youth
- (Would this only redistribute crime?)
- GST
- Teach ways to identify and handle strain
- Conflict resolution family counseling,
school-based programs
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44Strain theory - evaluation
- Universal goal of monetary success?
- Relative deprivation
- Gender shapes experience of and response to
strain - Males material achievements females
relational concerns - Females economic marginalization
- Males externalize response females internalize
response - Gender and sexual victimization more likely for
females - Attention to structural barriers to success (vs.
blame the individual for failure)
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45Institutional-Anomie TheoryMessner Rosenfeld
1994
- High rates of serious crime in USA
- Social stratification myth of equal opportunity
- Cultural emphasis on monetary success, plus
relationships among - Economy
- Polity
- Family
- Education
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46Anomie in capitalist societies
- Unregulated goals
- Emphasis on PROFIT
- Unregulated means
- Emphasis on competition, innovation
- Emphasis on technical efficiency (vs. morality)
- Level of anomie depends on institutional balance
of power (among economy, polity, family
education)
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47Institutional imbalance Economic dominance
- Devaluation of non-economic institutional
functions and roles - Accommodation to economic requirements by other
institutions - Penetration of economic norms into other
institutional domains
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48Economic dominance weak social control
- Non-economic institutions cannot fulfill their
distinctive functions - Non-economic institutions lose their influence
- Behavior falls more in line with anomic
orientations high levels of crime
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49Anomic crime
- Crime for economic gain (instrumental vs.
expressive motive) - Petty theft or white collar crime
- Crimes of force (easiest way to achieve goal)
- Predatory street crime such as robbery
- USA guns gun-related violence and homicide for
economic gain
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50Institutional imbalance Political dominance
- Political dominance state has a significant
role in regulating everyday life - Corrupt moral climate
- Personal agency is decreased
- Less feeling of responsibility for others
- More cynicism about responsibility for others
- Could explain Scandinavian tax avoidance
underground economy (a certain type of crime)
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51Decommodification crime Messner Rosenfeld
1997
- Hypothesis Highly decommodified policies (broad
and generous social welfare and insurance
programs) lower rates of homicide - Reasoning Institutional balance of power is
less likely to be dominated by market economy,
more likely to reflect norms of collective
support and mutual obligation
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52Institutional-Anomie theory
- Interplay of economy and other social
institutions - Japan prominent role of family
- Ireland organized religion
- Links between welfare state and cultural values
that inhibit violence - Implications for reduced welfare spending
- Unintended social consequences (crime)
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