Title: Individual and Social Strain
1Individual and Social Strain
- Social Merton Social structure unequally
distributes means to achieve culturally valued
goals. - Individual Agnew Strain is experienced at the
individual level as anger, stress, frustration,
anxiety, etc.
2Agnews General Strain Theory
Strain
- Negative emotions
- Anger
- Resentment
- Rage
- Dissatisfaction
- Disappointment
Coping strategies (including crime)
At the individual level, what are possible
sources of negative emotions?
3Strain as the actual or anticipated failure to
achieve positively valued goals
- Strain as gap between aspirations and
expectations/actual achievements - Strain as gap between expectations and actual
achievements - Strain as disjunction between just/fair outcomes
and actual outcomes (equity)
4Strain as the actual or anticipated failure to
achieve positively valued goalsLame clip art
version
Barrier
Positively valued goal
This type of strain Consistent with Merton (and
Cohen)
Person seeking positively valued goal
5Strain as the actual or anticipated removal of
positively valued stimuli
- Negative emotions stemming from loss of, e.g.,
parent, friend, material goods, etc.
Positively valued stimulus
Person experiencing loss of positively valued
stimulus
6Strain as the actual or anticipated presentation
of negatively valued stimuli
- Negative emotions stemming from e.g., child
abuse/neglect, criminal victimization, physical
punishment, negative relations with
parents/peersdisgusting scenes, exposure to
violence, etc.
7Linking strain to delinquency
- Anger as key intervening emotion
- Delinquency may alleviate anger/strain
- delinquency may be used to achieve positively
valued goals, protect/retrieve positively valued
stimuli, or terminate/escape negative stimuli - delinquency may be used to seek revenge
- delinquency may be used to manage/cope with
negative emotions (e.g., drug use)
8Why Does Strain Lead to Delinquent Adaptations?
- Strain affects valued goals/values/identities
- Availability of individual coping resources
- Availability of social support
- Constraints to delinquent coping
- Costs/benefits of crime in a given situation
- Social control
- Access to illegitimate means
- Disposition to delinquency
9Origin of Conflict/Inequality ModelsSellins
Culture Conflict Model
- Law is variable across time and cultures law is
the imposition by powerful groups of their
cultural codes upon the powerless - The cause of crime some behaviors that are
encouraged or tolerated in subcultural groups are
criminalized by the dominant culture
10Sellin (contd)
- The causes of culture conflict
- Growth of civilization social differentiation
leads to an infinity of social groupings each
with its own subculture - Migration of conduct norms rooted in immigration
to the US - Conquest
11SutherlandApproach to Theory
- Logical abstraction
- Differentiating levels of analysis
- Analytic induction (deterministic versus
probabilistic)
12Differential AssociationThe Nine Propositions
- 1. Criminal behavior is learned
- Not inherited
13Differential AssociationThe Nine Propositions
- 1. Criminal behavior is learned
- Not inherited
- 2. Criminal behavior is learned in interaction
with other persons in a process of communication - Verbal
- Gestures
14Differential AssociationThe Nine Propositions
- 3. Criminal behavior learned mostly in intimate
personal groups - Media not very important
15Differential AssociationThe Nine Propositions
- 3. Criminal behavior learned mostly in intimate
personal groups - Media not very important
- 4. Learning includes
- Techniques of committing crime
- The specific direction of motives, drives,
rationalizations, and attitudes
16Differential AssociationThe Nine Propositions
- 5. The direction of motives and dirves is
learned from definitions of the legal codes as
favorable or unfavorable - In the U.S., definitions are usually mixed,
resulting in culture conflict
17Differential AssociationThe Nine Propositions
- 6. A person becomes delinquent because of an
excess of definitions favorable to violation of
law over definitions unfavorable to violation of
law - Principle of differential association
18Differential AssociationThe Nine Propositions
- 7. Differential associations may vary in
frequency, duration, priority, and intensity - Frequency how often
- Duration how long and how much time has the
association occupied - Priority how early did the association begin
- Intensity how important is the relationship
19Differential AssociationThe Nine Propositions
- 8. The process of learning criminal behavior
involves all the mechanisms that are involved in
any other learning
20Differential Social Organization
- Differential social organization the extent to
which a GROUP is organized in favor of crime or
against crime
21Sutherland Macro and Micro Theories of
Differential Association
M A C R O M I C R O
Normative culture conflict
Differential social organization
Crime rates
Differential association
Individual crime