Title: Approaches to Defining Deviance
1Approaches to Defining Deviance
- 4 Primary Approaches
- Absolutist
- Deviant behavior constitutes actions that are in
violation of a universal morality. - By morality sociologists mean a belief system
for distinguishing right/good from wrong/bad. - Fails to take into account situational or
contextual factors (cultural differences
historical factors)
2Western Judeo-Christian Absolutism
- Ten Commandments (Exodus)
- Thou shalt have no other gods before me.
- Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image
- Thou shalt not take the name of the lord thy God
in vain - Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy
- Honor thy father and thy mother
- Thou shalt not kill
- Thou shalt not commit adultery
- Thou shalt not steal
- Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy
neighbour - Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's house, Etc.
3Approaches to Defining Deviance
- Statistical
- Deviant behavior constitutes actions that are a
numerical minority. Conformity is defined by
majority behavior. - Majority rule, minority deviance
- Criticism What may be otherwise thought of as
deviant behavior is from the statistical view is
behavior in which a numerical majority engages
(e.g. pre-marital sex minor delinquency
speeding)
4Approaches to Defining Deviance
- 3) Reactivist
- Deviance is any behavior which produces a
negative reaction. This puts the focus on
those reacting rather than the deviant. - Highly situational/contextual (subjectivist).
- Criticism A norm violation is necessary before
any reaction to deviance takes place.
5Approaches to Defining Deviance
- 4) Normative (objective)
- Deviance is defined by violation of a social
norm. Social norms can be identified in an
objective way. -
- Contextual, but less so than the Reactivist
approach - Deviance hinges on a group notion of
- what ought to be (Prescriptions)
- What should not be (Proscriptions)
- Norms require a significant level of group
consensus
6- Issues to be Aware of in Defining Deviance
- Individual properties relevant to a deviant
status - Attitudes, Beliefs
- Behavior
- Conditional characteristics
- Ascribed characteristics
- Achieved
- Choices or agency
- Structural influences on deviance
- Structural differences in life chances
- Power differences in defining deviance
- Cultural frameworks, which provide meaning to
interpreting behavior - We will examine both levels and try to make
connections (Structuration Giddens)
7How Distinct is Deviance?
Ch 2 (Tittle Paternoster) makes this point.
They focus on middle class norms because society
is too fractured from their view to hold a single
set of norms applicable to all members of
society. Do you agree?
8More on Norms
- Three dimensions of social norms
- Folkways - concerned with minor, everyday
conventions of behavior etiquette, tradition,
etc. - Mores - based upon larger societal level
standards of morality. - Laws strongest set of norms formally codified,
sanctioned, etc.
9Folkways, Mores, and Law
- Emile Durkheim on Deviance Part Reactivist,
part Normative - What distinguishes different behaviors from one
another? - Crime Acts that violate collective sentiments
- Collective Sentiments
- Beliefs shared by social groups all social
groups can be thought of as cultural communities - Culture the distinctive way of life for a group
of people - Altruistic Sentiment Respect for that which is
anothers - Durkheims Assumptions about Human Nature
10Durkheim on Deviance/Crime
- Defining characteristic of crime is punishment
that follows a criminal act - The defining element is the social reaction to
the act, especially the intensity of reaction.
11Altruistic Sentiment Scale
Durkheim wants to know What distinguishes crime
from poor taste?
Poor taste
Robbery
low
High
Moral boundaries
Formal Negative Sanctions are applied when a
threshold of collective sentiments is violated
12Notes on Moral Boundaries
- Variable according to changes in collective
sentiments - Definitions change over time
- Change over social space (audiences vary)
- Amount of deviance, however is relatively stable
- Subculture
- A group with a distinctive way of life that
maintains some ties to larger the society/culture - Sanctions
- Positive Negative
- Formal Informal
- Sanctions are social devices to produce
conformity