Why do people commit Crimes? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Why do people commit Crimes?

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Why do people commit Crimes? Theories of Criminology – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why do people commit Crimes?


1
Why do people commit Crimes?
  • Theories of Criminology

2
Positive Theory (Positivism)
  • Criminals are born not made
  • This is an example of nature, not nurture
  • Focused on biological and psychological factors
    to explain criminal behaviour

3
Positivist Theorists
  • Cesare Lombarso (1835 1909)
  • Italian physician and psychiatrist
  • What did he think/do?
  • Studied cadavers of executed criminals in an
    effort to determine scientifically whether
    criminals were physically any different from
    non-criminals
  • He believed that people were born criminals and
    facial features of criminals included things like
    enormous jaws and strong canine teeth.

4
Pictures of murderers that Lambarso believed
carried facial features tied to criminal
activity.
5
Murderer
Sean Penn
See any similarities!? Does this mean Sean Penn
is a Criminal?
6
Positivist Theorists cont
  • In the 1960s, positivist criminologists argued
    that criminal behaviour lies in abnormal
    chromosomes
  • The XYY theory argued that violent male criminals
    have an abnormal XYY chromosome (XY is the normal
    pattern in males)
  • However, researchers soon found out that this was
    not true and that criminals had normal
    chromosomes and that non-criminals also had
    abnormal chromosomes.
  • The Positivist theory of criminals being born
    rather than made died out. There were moral
    implications with this.

7
Modern Day Example
  • Philippe Rushton
  • University of Western Ontario psychology
    professor
  • Rushton's book Race, Evolution, and Behavior
    (1995)tries to show that East Asians and their
    descendants average a larger brain size, greater
    intelligence, more sexual restraint, slower rates
    of maturation, and greater law abidingness and
    social organization than do Europeans and their
    descendants, who average higher scores on these
    dimensions than Africans and their descendants.

8
Sociological PerspectivesTheory of Anomie
  • Sociological Theorist Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
  • People who live in cities feel more anonymous and
    isolated (as compared to rural life).
  • No longer restrained by the strict norms of
    society (in rural life) and given the anonymity
    in a big city certain individuals turned to
    crime.
  • Durkheim is also a father of functionalism (i.e.,
    everyone has a role/function in society and that
    is how society runs/functions.
  • Durkheim believes that criminals have a role and
    are needed for society to function
  • If there were no crime, it would mean that
    everyone in society was the same and agreed on
    everything. This is no ideal and society would be
    too comforting people need a release.

9
Anomie cont
  • Kitty Genovese
  • Young woman stabbed to death on a street in New
    York City -1964
  • As many as 37 neighbours and bystanders all heard
    her screams for help.
  • No one called the police because they all thought
    someone else would take action.
  • Sociologists call this Diffusion of
    Responsibility
  • Kitty Genovese Article

10
Sociology contEcological School
  • Believed that criminal behaviour was fostered and
    encouraged in certain environments.
  • They studied a number of poor neighbourhoods and
    concluded that communities that suffered from
    high rates of poverty and social disintegration
    were more likely to condone criminal activity
    than more affluent neighbourhoods.

11
Sociology contSocial Conflict Theory
  • Karl Marx and Frederick Engels argued that the
    capitalist society encouraged crime as people
    competed for resources and wealth.
  • Our society protects those with power and
    property. As a result, people who are
    economically disadvantaged are more likely to be
    punished by our justice system. The only way to
    solve the crime problem is to eliminate the
    capitalist system.

12
Social Psychological Perspective
  • Social psychology is the study of the relations
    between individuals and people.
  • They are interested in how regular people can
    commit atrocious crimes.
  • Stanley Milgram was specifically interested in
    how Nazis were able to commit horrible acts of
    genocide he focused on how people could do this
    just by following orders.
  • Milgram Experiment
  • Torturing and killing innocent civilians

13
In relation to torturing article
  • Displacement of responsibility and dehumanizing
    the victim are two categories of moral
    disengagement
  • Bandura (1999) states, People behave in ways
    they would normally oppose if a legitimate
    authority accepts responsibility for the
    consequences of that behavior. Under these
    conditions, people view their actions as the
    dictates of authorities rather than their own
    actions.
  • According to reports in the article, the torture
    and abuse of the civilians was approved and
    facilitated by the White House
  • According to Bandura, (1999) person can justify
    torture by loosing empathy for the victim while
    convincing himself that the victim lacks human
    qualities.
  • Furthermore, once the victim is dehumanized, he
    is no longer viewed as a person with feelings,
    concerns or hopes but as a subhuman object that
    is easily tortured (Bandura, 1999).

14
Strain Theory (Sociology)
  • Current societies stress the goals of acquiring
    wealth, success, and power.
  • However, the means to achieve these goals require
    education and economic resources.
  • These means are frequently denied or unavailable
    to those who are economically disadvantaged or
    have little opportunity for formal education.
  • Example The Wire, Season 4, Episode 8
  • Young African American youth yearning for the
    chance to work on the streets to sell drugs
    because they know this is the only way they can
    make money.

15
Psychoanalytical Theory
  • Sigmund Freud believed that all humans have
    criminal tendencies.
  • It is through socialization that these
    tendencies are controlled during childhood.
  • If a child has an identity problem with his/her
    parent, this problem may cause the child to
    direct its antisocial tendencies outward and thus
    become a criminal.
  • Psychological Human Development also comes into
    play here

16
John Wayne Gacy Jr. How did he grow up to be a
murderer?
  • Theorists consider moral behaviour to be
    self-regulated through mechanisms of
    self-evaluation where one can approve or
    disapprove irresponsible or inhumane behaviour
  • It clear that Gacy showed a lack of moral
    behaviour and hence, in the act was not able to
    disapprove his behaviour adequately to avoid it
    completely.
  • Bandura (1977), states that most violent acts and
    inhumanities are perpetrated by people who, in
    other areas of their life are quite considerate
    in their behaviour.
  • This describes Gacys behaviour perfectly as he
    was very friendly, well liked by the neighbours
    and was largely involved in the community no one
    would assume he was capable of such casualties.
    Moreover, Gacy illustrated moral disengagement by
    justifying his murderous acts

17
Cont
  • According to Sigelman and Rider (2009), children
    who are raised in abusive environments can grow
    up to become abusers and to learn that violence
    is an integral part of human relationships.
  • Hence, it can be argued that Gacys immoral,
    violent and murderous adulthood is rooted in the
    violence from his childhood. Furthermore, abusers
    are often insecure individuals with low
    self-esteem
  • Furthermore, abusers are often insecure
    individuals with low self-esteem. Abusers can
    form negative internal working models of
    themselves and others, which are most likely
    rooted in unhappy experiences in insecure
    relationships with parents and negative
    experiences in romantic relationships
  • although his father hurt him physically and
    emotionally, Gacy desperately sought his fathers
    approval but was never able to achieve it. This
    insecurity led him to failed marriages and more
    interestingly, to his attraction to hiding
    himself under clown costumes and make-up in order
    for the children in the community to like him.

18
John Wayne Gacy Jr.
  • AE Biography Part 1
  • AE Biography Part 2
  • AE Biography Part 3
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