Sociology Exam 2
Status Frustration Theory
Albert Cohen's view that delinquency results from school failure and the concomitant need to regain self-esteem by being successful in delinquent activities
Differential Association
Edwin Sutherland's view that deviance stems from interacting with primary group members who commit deviance and have values conducive to deviance
Differential Opportunity Theory
Richard Cloward and Lloyd Ohlin's view that differential access to illegitimate means helps determine the types of deviance in which poor people engage
Strain Theory
Robert Merton's view that deviance is caused by failure to achieve the American goal of financial success through the conventional means of working
Uniform Crime Report
The FBI's regular compilation of crime statistics, most of them on Index crimes
Primary Deviance and Secondary Deviance
The difference between primary deviance and secondary deviance is in how the deviant self-identifies after society labels his actions as deviations from the norm. Primary deviance is the first event that is punished. If the deviant feels there's nothing he can do to change society's perception of him, he will continue to commit deviant acts. This is secondary deviance.
Relativity of Deviance
a behavior is considered deviant depends on the circumstances in which the behavior occurs and not o the behavior itself : relative in space- given behavior may be considered deviant in one society and not the other: relative in time- may be considered deviant in one time period and acceptable years later
Crime
behavior that violates laws
Deviance
behavior that violates social norms and arouses negative social reactions
atavists
brains were incapable of conforming to modern norms, evolutionary accidents
Conflict Theory
interprets society as a struggle for power between groups engaging in conflict for limited resource
Biological Explanations
see crime and deviant behavior as a form of illness caused by pathological factors that are specific to certain types of individuals. They assume that some people are "born criminals" who are biologically different than non-criminals.
Durkheim and Deviance
society without deviance is impossible for atleast two reasons. the collective conscience is never strong enough to prevent all rule breaking and because deviance serves several important function for society, considered normal part of every day society
Labeling Theory
the view that extralegal factors affect whether someone acquire a deviant label and that being labeled deviant increases the chances of future deviance
Global Stratification
uneven distribution of privileges, material awards, opportunities, power, prestige and influence among individuals and groups
Social Control
ways in which a society tries to prevent and sanction behavior that violates norms