Chapter 6
Deviance
a behavior, trait, belief, or other characteristic that violates a norm and causes a negative reaction (page 153)
Criminal justice system
a collection of social institutions, such as legislatures, police, courts, and prisons, that creates and enforces laws (page 170)
In-group orientation
among stigmatized individuals, the rejection of prevailing judgments or prejudice and the development of new standards that value their group identity (page 162)
Rehabilitation
an approach to punishment that attempts to reform criminals as part of their penalty (page 170)
Retribution
an approach to punishment that emphasizes retaliation or revenge for the crime as the appropriate goal (page 170)
Deterrence
an approach to punishment that relies on the threat of harsh penalties to discourage people from committing crimes (page 170)
Incapacitation
an approach to punishment that seeks to protect society from criminals by imprisoning or executing them (page 170)
Self-fulfilling prophecy
an inaccurate statement or belief that, by altering the situation, becomes accurate; a prediction that causes itself to come true (page 160)
Uniform Crime Report (UCR)
an official measure of crime in the United States, produced by the FBI's official tabulation of every crime reported by more than 18,000 law enforcement agencies (page 166)
Outsiders
according to Howard Becker, those labeled deviant and subsequently segregated from "normal" society (page 163)
Secondary deviance
in labeling theory, the subsequent deviant identity or career that develops as a result of being labeled deviant (page 160)
Stereotype threat
a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy in which the fear of performing poorly -- and confirming stereotypes about their social groups -- causes students to perform poorly (page 160)
Social control theory
a theory of crime, proposed by Travis Hirschi, that posits that strong social bonds increase conformity and decrease deviance (page 155)
Crime
a violation of a norm that has been codified into law (page 165)
Positive deviance
actions considered deviant within a given context but are later reinterpreted as appropriate or even heroic (page 172)
White collar crime
crime committed by a high-status individual in the course of his occupation (page 167)
Cybercrime
crimes committed via the Internet, including identity theft, embezzlement, fraud, sexual predation, and financial scams (page 166)
Violent crime
crimes in which violence is either the objective or the means to an end, including murder, rape, aggravated assault, and robbery (page 166)
Property crime
crimes that do not involve violence, including burglary, larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson (page 166)
Primary deviance
in labeling theory, the initial act or attitude that causes one to be labeled deviant (page 160)
Criminology
the systematic scientific study of crime, criminals, and criminal justice (page 166)
Cyberbullying
the use of electronic media (web pages, social networking sites, e-mail, Twitter, cell phones) to tease, harass, threaten, or humiliate someone (page 158)
Differential association theory
Edwin Sutherland's hypothesis that we learn to be deviant through our associations with deviant peers (page 157)
Stigma
Erving Goffman's term for any physical or social attribute that devalues a person or group's identity and that may exclude those who are devalued from normal social interaction (page 161)
Innovators
individuals who accept society's approved goals but not society's approved means to achieve them (page 156)
Ritualists
individuals who have given up hope of achieving society's approved goals but still operate according to society's approved means (page 156)
Rebels
individuals who reject society's approved goals and means and instead create and work toward their own (sometimes revolutionary) goals using new means (page 156)
Retreatists
individuals who renounce society's approved goals and means entirely and live outside conventional norms altogether (page 156)
Passing
presenting yourself as a member of a different group than the stigmatized group to which you belong (page 162)
Deviance avowal
process by which an individual self-identifies as deviant and initiates her own labeling process (page 163)
Capital punishment
the death penalty (page 172)
Labeling theory
Howard Becker's idea that deviance is a consequence of external judgments, or labels, that modify the individual's self-concept and change the way others respond to the labeled person (page 158)
Stereotype promise
a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy in which positive stereotypes, such as the "model minority" label applied to Asian Americans, lead to positive performance outcomes (page 161)
Tertiary deviance
redefining the stigma associated with a deviant label as a positive phenomenon (page 160)
Social control
the formal and informal mechanisms used to elicit conformity to values and norms and thus promote social cohesion (page 156)