Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Right Realism
- Crime destroys communities,
undermines social cohesion and
threatens society's work ethic
- US & UK had tough stances towards offenders –
and held view that the best way to reduce crime
was through tough control and punishment,
rather than rehabilitating offenders or tackling
the causes of crime such as poverty
- labelling theory and critical
criminology are too
sympathetic of the criminal
and too hostile on law and
order
Anmerkungen:
- Right realism focuses less on the causes of crime but more on how to provide practical solutions
- Causes of Crime
Anmerkungen:
- go against marxist theory - old are poor but have low crime rates
- Biological
differences
- James Q. Wilson & Richard J.
Herrnstein - biosocial theory
- some people are
innately more strongly
predisposed to commit
crime
Anmerkungen:
- e.g. personality traits such as aggression extroversion risk taking and low impulse control - greater risk to offend
- Herrnstein & Murray - main cause
of crime is low intelligence which
they see as biologically determined
- Lilly et al - IQ differences only
account for 3% of differences in
offending
- Socialisation and the
underclass
- effective socialisation can
decrease the risk of
offending as it involves
learning self control and
moral values
- see nuclear family as
the best agency of
socialisation
- lone mothers are ineffective
socialisation agents especially for boys -
absent fathers; boys lack paternal
discipline and appropriate male role
models
Anmerkungen:
- young males turn to delinquent male role models and street crime in order to gain status
- focuses on petty street
crime and not on
corporate crime
- Murray - crime rate increasing
because of a growing underclass who
are defied by their deviant behaviour
and fail to socialise their children
properly
- due to welfare
dependency
- generous revolution - allowing
increasing numbers of people to
become dependent on the state; led to
the decline of marriage and the growth
of lone parent families and women and
children can live off benefits
Anmerkungen:
- men no longer take responsibility for supporting their families = no longer need to work
- Rational choice theory
Anmerkungen:
- individuals have free will and the power of reason
- Ron Clarke
- decision to offend is a choice based on a
rational calculation of the likely consequences; if
the rewards of crime are greater than those of
non-criminal behaviour - more likely to offend
- costs of crime seem low - explains the
increase in crime rate
- Marcus Felson -
routine activity theory
- must be a motivated offender, suitable
target and the absence of a capable
guardian for crime to occur
- informal guardians e.g. provided by the
community more effective than formal ones
(police) at deterring from crime
Anmerkungen:
- e.g. after Hurricane Andrew in Florida - patrols by local citizens to protect property during absence of police prevented looting and crime rates decreased during this time (Cromwell et al)
- overestimates rationality and
calculations before committing a crime -
can explain utilitarian crime and not
violent crime
- conflicts with the idea
that their behaviour is
biologically and socially
determined
- ignores wider structural
causes e.g. poverty
- Tackling Crime
- don't deal with the causes of crime since they cannot
easily be changed; try to make crime less attractive
(control contain and punish)
- Wilson & Kelling - essential to maintain the
orderly character of neighbourhoods;
deterioration must be dealt with immediately
- over emphasises control of disorder rather than tackling
underlying causes of neighbourhood decline e.g. lack of
investment
- zero tolerance policy towards
undesirable behaviour
(prostitution begging and
drunkenness)
- gives free rein to discriminate
against ethnic minority youth,
homeless etc
- results in displacement of crime
to other areas
Anmerkungen:
- Jones - right realist policies in the USA failed to prevent the crime rate increasing
- should reduce the rewards and
increase the costs of crime (target
hardening and longer prison
sentences)