Frage | Antworten |
what are three types of norms? | folkways, mores, and laws |
define folkway norm | simple everyday norms based on custom, tradition or etiquette |
define mores norms | based on broad societal morals, whose infraction would generate more serious social condemnation |
what type of people violate mores norms? | bad or wicked and potentially harmful to society |
define law norms | they are the strongest norm and supported by codified social sanctions |
what did Smith and Pollack suggest? | deviance might be conceptualized as violations of the norms associated with crime, sin, and poor taste. |
ABC's of deviance | their attitudes, behaviors or conditions |
true or false: can deviant behaviors be intentional or inadvertent | true |
three categories of S's | sin, sick, selected |
negative deviance | negative deviance refers to underconformity or nonconformity |
positive deviance | describes overconformity that is responded to in a confirmatory fashion |
what does typology recognize | traditional distinction between normative expectations and societal reactions involves a false dichotomy and seeks to integrate normative definitions with reactivist definitions |
define interactionist prespective | deviance as the infraction of some agreed-upon rule |
true or false: is deviance created by society | true |
social groups create deviance by making the rules whose infraction constitutes deviance |
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