Erstellt von Victoria Bradley
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Frage | Antworten |
What is a moral enterprise? | The process of constructing and applying definitions of deviance to be understood. |
What are the two facets of deviance making enterprise? | 1. Rule creating 2. Rule enforcers |
Who would be considered rule creators and rule enforcers? | Rule creators: politicians, crusading public figures, teachers etc. Rule enforcers: police, judge, courts, RA's, parents etc. |
What are the goals of manufacturing public morality? | 1. Generate broad awareness 2. Bring out moral conversion 3. Enlist the support of sponsors 4. Look to different groups in society to form alliances or coalitions to support their campaigns |
When does a moral panic arise? | When a threat to society is depicted, promoting terror and dread with its powerfully persuasive focus on folk devils. |
What are examples of moral panics? | School shootings, kidnappings, gangs, and drugs. |
What is one of the most clearest elements of social power? | Money. |
Do people ever resist their labels of deviance? | Yes. |
Chapter 15: What was the first and most significant drug scare? | Over drink, known as the temperance movement in the late 18th and early 19th century. |
When did the shift on alcohol to other drugs occur? | When there was a nationwide scare due to the use of opiates and cocaine. |
What was said to have lead the youth to rebellion and ruin? | The "killer weed" also known as the "drop out drug." |
What are the 7 ingredient to a drug scare? | 1. A kernel of truth 2. Media magnification 3. Politico moral entrepreneurs 4. Professional Interest Group 5. Historical context of conflict 6. Linking a form of drug use to a "dangerous class" 7. Scapegoating a drug for a wife array of public problems |
What were the three claims listed to Americas vulnerability to drug scares? | 1. The evils of drugs are especially viable in American culture because they provide a welcome vocabulary of attribution; 2. because our society developed a temperance culture 3. Due to the temperance culture capitalism has built a post modern, mass consumption culture that exacerbates the problem of self control. |
Chapter 16: What is the distribution of deviance associated with? | The system of stratification. |
What does deviance creation involve? | Political competition in which moral entrepreneurs originate moral crusades aimed at generating reform. |
Why is smoking considered deviant? | Because its seen as socially reprehensible, is bad for your health, and others (second hand smoke). |
What was the purpose of the tax passed in California (Proposition 99)? | To fund smoking prevention and treatment programs. |
What was the primary concern of moral entrepreneurs regarding smoking? | Health. |
T or F: Smokers were seen as engaging in unclean and objectionable behavior stigmatized qualities defining their social status? | True. |
Was smoking being considered a"patriotic calling" or constitutional right and argument? | Yes. |
Essay Question | Would cigarette smoking be defined as deviant if there were a positive correlation between smoking and socio economic status? |
Chapter 17: What are some reasons that a moral panic would fail to launch? | 1. Lack of technological understanding 2. Comprehensive official control of an issue. Due to: 1. Lack of media access 2. The invisibility of the problem. 3. Preemption by other causes and interest groups. |
What are some of the criteria to the creation of a moral panic? | Look at notes on page 187. |
Chapter 18: What are some things the feminist scholars suggested? | -Black women are more immune from negative experiences with the juvenile system. - Girls are more likely than boys to experience juvenile justice interventions. - African American women and girls receive more punitive treatment than their white counterparts. (189) |
What were aspects of the experiment/research done in this chapter? | - Interviewed 75 black youth in St. Louis - Ages were between 12-19 - "At risk" youths were recruited in the projects -The focus was on urban black adolescents because they were the group that involuntary police contacts were most frequent and salient. |
Were youth responses consistent across genders? | Yes. |
What did youths describe as the primary police strategy in their neighborhoods? | Pedestrian and vehicle stops. |
What were terms that the police were described as? | -Physically intrusive - They limited their use of public space -Prejudicial -Used antagonistic language |
Results of the study. | Pg 198 refer to notes |
Chapter 19: Do all individuals engage in behavior consistent with gender expectations? | No. |
Why does women's violation of traditional gender role norms represent a particularly serious threat to patriarchal and heterosexist society? | Because this deviant behavior resists women's subordinate status. |
What is homophobia? | A fear of or negative reaction to homosexuality. |
Why are sports a susceptible arena for lesbian labeling? | Because of the historical linkage of masculinity with athleticism. |
What were two themes related to the lesbian stereotype in women sports? | 1. Silence surrounding the issue 2. Athletes internalization of social stereotypes concerning lesbians and women atheletes |
How is silence in sports manifested? | - Athletes difficulty in discussing lesbian topic - Viewing lesbian as a personal and irrelevant issue -Disguising athletic identity to avoid lesbian label -Team and administrative difficulty in addressing the lesbian issue |
What were 3 indicators/form of silence? | 1. The difficulty and uneasiness many athletes experienced in discussing the lesbian stereotype. 2. The stereotype was reflected in athletes general comments about lesbianism. 3. The stereotype was a tendency for athletes to hide their athletic identities. |
T or F: The silence surrounding lesbians create female bonding and camaraderie? | False. |
What were the three categories of responses regarding athletes internalization? | 1. Acceptance of lesbian stereotypes 2. Acceptance of women sports team stereotypes 3. Acceptance of negative images of lesbianism. (pg 206) |
What were some examples of dis-empowerment? | - Women athletes being seen as less than "real women" -Discrediting women with the label of lesbian to control the number of females in sport -The athletes that are lesbians that go through homophobia |
Chapter 20: T or F:Over the past five years the number of prison inmates have decreased drastically? | False. |
Is recidivism a problem when it comes to inmates being released? | Yes, many of them end up going back (40% arrested for new crimes) |
What race has the expansion of the prison population been particularly consequential for? | A. Blacks B. Whites C. Hispanics Answer:A |
Fact | African Americans tend to suffer from lower rates of employment relative to whites. |
Fact | Employers that are already reluctant to hire blacks are even more reluctant to when their is criminal history involved. |
Fact | Blacks are less than half as likely to receive consideration by employers, relative to white counterparts and black nonoffenders. |
Chapter 21: Saints and Roughnecks | This was week 3's answer, refer to notes. |
Chapter 22: Key notes | This chapter is mostly about doctors and their high social status, and due to that their expected to live above the deviance. |
What were elements listed that assist with the doctors saint image? | - They possess the financial and political wherewithal to influence the manner in which criminal statuses are written and enforced. -The altruistic and trustworthy image is commented in the physicians code of ethics. -They have been relatively immune from legal scrutiny because of the medical professional historical preference for self regulation. |
What were some selected medical offenses that were listed? | -"kickbacks" -prescription violations -unnecessary treatments -sexual misconduct medicaid fraud and abuse |
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