Cultural factors –
the strong
emphasis on
success goals and
the weaker
emphasis on using
legitimate means
to achieve them
The strain between the
cultural goal of ‘money success’
and the lack of legitimate
opportunities to achieve it
produces frustration in the job
market.
This creates a pressure
to resort to illegitimate
means such as crime and
deviance.
Merton calls this the
‘strain to anomie’
Devient Adaptions to Strain
Merton argues that
the individuals
position in the social
structure affects the
way they adapt or
respond to the strain
to anomie
Five different types of adaption
Conformity – Merton sees this as
typical response of most
Americans but is most likely
among middle class individuals
with good opportunities to
achieve. Individuals accept
culturally approved goals and
strive to achieve them through
legitimate means.
Innovation – Those at the
lower end of the class
structure are under
greater pressure to
innovate. Individuals
accept the money goal of
success but use
illegitimate means to
achieve it.
Ritualism – Typical of lower
middle classes. Individuals give
up on trying to achieve ‘money
success’ but have internalised the
legitimate means so they follow
the rules for their own sake.
Retreatism –
Individuals reject both
the goals and
legitimate means and
become dropouts.
Rebellion – Individuals
reject the societies goals
and means but replaces
them with new ones in a
desire to bring about
revolutionary change.
Criticisms
Takes official crime stats
at face value. These over
represent working class
crime. It is also too
deterministic - the
working class experience
the most strain yet they
don’t all deviate.
Marxist argue it ignores
the ruling class’s power to
make and enforce laws
which criminalise the
poor but not the rich.
It assumes there is value
consensus – ignores the
possibility that some may
not share the goal of
‘money success’
Only accounts for
utilitarian crime for
monetary gain. Also
does not account for
state crime.
Explains how deviance
results from individuals
adapting to the strain of
anomie but does not
account for group
deviance such as
delinquent subcultures.
Durkhiem
The Inevitability of Crime
In modern societies,
there is a tendency
towards anomie due
to increasing diversity.
This diversity weakens
the collective
conscience – resulting
in higher levels of
crime.
Crime is inevitable and universal
In complex
modern
societies,
there is a
diversity of
lifestyles and
values.
Not everyone is equally
effectively socialised.
The Positive Functions of Crime
Boundary Mainteinance
Crime prompts a reaction
from society, uniting its
members in condemnation of
the wrongdoer and reinforcing
their commitment to their
shared norms and values.
Punishment is not to make
the wrongdoer suffer or
mend his ways, or to remove
crime from society. It is to
reaffirm society's shared
rules and promote social
solidarity.
Rituals in the courtroom
dramatise wrongdoing
and publicly stigmatise
the offender. The
reaffirms the values of the
law abiding majority and
discourage others from
wrongdoing.
Adaption and Change
All change starts with
an act of deviance.
There must be some scope
for people with new ideas
and values to challenge and
change existing norms and
values – they must not be
stifled by the weight of social
control.
In the first instance, new
ideas and values will
inevitably appear as
deviance.
If those with new ideas are suppressed, society will stagnate and be unable to make necessary
adaptive changes.
Criticisms
He claims that society
requires a certain
amount of deviance –
but offers no way of
knowing how much is
the right amount.
Just because crime may
reinforce shared norms
and values and promote
social solidarity does not
mean that is why crime
exists in the first place.
Crime is not functional for
everybody – what about the
victim?
Crime doesn’t
always promote
social solidarity –
may have the
opposite effect
(eg. women may
stay inside for fear
of attack).
Subcultural Strain Theories
A.K. Cohen
Agrees with Merton that
much deviance results from
lower classes inability to
achieve mainstream
success goals by legitimate
means.
He criticises Merton’s explanation:
Merton ignores group
responses to the strain
to anomie, such as
delinquent subcultures
Merton does not
explain
non-utilitarian crime
Cohen notes that working
class boys face anomie in
the middle class education
system:
They are culturally
deprived and lack the skills
to achieve, leaving them at
the bottom of the official
status hierarchy.
As a result, they suffer status
frustration. They resolve it by
rejecting mainstream middle
class values and forming
subcultures with others in their
situation.
This offers an
illegitimate opportunity
structure for boys who
have failed to achieve
legitimately.
Cloward and Ohlin
Agree with Merton that
working class deviance stems
from lack of legitimate
opportunities to gain status.
But they note that not
everyone adapts to a lack of
legitimate opportunities by
turning to utilitarian crime.
The key reasons for
these differences is
unequal access to both
legitimate and
illegitimate
opportunity
structures.
Different neighborhoods
provide different illegitimate
opportunities to learn
criminal skills and develop
criminal careers.
They identify three types of subculture that result:
Criminal subcultures – provide
youths with an apprenticeship in
utilitarian crime. Arises in
neighborhoods where there is a
longstanding, stable criminal
culture and a hierarchy of
professional adult crime.
Conflict subcultures – arises in areas
of high population turnover that
prevent a stable professional criminal
network developing. The only
illegitimate opportunities are within
loosely organized gangs.
Retreatist subcultures – the ‘double
failures who fail in both the legitimate and
the illegitimate opportunity structures and
become ‘drop outs’ of society, often turning
to illegal drugs.