Created by DreamBig0927
about 10 years ago
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Question | Answer |
Deviance | The violation of norms(or rules or expectations). |
Crime | The violation of norms written into law. |
Stigma | "Blemishes" that discredit a person's claim to a "normal" identity. |
Social Order | A group's usual and customary social arrangements, on which its members depend and on which they base their lives. |
Social Control | A group's formal and informal means of enforcing its norms. |
Negative Sanction | An expression of disapproval for breaking a norm, ranging from a mild, informal reaction such as a frown to a formal reaction such as a fine or a prison sentence. |
Positive Sanction | An expression of approval for following a norm, ranging from a smile or a good grade in class to a material reward such as a prize. |
Genetic Predisposition | Inborn tendencies(for example, a tendecy to commit deviant acts). |
Street Crime | Crimes such as mugging, rape, and burglary. |
Personality Disorders | The view that a personality disturbance of some sort causes an individual to violate social norms. |
Differential Association | Edwin Sutherland's term to indicate that people who associate with some groups lean an "excess of definitions" of deviance, increasing the likelihood that they will become deviant. |
Control Theory | The idea that two control systems-inner controls and outer controls- work against our tendencies to deviate. |
Degradation Ceremony | A term coined by Harold Garfinkel to refer to a ritual whose goal is to remake someone's self by stripping away that individual's self-identity and stamping a new identity in its place. |
Labeling Theory | The view that the labels people are given affect their own and others' perceptions of them, thus channeling their behavior into either deviance or conformity. |
Technique of neutralization | Ways of thinking or rationalizing that help people deflect(or neutralize) society's norms. |
Cultural Goals | The objectives held out as legitimate or desirable for the members of a society to achieve. |
Institutionalized Means | Approved ways of reaching cultural goals. |
Strain Theory | Robert Merton's term for the strain engendered when a society socializes large numbers of people to desire a cultural goal (such as success), but withholds from some the approved means of reaching that goal; one adaptation to the strain is crime. |
Illegitimate Opportunity Structure | Opportunities for crimes that are woven into the texture of life. |
White-Collar Crimes | Edwin Sutherland's term for crimes committed by people of respectable and high social status in the course of their occupations; for example, bribery of public officials. |
Corporate Crime | Crime committed by executives in order to benefit their corporation. |
Criminal Justice System | The system of police, courts, and prisons set up to deal with people who are accused of having committed a crime. |
Recidivism Rate | The percentage of released convicts who are rearrested. |
Capital Punishment | The death penalty. |
Serial Murder | The killing of several victims in three or more separate events. |
Police Discretion | The practice of the police, in the normal course of their duties, to either arrest or ticket someone for an offense or to overlook the matter. |
Medicalization of Deviance | To make deviance a medical matter, a symptom of some underlying illness that needs to be treated by physicians. |
Medicalization | The transformation of a human condition into a matter to be treated by physicians. |
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