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AQA Sociology - Crime and Deviance - 15 Page Factsheet

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A digital copy of my typed notes on the AQA A-Level Sociology, Crime and Deviance topic (paper 3). Covering all key perspectives and essential theories. Includes detailed evaluations and real examples to boost your analysis. Organised with clear titles and colour-coded sections for each approach - Marxism, Feminism, Functionalism.

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Crime and Deviance - Paper 3

Crime - act/omission that is punishable by law
Deviance - diverging from accepted standards

Functionalist Theories of Crime
● Durkheim - Positive Functions of Crime
○ Boundary maintenance - condemn, solidarity
○ Adaption and change - all change starts with deviance e.g. suffragettes
● Davis - prostitution lets men release sexual frustration - protects nuclear family
● Ned Polsky - porn channels sexual desires away from adultery - protects family
● Albert Cohen - deviancy warns of problems with institutions - truancy + education
Evaluation
● Durkheim does not state how much crime is needed
● People don't commit crimes for the positive function
● Doesn't look at impacts on the individual victims
● Crime does not always lead to solidarity - fear, retaliation

Functionalist - Strain Theory - Merton
● People engage in crime as they are unable to achieve goals by legitimate means
● The American Dream
○ Cultural goal of money and happiness
○ Expected to achieve through hard work and self-discipline
○ Reinforces meritocracy
● Strain between goal of success and lack of legit opportunities to achieve it
● Merton’s types of adaption to strain
- Conformity: non-criminal/deviant
- Innovation: unemployment/poor education turns these people to crime
- Ritualism: given up on goals - forget a promotion, just works to get by
- Retreatism: given up all together e.g. drug addicts
- Rebellion: reject existing goals and replace with new to bring about change
● Research - societies that spent more on welfare had lower imprisonment rates
Evaluation
● Lower class crime rates are higher - less opportunity
● Most western crime is property crime - value material wealth so highly
● Marxists - ignores crime committed by R/C
● Marxists - ignores R/C ability to define the law
● Assumes everyone strives for money

Subcultural Strain Theories

Status Frustration - Cohen
● Focus on w/c boys
● Suffer from anomie in a m/c school system
● Can’t achieve legitimately - turn away from m/c values and to delinquent
subcultures
● Chavs - Owen Jones, w/c used as scapegoats for wider issues

, Alternative Status Hierarchy - Cohen
● Delinquent subculture reverses mainstream values - societal ‘bad’ is ‘good’ in the
subculture
● Mainstream society upholds school attendance, subcultures give status for truancy
● Offers another way to achieve status that these boys can’t achieve legitimately

Evaluation - Status Frustration and Alternative Status Hierarchy
● Offers explanation for non-economic delinquency
● Cohen, like Merton, assumes all w/c boys start off sharing m/c goals
● Ignores chance that they never shared these goals and never saw themselves as
failures

Three Subcultures - Cloward and Ohlin
● Aimed to explain youth delinquency in ways Merton did not
- Criminal Subcultures
- Youths provided with apprenticeship for career in utilitarian crime
- Arise in towns only where there is a stable criminal culture and hierarchy
- Young can climb the criminal career ladder
- Conflict Subculture
- Arises in areas of high population turnover
- Results in high levels of disorganisation and prevents stable criminal network
developing
- Its absence means illegitimate opportunities are only available in loosely
organised gangs
- Retreatist Subcultures
- Not everyone who aspires to be a professional criminal succeeds
- ‘Double failures’ - turn to retreatist subcultures - drug use
Evaluation
● Too deterministic
● Ignore wider power structures - who makes the law

Walter Miller - Lower Class Subcultures
● Not a strain subculture
● Not a result of inability to achieve, but a culture that makes deviance more accepted
● This subculture has a range of interests and characteristics:
- Toughness - expression of masculinity, rejects timidity, can lead to violence to
maintain a reputation for toughness
- Smartness - ability to con, steal and outsmart
- Excitement - Searching for stimulus, gambling, sex and alcohol

Institutional Anomie - Rosenfeld and Messner
● Obsession with money exerts pressure towards crime by encouraging anomie in
which people are encouraged to do anything in pursuit of wealth
● In USA and UK, economic goals are valued above all else
● Conclude that societies based on free market capitalism and lacking welfare are
inevitably going to have high crime rates
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