100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

AQA A-Level Sociology: Crime and Deviance FULL NOTE SUMMARY

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
37
Uploaded on
21-08-2025
Written in
2025/2026

Full note summary of ALL topics in the Crime and Deviance module - concise notes, perfect for revision! Everything you need to succeed at this module! Includes key sociologists, key theories, and evaluation points to secure top marks. Achieved an A* in Sociology; current Oxford law student. Check out my profile for Crime and Deviance full mark essays, and bundle deals for all of the A-Level Sociology topics! Topics covered: Functionalism, strain and subcultural theories 2 - 4 Interactionism and labelling 5 - 7 Class, power and crime 8 - 11 Realism 11 - 14 Gender 15 - 18 Ethnicity 19 - 21 Media 21 - 25 Globalisation, green crime human rights and state crime 25 - 31 Control, punishment and victims 32 - 37

Show more Read less











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Document information

Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
Unknown
Uploaded on
August 21, 2025
Number of pages
37
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Summary

Content preview

1




A-LEVEL
SOCIOLOGY:
CRIME AND
DEVIANCE

●​Functionalism, strain and subcultural theories 2 -
4
●​Interactionism and labelling 5 - 7
●​Class, power and crime 8 - 11
●​Realism 11 - 14
●​Gender 15 - 18
●​Ethnicity 19 - 21
●​Media 21 - 25
●​Globalisation, green crime human rights and
state crime 25 - 31
●​Control, punishment and victims 32 - 37

, 2


Functionalism, strain and subcultural theories
●​ Functionalism - DURKHEIM
○​ Inevitability of crime (not everyone equally socialised + complex modern
societies →diversity of lifestyles and values, different subcultures)
■​ Modern society = ANOMIE - normlessness - rules governing behaviour
become weaker due to specialised division of labour which weakens
collective conscience
-​ ERIKSON: if deviance performs positive social functions, society may actually be
organised to promote deviance
○​ Positive functions of crime:
1.​ Boundary maintenance - unites society in condemnation of wrongdoer
2.​ Adaptation and change - all starts with deviance so must allow a bit or
society will stagnate
⇒ don’t want too much or too little crime
-​ DAVIS: prostitution = safety valve - release of men’s sexual frustration - w/o
threatening monogamous nuclear family
-​ POLSKY: pornography safely ‘channels’ a variety of sexual desires away from
alternatives eg adultery
-​ COHEN: deviance = warning that an institution is not functioning properly
-​ AO3: explains function of crime but not its cause, looks at whole society not vulnerable
groups, may lead to isolation not solidarity

●​ Strain theory - Merton
○​ Deviance = strain between 2 things - goals that a culture ENCOURAGES
individuals to achieve vs institutional structure of society ALLOWS them to
achieve legitimately
○​ American Dream = meritocracy (+ achieve success at any price) - but untrue
○​ Cultural goal of money success + lack of legitimate opportunities → pressure to
deviate (strain to anomie)
○​ Adaptations::
1.​ CONFORMITY: + goals + means
2.​ INNOVATION: + goal - means
3.​ RITUALISM: - goals + means (dead-end jobs)
4.​ RETREATISM: - goals - means
5.​ REBELLION: reject goals/means + replace them with new ones (hippies)
+​ AO3: explain patterns shown in official crime statistics - most crime is property crime,
lower-class crime rates are higher
-​ AO3: takes official crime statistics at face value, too deterministic, Marxist: ignore power
of ruling class, assumes there is value consensus, only accounts for utilitarian crime

●​ Subcultural strain theory - A COHEN

, 3


○​ Agrees Merton: lower-class phenomenon - inability of lower classes to achieve
mainstream success by legitimate means
○​ Criticises Merton: sees as an individual response strain, ignoring that deviance is
committed in groups / focuses on utilitarian crime not vandalism
○​ WC boys suffer anomie in MC school system → status frustration → resolved by
rejecting MC values and forming a delinquent subculture
■​ Inverts values of mainstream society
■​ Function = alternative status hierarchy
-​ AO3: good for non-utilitarian crime, but assumes WC boys share MC success goals

●​ Subcultural strain theory - CLOWARD and OHLIN
○​ Not everyone who is denied legitimate opportunities turns to innovation
○​ Not only is there unequal access to legitimate opportunity structure (Merton +
Cohen), but unequal access to illegitimate opportunity structures
1.​ CRIMINAL SUBCULTURE: longstanding + stable criminal subculture
2.​ CONFLICT SUBCULTURE: high levels of social disorganisation prevents
stable professional criminal network developing - loosely organised
gangs
3.​ RETREATIST SUBCULTURE: ‘double failures’ - fail in legitimate +
illegitimate eg illegal drug use
-​ AO3: SOUTH; draw boundaries too sharply - drug trade = mixture of ‘disorganised’ crime
(conflict subculture) + ‘professional crime’ (criminal) / some retreatists users are also
professional dealers

-​ AO3: MILLER - strain theories = reactive theories - lower class has its own independent
subculture
-​ AO3: MATZA: most deviants are not strongly committed to their subculture - drifting in
and out of delinquency

●​ Recent strain theories; variety of goals - popularity with peers, autonomy from adults,
young males treated like ‘real men’
●​ Institutional anomie theory - MESSNER and ROSENFELD
○​ American Dream: obsession with money success + winner takes all mentality →
pressure towards crime encourages an anomic cultural environment - ‘anything
goes’ mentality in pursuit of wealth
○​ Societies based on free-market capitalism + lacks adequate welfare = high crime
rates are inevitable as economic goals are values above all - ‘winner takes all’
mentality
+​ DOWNES + HANSEN: survey of crime rates and welfare spending - 18 countries -=
societies spent more on welfare → lower rates of imprisonment

, 4


+​ SAVELSBERG: post communist societies in Eastern Europe saw a rise in crime -
communism’s collective values = replaced by new western capitalist foals of individual
‘money success’
£8.99
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
elliebean1
2.0
(1)

Also available in package deal

Thumbnail
Package deal
A-Level Sociology MEGA BUNDLE: Concise revision notes and full mark essays!
-
9 2025
£ 67.91 More info

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
elliebean1 University of Oxford
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
9
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
20
Last sold
2 weeks ago
A* Notes

First Year Oxford Law Student: sharing the notes that helped me achieve straight A* in A-levels (English Literature, History, Economics, Sociology)!

2.0

1 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
1
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions