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Exam (elaborations)

Subcultural views on crime

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Extremely detailed essay plan on Subcultural views of crime. Includes introduction, conclusion, key theorists, explanations and evaluations. Earned an A* overall and above 90% in all class tests.









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Uploaded on
November 11, 2025
Number of pages
4
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
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Subcultural views on crime:
Intro:
 There are three forms of subcultural theory: Functionalist,
Interactionism and Marxism
 All suggest that young people develop subcultures with norms and
values that at times from differ from those of mainstream society
 Subcultural strain theories see deviance as the product of a
delinquent subculture with different values from those of
mainstream society
 They see subcultures as providing an alternative opportunity
structure for those who are denied the chance to achieve by
legitimate means - mainly the working-class
 Examples of subcultures are the Mods and Rockers, high school
cliques and hippies

Point 1: Functionalist view on subcultures
AO2:
 Functionalist theories say that when young people cannot achieve
status for themselves, they form subcultures with alternative values
from mainstream society
 Cohen criticised Merton from within the functionalist tradition. He
looked at working-class delinquent boys and argued that deviance is
not individual, but collective
 His criticisms of Merton were specifically that: working-class males
are particularly linked to crime and gang culture, much
delinquent/criminal behaviour is not about acquiring goods or
wealth, but is destructive, including self-destructive, and Merton’s
analysis is “monocultural
 Cohen developed an analysis of the culture of the delinquent boys
as forming cultural values that are a response to dominant culture
 Working class boys are judged by middle class standards in schools
and thus cannot compete. They experience status frustration
because they cannot succeed
 Instead, they develop subcultures with values that are hostile to
middle-class values and reject the system that has rejected them.
Vandalism, crime and truancy give them status within the
subculture
 Cloward and Ohlin suggest the varied social circumstances in which
working class youth live give rise to three types of delinquent
subcultures: criminal, conflict and Retreatist
 Criminal: characterised by utilitarian (useful) crimes, such as theft
 Conflict: emerge in socially disorganised areas where there is a high
rate of population turnover and a consequent lack of social cohesion
 Retreatist: emerge among those lower-class youth who are “double
failures”
AO3:
 Miller explains crime and deviance in terms of distinctive working-
class subcultures
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