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AQA A-Level Sociology: Crime & Deviance Complete Revision Notes

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This is a resource solely made by myself, who received an A* in A-Level AQA Sociology. This pack includes in-depth Cornell-style notes for each individual topic according to the official specification and textbook. The notes involve key ideas and theories/theorists on the left side and condensed explanations on the right hand side, with evaluation running throughout on most pages. In PDF form and GoodNotes (upon request). Topics include: Practice exam questions - Explanations of Crime Functionalism on Crime Strain Theory: Functionalism on Crime Subcultures: Functionalism on Crime Marxists on Crime Marxists: White Collar Crime Marxists: White Collar Crime Explanations Neo-Marxists Interactionalists (Labelling and Crime) Interactionalists (Labelling and Deviance) Practice questions on labelling and crime Left Realism on Crime Left Realism on Crime Prevention Right Realism on Crime Right Realism on Crime Prevention – **Gender & Crime ** Bias For & Against Women Explaining Female Crime Explaining Male Crime Ethnicity in Crime & Justice Black and minority ethnicity (BME) in statistics Explanations for BME Crime Additional Explanations and Victimisation – **Media & Crime ** The Medias Presentation of Crime The Media Causing Crime – **Globalisation, Green Crime & State Crime** Globalisation Environmental Crime State Crime & Definitions Explaining State Crime – **Crime, Punishment & Victims ** Crime Prevention Surveillance (control) Punishment & Its Functions Victims of Crime Patterns of Victimisation

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Crime & Deviance
REVISION
A-Level Sociology

, CRIME, DEVIANCE,
SOCIAL ORDER AND
SOCIAL CONTROL

,FUNCTIONALISM

Explanations of Crime

4 Key Functions • To generate and sustain morality: Right and wrong. Jimmy Saville.
Durkheim • To reaffirm boundaries: How far is too far. Stephen Lawrence.
• To promote social cohesion/unity: for example, 9/11 or Rosa Parks (collective
sentiments)
• To encourage social change: for example, votes for women following the
suffragettes, security changes following 9/11, Saville & safeguarding



Safety Valve • Certain crimes are the lesser evil i.e. smaller crimes can prevent larger
Davis (1961) crimes or social breakdown
or Polsky • Polsky argues that child porn/prostitution should be legal to avoid
major molestation/rape
AO3: this could lead to/incentivise the consequence by giving people a
flavour of it.

• Crimes can highlight a dysfunction in society that needs to be addressed
Crimes as a
• For example, suicide rates on the increase which leads to a dysfunction
Warning for the NHS and solutions would be better education or better suicide
Clinard & Cohen prevention lines

Society is Organised • The true function of some social control agencies maintains
to Commit Crime crime rather than rid it e.g. police having quotas
Erikson (1969)
• Society is made to maintain crime e.g. festivals and drugs

Bond Theory • People are less likely to commit crime because of four types of socia
Hirschi control
— Attachment: community, family, friends
— Commitment: job, future, children, what you have to lose
— Involvement: time to commit crime
— Belief: personal/religious values
H/E white collar crime often sees people having all bonds but still
commit crime
AO3
• Ignores the view of the victim: despite crime having a positive function, people still die
• Does all crime lead to social solidarity: George Floyd & racism/terrorism & islamaphobia,
or rape and female isolation rather than cohesion leading to other deviances

, STRAIN THEORY: FUNCTIONALISM

Explanations of Crime

Strain Theory • People commit crime as they are unable to achieve socially approve
Merton goals through legitimate means. These goals were described as the
‘American Dream’
• Society promotes itself as meritocratic and anyone can achieve their
goals e.g. money is earned through studying hard/work and power is
achieved through associating and impressing the right people


Why can’t these • Structural issues: unequal access to resources and opportunities
Goals be • Cultural issues: not having legitimate means to achieve goals e.g.
Achieved? present-time orientation


Responses to • People turn to criminal methods to achieve the AD as a result of the
Strain pressure applied to them by society
• People respond different based on their stratification:
— Conformity. Follows the AD legitimately, law-abiding.
(accepts goal and means)
— Innovation. Wants AD. Rejects hard work to get there.
(accepts goal but not means)
— Ritualism. AD doesn’t matter but want to lead a law-abiding life.
(rejects goal but accepts means)
— Retreatism. Social drop-outs, anarchists.
(reject goal and means)
— Rebellion. Makes own AD
(replace goal and means)


Criticisms of • Deterministic: assumes people commit crime if they have strain
Strain • Ignores those who have AD but still commit crime i.e. fraud
• Assumes a value consensus: are we all striving for money, crime and
status?
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