Chapter 8: Deviance, Crime, and Social Control
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            anomie
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        Durkheim's term for the loss of direction felt in a society when social control of individual has become ineffective; usually occurs during a period of profound social change and disorder
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            Robert Merton
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        adapted Durkheim's notion of anomie to explain why people accept or reject the goals of a society the socially approved means of fulfilling aspirations, or both
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            success
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        one important cultural goal in the US that is measured largely in terms of money
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            Modes of Individual Adaptation
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        Nondeviant: conformity; Deviant: innovation, ritualism, retreatism, and rebellion
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            Nondeviant
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        accepts institutionalized means (hard work) and societal goal (acquisition of wealth); conformity
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            Innovation
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        rejects institutionalized means (hard work) but accepts societal goal (acquisition of wealth); deviant
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            Ritualism
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        accepts institutionalized means (hard work) but rejects societal goal (acquisition of wealth); deviant
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            Retreatism
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        rejects institutionalized means (hard work) and societal goal (acquisition of wealth); deviant
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            Rebellion
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        replaces institutionalized means (hard work) and societal goal (acquisition of wealth) with new means and goals
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            anomie theory of deviance
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        Robert Merton's theory of deviance as an adaptation of socially prescribed goals or of the means governing their attainment, or both
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            conformity
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        going along with peers - individuals of our own status who have no special right to direct our behavior
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            control theory
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        a view of conformity and deviance that suggests that our connection to members of society leads us to systematically conform to society's norms
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            crime
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        a violation of criminal law for which some government authority applies formal penalties; reflects competing values and interests
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            cultural transmission
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        a school of criminology that argues that criminal behavior is learned through social interactions; explains the deviant behavior of juvenile delinquents or graffiti artists but fails to explain the conduct of first-time impulsive shoplifter or impoverished person who steals out of necessity
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            deviance
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        behavior that violates the standards of conduct or expectations of a group or society; we are all deviant from time to time; not always negative nor criminal; hardly objective or set in stone: changes from one era to another, defined by the individuals or groups with the greatest status and power
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            differential association
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        a theory of deviance that holds that violation of rules results from exposure to attitudes favorable to criminal acts
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            differential justice
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        differences in the way social control is exercised over different groups; puts African Americans and Latinos at a disadvantage
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            Feminist
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        pushed for amendments in the criminal law defining rape
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            Freda Adler and Meda Chesney-Lind
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        many existing approaches to deviance and crime were developed with only men in mind
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            formal social control
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        social control that is carried out by authorized agents, such as police officers, judges, school administrators, and employers; example is being placed in a correctional supervision
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            binge drinking
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        indulging in five or four consecutive drinks in a row
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            1700
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        number of college sstudents that die of unintentional aclohol-related injuries each year
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            hate crime (or bias crime)
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        a criminal offense committed because of the offender's bias against a race, religion, ethnic group, national origin, or sexual orientation
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            index crimes
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        the eight types of crime reported annually by the FBI in the 'Uniform Crime Reports:' murder, rape, robbery, assault, burglary, theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson
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            informal social control
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        social control that is carried out casually by ordinary people through such means as laughter, smiles, and ridicule
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            labeling theory (or societal-reaction approach)
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        an approach to deviance that attempts to explain why certain people are viewed as deviants while others engaged in the same behavior are not; response to an act, not the behavior itself; focuses on agents of social control; som individuals or groups have the power to define labels and apply them to others; conflict perspective's emphasis on the social significance of power
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            racial profiling
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        people are identified as criminal suspects purely on the basis of their race, has come under public scrutiny
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            Howard Becker
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        popularized labeling theory; \"deviant behavior is behavior that people so label\"
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            Saints
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        group of high school males who continually engaged in excessive drinking but never arrested; hid behind a facade of respectability: good family, good grades, planned on going to college; their delinquent acts are viewed as a few isolated cases
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            Roughnecks
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        group of high school males who continually engaged in excessive drinking and was frequently in trouble with police and townspeople; had no aura of respectability: bad grades, beat up cars
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            William Chambliss
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        concluded that social class played an important role in the varying fortunes of the Saints and the Roughnecks
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            law
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        governmental social control; changes depending on he standards of what is right and wrong, of how violations are to be determined, and of what sanctions are to be applied
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            socialization
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        primary source of conforming and obedient behavior
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            15
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        number of states that granted citizens the right to use marijuana for medical purposes, including the District of Columbia
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            Travis Hirschi
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        people's bond to family members, friends, and peers induce us to follow mores and folkways
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            obedience
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        compliance with higher authorities in a hierarchical structure
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            organized crime
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        the work of a group that regulates relations among criminal enterprises involved in illegal activities, including prostitution, gambling, and the smugglinng and sale of illegal drugs
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            professional criminal
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        a person who pursues crime as a day-to-day occupation, developing skilled techniques and enjoying a certain degree of status among other criminals
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            sanction
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        a penalty or reqard for conduct concerning a social norm
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            social constructionist perspective
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        an approach to deviance that emphasizes the role of culture in the creation of the deviant identity
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            third-hand smoke
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        smoke-related chemicals that cling to clothes and linger in rooms, cars, even elevators
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            American Psychiatrict Association
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        considered homosexuality as a mental illness for two years
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            social control
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        the techniques and strategies for preventing deviant human behavior in any society; challenged by people receiving competing messages about how to behave
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            gay and lesbian
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        more positive terms
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            queer
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        pejorative term
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            transgendered people
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        some see themselves as both male and females; people whose current gender identity does not match their physical identity at birth
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            transexuals
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        take hormones or undergo surgery in an effort to draw physically closer to their chosen gender identity
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            transvestites
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        cross-dressers who wear the clothing of the opposite sex
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            pedophilia
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        an adult having sex with a minor
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            Functionalists
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        maintain that people must respect social norms if any group or society is to survive: societies could not literaaly function if massive numbers of people defied standards of appropriate conduct
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            social disorganization theory
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        the theory that crime and deviance are caused by the absence or breakdown of communal relationships and social institutions; developed at the University of Chicago in the early 1900s to describe the apparent disorganization that occured; emphasize on the effects of social networks on communal bonds; acknowledge that communities are not isolated islands and may be enhanced or weakened by their ties to groups outside the immediate community
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            critiques of social disorganization theory
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        the theory seems like a \"blame the victim;\" leaves larger societal forces unaccountable such as lack of jobs or high-quality schools
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            Clifford Shaw and Henry McKay
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        literally mapped the distribution of social problems in Chicago; found high rates of social problems in neighborhoods where buildings had detoriated and the population had declined, regardless of the neighborhood's ethnic and racial composition
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            Conflict theorists
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        successful functioning of a society will consistently benefit the powerful and work to the disadvantage of other groups: rebellions are necessary as seen historically such as US resisting the social norms set by England to win independence and etc
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            Stanley Milgram
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        made useful distinctions between two levels of social control: conformity and obedience; people shift individual responsibility to their authority figure and see themselves as merely doing their duty
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            conflict perspective
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        obedience may be affected by the value we place on those whom our behavior affects; some of Milgram's subjects are more willing to obey if they feel that the \"victim\" deserves the punishment
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            Gary Schulman
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        re-created Milgram's experiment and found that White students were significantly more likely to shock Black learners than White learners
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            interactionist perspective
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        subjects were less likely to inflict supposed shocks as they were moved physically closer to their victims; they were more likely to continue administering the greater shocks if increase is in short increments instead of a large jump from a low to high voltage
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            Jerry Burger
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        repeated part of Milgram's experiment with college undergraduates; screened-out those who have heard of Milgram's experiments and saw that the results were similar to Milgram's with a 70% full obedience compared to 82.5% without significant difference
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            corporal punishments
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        child development specialists and pediatrics see these punishments ineffective and inappropriate because they teach children to solve problems through violence
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            Milgram experiment
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        fake administration of painful electric shocks to an accomplice who gives an incorrect answer to a memory test; \"behavior that is unthinkable in an individual...acting on his own may be executed without hesitation when carried out under orders\"
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            2/3
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        portion of Milgram's subjects that administered 'shocks'
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            stigma
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        a label used to devalue members of certain social groups; coined by Erving Goffman; often sticks for life
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            spoiled identity
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        people's reputations viewed as \"disfigured\" or \"stranged,\" in other words, deviant
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            anonymity
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        increased uncivilized behavior, which pushed for establishments of formal rules, especially for online behavior
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            Napster
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        a renegade website that allowed people to download music for free; shut down by the court
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            transnational crime
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        crime that occurs across multiple national borders
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            victimization survey
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        a questionnaire or interview given to a sample of the population to determine whether people have been victims of crime
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            victimless crime
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        a term used by sociologists to describe the willing exchange among adults of widely desired but illegal goods and services
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            white-collar crime
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        illegal acts committed by affluent, \"respectable\" individuals in the course of business activities
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            Peter Moskos
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        did a 20-month tour of duty with the Baltimore Police Department and responded to crimes; wrote the book 'Cop in the Hood: My Year Policing Baltimore's Eastern District;' crimes are functional in some subcultures, even if it is socially unacceptable to the rest of the neighborhood
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            Journalist Naomi Wolf
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        used the term 'beauty myth' to refer to an exaggerated ideal of beauty
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            20th century
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        contemporary studies, primarily by biochemists, deiscredited 1800s substantial research efforts to identify biological factors that lead to deviance since cirminality is hardly a personality trait and aggression can also lead to success in the corporate world, professional sports, and other walks of life
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            sociologists
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        reject any genetic roots of crime and deviance
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            functionalist
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        deviance is a common part of human existence, with positive and negative consequences, and it helps define the limits of proper behavior; explains why rule violations continue to happen despite pressure to conform and obey
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            Emile Durkheim
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        focused on criminal acts; punishments established within a culture help define acceptable behavior, which contributes to stability; introduced the word 'anomie'
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            Kai Erikson
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        illustrated the boundary maintenance function of deviance in his study of the Puritans of 17th-century New England (burning witches)
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            Interactionst
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        offers to explanations of crime: cultural transmission and routine activities theory
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            Philip Zimbardo
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        mock prison experiment; conducted an experiment that demostrated the power of communal relationships by leaving a car with its hood open in two different neighborhoods (one was strip quickly, the other one tooks weeks before it was touched)
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            Edwin Sutherland
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        first advanced the idea that an individual undergoes the same basic socialization process in learning conforming and deviant acts; drew on 'cultural transmission' and used the term 'differential association;' views that improper behavior results from the types of grous one associates with
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            Susan A. Phillips
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        discovered that graffiti writers learned from one another and noted how other ethnic groups built on models of African American and Chicano gangs, superimposing Cambodian, Chinese, or Vietnamese symbols
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            conflict theory
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        point out that people with power protect their interests and define deviance to suit their needs
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            Richard Quinney
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        leading exponent of the view that the criminal justice system serves the interestsof the powerful; lawmaking is often an attempt by the powerful to coerce others into their morality
