The Function of Theory Is To Provide Puzzles For Research (Lewis Coser)
The Function of Theory Is To Provide Puzzles For Research (Lewis Coser)
The Function of Theory Is To Provide Puzzles For Research (Lewis Coser)
Source: O'Connor, T. (03/26/04). In Crime Theories, MegaLinks in Criminal Justice. Retrieved from
http://faculty.ncwc.edu/toconnor/111/111lect03.htm on January 9, 2006.
13. Postmodern hierarchical privileges and language more informal social control
1. Biochemistry is known by many names: biological, constitutional (having to do with
the structure of the body's morphology), genetic, and anthropological criminology. The
oldest field is criminal anthropology, founded by the father of modern criminology,
Cesare Lombroso, in 1876. He was one of the first exponents of the positivist approach
to explaining crime, positivism meaning a search for the causes of crime using scientific
method, as opposed to the classical approach, which relies upon free will as the main
cause of crime. Historically, theories of the biochemistry type have tried to establish the
biological inferiority of criminals, but modern biocriminology simply says that heredity
and body organ dysfunctions produce a predisposition toward crime.
2. Psychological criminology has been around since 1914, and attempts to explain the
consistent finding that there is an eight-point IQ difference between criminals and
noncriminals. That gap isn't enough to notice, but it might make them more impulsive
and foolhardy, and even smart people with high IQs are vulnerable to folly. Other
psychocriminologists focus on personality disorders, like the psychopaths, sociopaths,
and antisocial personalities.
3. Ecological criminology was the first sociological criminology, developed during the
1920s at the Department of Sociology at the University of Chicago. Hence, it is also
called Chicago School sociology. Ecology is the study of relationships between an
organism and its environment, and this type of theory explains crime by the disorganized
eco-areas where people live rather than by the kind of people who live there.
4. Strain, sometimes called by the French word anomie, is a 1938 American version of
French sociology, invented by the father of modern sociology, Emile Durkheim (1858-
1917). This type of theory sees crime as the normal result of an "American dream" in
which people set their aspirations (for wealth, education, occupation, any status symbol)
too high, and inevitably discover strain, or goal blockages, along the way. The only two
things to do are reduce aspirations or increase opportunities.
5. Learning theories tend to follow the lead of Edwin Sutherland's theory of differential
association, developed in 1947, although ideas about imitation or modeling go back to
1890. Often oversimplified as "peer group" theories, learning is much more than that,
and involves the analysis of what is positively and negatively rewarding (reinforcing) for
individuals.
6. Control theories in criminology are all about social control. Only those called
containment or low-self control theories have to do with individual psychology. Control
theory has pretty much dominated the criminological landscape since 1969. It focuses
upon a person's relationships to their agents of socialization, such as parents, teachers,
preachers, coaches, scout leaders, or police officers. It studies how effective bonding
with such authority figures translates into bonding with society, hence keeping people out
of trouble with the law.
7. Labeling theory was a child of the 1960s and 1970s which saw criminals as underdogs
who initially did something out of the ordinary, and then got swept up in a huge,
government-sponsored labeling or shunning reaction. It argues that anyone facing such
an overwhelming, negative labeling social reaction will eventually become more like the
label because that is the only way out for their identify formation. It points out that
sometimes its best to do nothing (for minor offending), and that there are few
reintegrative rituals designed to help people fit back into their communities.
8. Conflict theory holds that society is based on conflict between competing interest
groups; for example, rich against poor, management against labor, whites against
minorities, men against women, adults against children, etc. These kind of dog-eat-dog
theories also have their origins in the 1960s and 1970s, and are characterized by the study
of power and powerlessness.
9. Radical theories, also from the 1960s and 1970s, typically involve Marxist (referring to
Karl Marx 1818-1883) critiques of capitalist society which allows things to exist like
millions of billionaires and millionaires while the vast majority of people live in poverty
or just get by. Such fundamental economic disparities reflect basic contradictions in the
way work is organized into demoralizing, brutalizing, and oppressive conditions. Crime
is seen as a reflection of class struggle, a kind of primitive rebellion with criminals
behaving as rebels without a clue. Only through praxis (informed action based on
theoretical understanding) will the new socialist society be formed and crime will go
away.
10. Left realism is a mid-1980s British development that focuses upon the reasons why
people of the working class prey upon one another, that is, victimize other poor people of
their own race and kind. It wants the police to have more power in protecting poor
people, but on the other hand, doesn't want the police to be invasive or intrusive.
11. Peacemaking criminology came about during the 1990s as the study of how "wars"
on crime only make matters worse. It suggests that the solution to crime is to create more
caring, mutually dependent communities and strive for inner rebirth or spiritual
rejuvenation (inner peace).
12. Feminist criminology matured in the 1990s, although feminist ideas have been around
for decades. The central concept is patriarchy, or male domination, as the main cause of
crime. Feminists also tend to call for more attention to female points of view.
13. Postmodern criminology matured in the 1990s, although postmodernism itself (as a
rejection of scientific rationality to the pursuit of knowledge) was born in the late 1960s.
It tends to focus upon how stereotypical words, thoughts, and conceptions limit our
understanding, and how crime develops from feelings of being disconnected and
dehumanized. It advocates replacing our current legal system with informal social
controls such as group and neighborhood tribunals.
This has been only the briefest of overviews on crime theories. There is much,
much more, and the reader is encouraged to find out more, including the comparative
advantages and weaknesses of different theories.
INTERNET RESOURCES
PRINTED RESOURCES
Cullen, F. & R. Agnew (1999). Criminological Theory. Los Angeles, CA: Roxbury.
DeKeseredy, W. & M. Schwartz (1996). Contemporary Criminology. Belmont, CA:
Wadsworth.
Source: