"The four authors of this concise book provide an authoritative introduction to various key concepts about crime and its relationship to society. Each affiliate starts with a definition (due east.g., deviance, social control, normalization), providing readers with the vocabulary and conceptual framework for fully understanding affiliate contents... a very skilful way to betrayal students and the public (and scholars from outside fields) to definitions, ideas, and theories of offense and society." - One thousand. Evans, Indiana State Academy, Choice Primal Concepts in Crime and Society offers an administrative introduction to central issues in the expanse of criminal offense as it connects to society. By providing critical insight into the fundamental issues within each concept as well as highlighted cross-references to other key concepts, students will be helped to grasp a articulate understanding of each of the topics covered and how they chronicle to broader areas of law-breaking and criminality. The book is divided into 3 parts: • Understanding Criminal offense and Criminality: introduces topics such as the social structure of criminal offense and deviance, social control, the fright of offense, poverty and exclusion, white collar crime, victims of offense, race/gender and law-breaking. • Types of Criminal offense and Criminality: explores examples including human trafficking, sexual practice piece of work, drug criminal offence, ecology crime, cyber law-breaking, war criminal offense, terrorism, and interpersonal violence. • Responses to Crime: looks at areas such every bit crime and the media, policing, moral panics, deterrence, prisons and rehabilitation. The book provides an up-to-date, critical understanding on a wide range of crime related topics covering the major concepts students are likely to encounter within the fields of sociology, criminology and beyond the social sciences.

Chapter 5: Social Structure of Crime and Deviance

[Page 20]

Social Construction of Crime and Deviance

Social Structure of Crime and Deviance

Definition: In order for any group, regardless of how large it is, to alive together, a set of rules or 'norms' is required to maintain relative peace and harmony. Norms tin can be explicit (in the form of rules and laws) or implicit (through beliefs, shared meanings and understandings of how things are). Social order is maintained when individuals conform to these shared norms. Deviancy occurs when people step outside these rules or norms. In some cases, when the deviancy is considered serious enough, it will be constituted equally a crime. Actions that are viewed as crimes attract country sanctions such equally fines, incarceration and, in some cases, corporal punishments like execution.

Anybody ...

locked icon

Sign in to access this content

Sign in

Get a xxx day FREE TRIAL

  • Watch videos from a diverseness of sources bringing classroom topics to life

  • Read modern, diverse business organisation cases

  • Explore hundreds of books and reference titles

sign upwards today!