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Chapter 6 Social Structure Theory
Socioeconomic Structure and Crime
- The U.S. is a stratified society: social strata are created by the unequal distribution of wealth, power, and prestige. Social classes are segments of the population who share attitudes, values, norms, and an identifiable lifestyle The poverty rate is 2003 was 12.5 percent Nearly 36 million people live in poverty
Socioeconomic Structure and Crime
- Child Poverty Poverty during early childhood has a more severe impact than during adolescence Low income children are less likely to achieve in school and more likely to suffer health problems Social problems in lower-class slum areas are epidemic Nearly 25 percent of children under age 6 live in poverty
- Figure 6.1 Number in Poverty and Poverty Rates, 1959-
- Figure 6.2 Poverty Rates by Age, 1959-
Socioeconomic Structure and Crime
- The Underclass Culture of poverty is passed from one generation to the next Gunnar Myrdal suggested that an “underclass” was cut off from society Unemployment and underemployment disrupts family life and creates despair
Socioeconomic Structure and Crime
- Minority Group Poverty 20 percent of African Americans and Hispanics live in poverty 10 percent of Whites live in poverty William Julius Wilson suggests disadvantaged minorities direct their aggression toward those close to them
Figure 6.3 The Three Branches of Social Structure Theory
Social Disorganization Theories Links crime rates to neighborhood ecological characteristics Social disorganization includes low income groups with large single-parent households and institutions of broken down social control Residents in crime-ridden areas are trying to leave at the earliest opportunity
Social Disorganization Theories
- The Work of Shaw and McKay Linked transitional slum areas to the inclination to commit crime Transitional neighborhoods are incapable of inducing residents to defend against criminal groups Concentric zone mapping identified the inner-city transitional zones as having the heaviest concentration of crime. Slum children choose to join gangs when values are in conflict with existing middle-class norms Crime rates correspond to neighborhood structure according to Shaw and McKay
Figure 6.5 Shaw and McKay’s Concentric Zones Map of Chicago
Social Disorganization Theories Community fear: Social and physical incivilities increase the fear of crime (i.e. graffiti, prostitutes, dirt, and noise)
- Race and fear: Fear by Whites is based on racial stereotypes. Fear by minorities is greater
- Gangs and fear: Open activities of brazen gang activity creates community fear
- Mistrust and fear: A “siege mentality” develops based on mistrust of the outside world Community change: Communities undergoing rapid structural changes experience great changes in crime rates (gentrification) Change and decline: Neighborhoods most at risk contain large numbers of single-parent families and social strain
CNN Clip - New Approaches To Gang Problems
Strain Theories
- Theories that view crime as a direct result of lower-class frustration and anger. Anomie (from the Greek word a nomos, without norms) – in an anomic society rules of behavior have broken down because of rapid social change, war, or famine. - Mechanical solidarity: pre-industrial styled societies held together by traditions and shared values - Organic solidarity: Complex post-industrial societies which are interdependent for services and needs
Figure 6.6 The Basic Components of Strain Theory