Criminology Forms of Social Control PDF
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This document explores various forms of social control, distinguishing between internal and external methods. It covers agencies such as the criminal justice system and also touches on the roles of tradition and culture in maintaining social order. Keywords include: social control, criminology, criminal justice, and crime.
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# TOPIC 2.1 Explain forms of social control ## Getting started Working in a small group, complete the following: 1. What are norms, values and moral codes? (If you're not sure, look back at Criminology Book One, Unit 2, Topic 1.1.) 2. What sanctions exist for controlling our behaviour in line w...
# TOPIC 2.1 Explain forms of social control ## Getting started Working in a small group, complete the following: 1. What are norms, values and moral codes? (If you're not sure, look back at Criminology Book One, Unit 2, Topic 1.1.) 2. What sanctions exist for controlling our behaviour in line with society's norms? For example, how is our behaviour controlled in school by piers and teachers? 3. Why do you think people follow the norms and values of society? Share your answers with the rest of the class. As a whole class, make a list of the ways our behaviour is controlled in society. ## What is social control? For society to function smoothly, people need to behave more or less as others expect them to. Imagine the chaos, for example, if the bus driver decided today to take their bus to the seaside, passengers and all, instead of following the normal route so that people could get to work, school or the shops – or if the postman decided to post all the mail to just one address in each street. Social control involves persuading or compelling people to conform to society's norms, laws and expectations. Society has various means of achieving control over its members' behaviour, which we can group into two main forms: * Internal form of social control * External forms of social control. ## Internal form of social control These are controls over our behaviour that come from within ourselves – from our personalities or our values. As such, they are therefore also forms of self-control. They lead us to conform to the rules of society and the groups that we belong to because we feel inwardly that it is the right thing to do. ### Moral conscience or superego According to Freud's psychoanalytic theory, we confirm to society's expectations and obey its rules because our superego tells us to do so. Along with the id and the ego, the superego forms part of our personality. Our superego tells us what is right and wrong and inflicts guilt feelings on us if we fail to do as it urges. Our superego develops through early socialisation within the family, as a sort of internalised 'nagging parent' telling us how we ought to behave. Its function is to restrain the selfish, 'animal' urges of the id. If we acted on these urges, they would often lead us into antisocial and criminal behaviour. The superego allows us to exercise self-control and behave in socially acceptable ways. ### Tradition and culture The culture to which we belong also becomes part of use through socialisation. We come to accept its values, norms and traditions as part of our identity. For example, believers follow the religious traditions that they have been raised in, such as the Muslim tradition of fasting during Ramadan or the Jewish tradition of sharing the Shabbat (Sabbath) evening meal. Conforming such traditions in important way of affirming one's identity and being accepted as a member of a particular community. ### Internalisation of socials rules and morality Both our superego and the traditions we follow become part of out inner self or personality. Yet both of them start as things outside of us – either as our parents' rules and values in the case of the superego, or as those of our culture or social group in the case of tradition. In both cases, we internalise these rules through the process of Socialisation– whether from our parents or form wider social groups and institutions such as religion, school and peer groups. In this way, society's rules and moral code become our own personal rules and moral code. As a result, we come to conform willingly to social norms. 'Rational ideology' is a term that has been used to describe the fact that we internalise social rules, and use them to tell us what in right and wrong. This enable us to keep within the law. **Activity:** Media Socialisation to go to www.criminology.uk.net ## External forms of social control As well as internal forms of control such as our conscience, society has controls that aim to ensure we conform to expectation to its rules. Society does this through agencies of social control. ### Agencies of social control The are organisations or institutions that impose rules in an effort to make us behave in certain ways. They include the family, peer group and education system. For example, parents may send a naughty child to be, friends may shun someone who tells tales, and teachers may give a disruptive student a detention. All these are negative sanctions (punishments), but agencies of social control can give positive sanctions (rewards) to those who conform. For example, a hardworking student many earn praise, gold stars etc. from the teacher. Both positions and negative sanctions help to impose social content. This echoes Skinner's operant learning theory of behaviour reinforcement – punishments deter undesired behaviour and rewards encourage table behaviour. ### The criminal justice system The criminal justice system contains several agencies of social control, each with the power to use formal legal sanctions against individuals in an attempt to make them conform to society's laws. These agencies and their powers include the following: * The police have powers to stop, search, arrest, detain and question suspects. * The CPS can charge a suspect and prosecute them in court. * Judges and magistrates have powers to bail the accused or remand them in custody and to sentence the guilty to a variety of punishments. * The prison service can detain prisons against their will for the duration of their sentence, and punish prisoners' misbehaviour (e.g., by putting them in solitary confinement). All these are negative sanctions, but the justice system all also has positive sanctions (rewards) that it can use to control behaviour. For example, assisting the prosecution is likely to earn an offender a lower sentence, while good behaviour by prisoners may earn them more privileges and earlier parole. ### Coercion Coercion involves the use or threat of force in order to make someone stop doing something. Force may involve physical or psychological violence, or other forms of pressure The negative sanctions of the criminal justice system are examples of Coercion: sending someone to prison for stealing is a form of Coercion aimed at preventing further offending (if only for the period that the thief is in jail). ### Fear of punishment Fear of punishment is one way of trying to achieve social control and make people can form to the law. In effect, fear of punishment is form of Coercion, because it involves the threat that force will be used against you if you do not obey the law. For example, if you commit an offense, you may be arrested, charged, convicted and jailed– all against your will. Deterrence Some Theoris such as right realis, argue that a fear of being caught and punish is why ensures that many will be Criminal continue to obey the law. In other words, fear ads a saderen, we shall look at punishment and deterrence in more detail in Topic 2.2 . ## COntrol theory Most criminological theories ask how people commit crimes, but control theories start from the opposite question: why do people obey the law? The answer given by control theorists such as Travis Hirschi is that people conform because they are controlled by their bonds of society, which keep them from deviating. Hirschi argues that 'delinquent act occur when an individual bond of society when or broken'. According to Mirchi, the individual's bond to society has four elements: 1. **Attachment** Then more attached we are to others, the more we care about their opinion of us, the more we will respect your norms, and the less we will likely we will be to break them This is especially true attachments to parents and teachers. 2. **Commitment** How committed are you to converting goals such as succeeding in education and getting a good job? The more we are committed to conventional life sell the more we risk losing by getting involved in crime, so the more likely we are to conform 3. **Involvement** The more involved we are a conventional law-abiding activities, like studying for participating in sports. The less time and energy was have for getting involved in criminal once This is part of the justification for you that clubs: they keep you people off the streets and busy with legal that activities/ 4. **Beliefs** If we have been socialised to believe it is right to obey the law, we are less likely to to break it . Parenting many control there's and emphasize the role of parenting in creating bonds that prevent young people from offending for example, Golf Fredson and her she argued that low self control is major cause of delinquency, and that I results from poor socialisation and in consistent or absent parental discipline. Other control there's is put forward similar ideas, Riley and Shaw for that lack of parental supervision was an important factor in delinquency. They argued that parents should: * involve themselves in their teenagers lives and spend time with them * take an interest in what they a school and how they spend time with their friend's * show strong disapproval of criminal behaviour and explain the consequences of offending. Walter Reckless also points to the importance of parenting and socialisation. We have psychological tenden that can lead to criminality, but of effective socialisation can provide internal containment' by building the south control to resist the temptation to offend. He also argues that external controls such as parental discipline can provide external containment '. Heminism have also used control theory to explain women slow rate of over 28 Frances Hi densahn argues that patriarchal (male dominated) society controls females more closely, making it harder for them to offend For example, women spend more time on domestic duties, leaving them less so opportunity engaged in criminality outside the home. Pot Corlen found that females do a offenders often faded and form an attachment of parents because they ed suffered abuse in the family or been brought up in care. **ACTIVITY:** Media Forms of social control go to www.criminology.uk.net Image: A group of young people in kayaks and helmets are paddling on a calm lake or river. The kayaks are brightly colored, and the water is reflecting the sky.. **Hobbies and sporting activities may help to jeep young people out of crime.**