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9: Crime and Deviance

  • Page ID
    231764

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    In this module, we explore Crime and Deviance through four major perspectives: Biological theories, including Lombroso’s 19th-century “born criminal” concept and sociological approaches; including Structural Functionalism , which sees deviance as defining norms, fostering social cohesion, creating roles like policing and corrections, and inspiring social change; Conflict Theory, which interprets crime as rooted in power inequalities and the ability of elites to define deviance; and Symbolic Interactionism, covering how crime is learned via social interaction (Cultural Transmission and Differential Association), labeled by society (Labeling Theory), and controlled through social bonds (Control Theory)


    This page titled 9: Crime and Deviance is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by .

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