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Chapter 7: Crime and Deviance

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Notes:

 deviance, violation of social norms,

agents of social control, informal and formal groups that control the behavior of members of society,

informal social control, individuals and groups that unofficially reinforce social norms

formal social control, groups and organizations whose specific function is to control the behavior of members of societies and reinforce social norms

social stigma, a label associating an individual with a set of unwanted characteristics that form a stereotype.

 labeling theory, the idea that individuals labeled as deviant are more likely to act on the label

primary deviance, violations of norms that do not result in being labeled as deviant 

 Secondary deviance, norm violations that result in being publicly labeled as a deviant and outsider,

tertiary deviance, normalizing deviant behavior by labeling it as nondeviant

Differential association theory, a process by which individuals learn deviant and criminal behavior from associating with deviants and criminals

crime, an offense in violation of public law (HP), and the criminal’s motives, drives, rationalizations, 

social control theory, which states that individuals who do not have enough strong social bonds are more likely to feel disconnected from society and engage in deviance and crime 

Attachment: The family is the attachment source, as parents provide support and teach children socially acceptable behavior.

Belief: The level of acceptance of the social values of society.

Commitment: An individual’s focus on achieving socially accepted goals such as a high school or college degree and a high-status job.

Involvement: Participation in conventional activities that lead to socially accepted goals.

containment theory, the idea that individuals have various social controls (containments) that provide a protective barrier to help them to resist engaging in deviant and criminal behavior,

structural strain theory, the theory that social structures can promote crime and deviance among individuals within a society 

white-collar crime, nonviolent and financially motivated crime

incarceration rate, the number of people in state and federal prisons

criminal justice system, formal institutions designed to enforce, arbitrate, and carry out the laws of society.

Cybercrime, a crime that targets the computer systems of an individual or group

hate crime, criminal behavior directed at individuals or groups based on their race, ethnicity, disability, 

terrorism, the use of violence or the threat of violence to influence the political process

crime rate, a statistical count of different categories of crime compiled by federal, state, and local agencies.

incarceration rate, the number of people in state and federal prisons,

differential justice, differences in how groups are treated in the criminal justice system

plea bargains, agreements in which the accused pleads guilty to the crime in exchange

collective conscience, a set of shared attitudes, beliefs, and ideas about how things should be in society.

capital punishment, a penalty for criminal behavior that results in the perpetrator’s death 

index crimes, the eight forms of criminal behavior to create the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report 

transnational crime, a crime that crosses interstate or international borders

counterfeiting, the manufacturing and selling of illegally copied products 

surveillance, it involves the use of technology to monitor the action and behavior of others