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GCSE Sociology

Crime and deviance

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What's covered

Explanations of crime — Merton, Becker, subcultural theory19
The social construction of crime and deviance17
Social control — formal and informal14
Patterns of crime — class, gender, ethnicity and age12
Crime statistics, patterns and the dark figure10

Key facts

1

The "dark figure" of crime is the amount of crime that is committed but is not reported to or recorded by the police, so it never appears in official statistics.

2

Becker (Outsiders, 1963) argued deviance is not inherent in an act but is created when society labels behaviour as deviant: "deviant behaviour is behaviour people so label".

3

The family is the agency of primary socialisation, teaching children society's norms and values from an early age.

4

Becker argued deviance is "not a quality of the act a person commits, but rather a consequence of the application by others of rules and sanctions".

5

Official crime statistics are collected by the police and published by the government, and are used to calculate the crime rate (offences per 1,000 people).

6

Labelling can trigger a self-fulfilling prophecy, leading a person into a deviant career and a deviant subculture.

7

The main agencies of formal social control are the police, the courts (criminal justice system) and prisons.

8

Crime is behaviour that breaks the formal written law of a society and is punishable by the state (e.g. police, courts).

9

In 2014 the Office for National Statistics removed its "gold standard" status from police-recorded crime figures because of inconsistent recording and deliberate alteration of the statistics.

10

Becker's labelling theory is an interactionist explanation that focuses on how society reacts to an act, not on the causes of the act itself.

Sample questions

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1Crime statistics, patterns and the dark figure

Which best defines the dark figure of crime?

  • Crime against businesses rather than individuals
  • Crime committed but not reported to or recorded by police
  • Crime committed only by repeat or career offenders
  • Crime recorded by police but later proven false
2Explanations of crime — Merton, Becker, subcultural theory

According to Merton's strain theory, what causes crime?

  • A weakening of social bonds that normally prevent deviance
  • Inherited biological traits that make some people criminal
  • Society's reaction in labelling certain people as deviant
  • The gap between shared goals and the legitimate means to achieve them
3Patterns of crime — class, gender, ethnicity and age

What does the term gender gap in offending describe?

  • Men and women are convicted of crime at equal rates
  • Men are convicted of far more crime than women
  • Older people are convicted of more crime than the young
  • Women are convicted of slightly more crime than men
4Social control — formal and informal

Which type of social control is based on written rules and laws enforced by official agencies?

  • Formal social control, enforced by the state and its agencies
  • Informal social control, enforced through unwritten everyday norms
  • Primary socialisation, where the family teaches children norms
  • Value consensus, the shared agreement on society's main values
5The social construction of crime and deviance

What is the best definition of deviance in sociology?

  • Any behaviour that breaks the formal written law
  • Behaviour that breaks a society's norms, though not always illegal
  • Behaviour that harms other members of society
  • Behaviour that is always punished by the courts
6Crime statistics, patterns and the dark figure

Which three sources do sociologists use to measure crime?

  • Media reports, official statistics and interviews
  • Official statistics, opinion polls and crime maps
  • Official statistics, victim surveys and self-report studies
  • Police arrests, court records and prison censuses

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