|
|||||
Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
Lesson
20
SOCIAL
DISTRIBUTION OF CRIME: EXPLANATIONS
Background
There
is a growing and widespread perception
among the population that, over time,
crime has grown
more
prevalent
and serious. During the last
half century it has been reported
that people are now much
more
fearful
of crime than in earlier
times. They are experiencing
heightened anxiety about going out after
dark,
about
their homes being burgled, and
about becoming the victims of
violence.
Statistics
about crime and delinquency
are probably the least reliable of
all officially published figures
on
social
issues. We cannot take official
statistics at face value,
but must pay attention to
the way in which
those
statistics were
generated.
The
most basic limitation of
official crime statistics is
that they only include crimes
actually recorded by the
police.
There is a long chain of problematic
decisions between possible
crime and its registration by
the
police.
The majority of crimes,
especially petty thefts, are
never reported to the police at all. Even in
the
case
of violent crimes, more than
one third of the victims choose
not to contact the police, claiming that
it
is
a private affair or something they
have dealt with themselves.
As a result of partial reporting
and partial
recording
of crimes, the official crime
statistics reflect only a portion of
overall offences.
Police
forces have been expanded in
response to growing crime.
When crime rates are on the
rise, there is
almost
inevitably public clamor for
putting more police `on the
street'. But the greater number of police
has
not
translated into lower crime
rates. Preventing crime, and
reducing fear of crime, are
both closely related
to
rebuilding strong communities. Police
should work closely with
citizens to improve local
community
standards
and civil behavior, using
education, persuasion, and
counseling instead of
incarceration.
`Community
policing' implies not only drawing in
citizens themselves, but
also changing the
characteristic
outlook
of police forces.
Social
Distribution of Crime
There
is a variation in the distribution of
crime by social characteristics
i.e. gender, age, social
class,
ethnicity,
locality. Does it mean that
some individuals or groups
more likely to commit crimes, or
to
become
the victims of crime. Research and
statistics show that crime
and victimization are not
randomly
distributed
among the population. For
example men are more
likely than women to commit
crimes; the
young
are more often involved in
crime than older people;
poor areas generally have
higher crime rates
than
better
off areas; the ethnic minorities
experience higher rates of victimization;
individuals living in inner
city
run
a greater risk of becoming victims than
those living in suburban
areas.
Gender
and Crime
National
and international data show
that:
·
Crimes
are highly concentrated
among men.
·
There is an
imbalance in the ratio of men to
women in prison.
·
There
are contrasts between the
types of crimes men and
women commit. (Women are
rarely
involved
in violence. Petty thefts, prostitutions are typical
female offenses).
In
reality gender differences in crime
rates may be less pronounced.
Reasons may be:
·
Certain
crimes perpetrated by women go unreported.
Domestic role provide them the
opportunity
to
commit crimes at home and in
private sphere and these go
unreported.
·
Women
regarded as naturally deceitful and
highly skilled at covering up their
crimes. Supposedly
grounded
in their biology that they
can hide their pain
and discomfort.
·
Women
offenders are treated more
leniently because male police officers
tend to adopt a
`chivalrous'
attitude towards them.
Questionable. Since women
appear to be less
dangerous,
therefore
officers may let them go.
Also they are less likely to
be imprisoned than male offenders.
50
Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
·
Leniency
toward women shown by criminal
justice system is also
questioned because women
are
treated
more harshly than men in
cases where they allegedly
deviated from the norms of
female
sexuality.
They may be considered as `doubly
deviant' i.e. broken the law
plus flouted appropriate
female
behavior. For sexually
promiscuous girls are more
often taken onto custody
than boys.
Here
one could refer to double
standards where male
aggression and violence is seen as
natural
phenomenon,
explanations for female
offences are sought in
psychological imbalance.
·
Female
lawbreakers often escape
because they are able to
persuade the police and other
authorities.
They
try to get special treatment under
"gender contract' an implicit contract between
men and
women
whereby (1) to be a woman is to be
erratic and impulsive, and
(2) women need
protection
by
men.
Women
victims don't report crime
due to the humiliating process of
medical examination, police
interrogations
and courtroom
cross-examinations.
Some
studies have shown some
correlation between an increase in
female criminality and the movement
for
women's
liberation.
Age
and Crime
Official
crime rates rise sharply
during adolescence and peak
during the late teens, and
thereafter fall. In the
USA
young people are becoming responsible
for serious crimes. Between
1987 and 1996, arrests
of
juveniles
for violent crimes shot up
to 60 percent. The offenses
like theft, burglary, assault,
and rape (called
street
crimes) are all associated
with young working class
males. Is it due to moral breakdown? Is
it due to
increasing
permissiveness? May be
both.
In
UK there are high rates of
offence among youth. In 1997, 40
percent of all offenders cautioned
or
convicted
were under 21 years. The
peak age for offending
boys and girls was
18.
There
could also be the matters of definition
of crime. Youth revolts may be
erroneously considered as
crimes.
Social
Class and Crime
There
is an impression that criminality is
more widespread among people of
lower social class. It is
a
mistake
to assume that being socially
disadvantaged means being criminal. Many
wealthy and powerful
people
carry out crimes whose
consequences can be much
more far-reaching than the
often petty crimes of
the
poor.
If
we extend our definition of crime beyond
street offences to include white-collar
crime, then the
`common
criminal'
looks affluent.
White-Collar
Crime
The
concept of white-collar crime
was first introduced by
Sutherland in his book
White-Collar
Crime in 1949.
It
refers to the crimes carried by
those in the more affluent
sectors of the society. `Crimes
committed by persons
of
high social status and
respectability in the course of their
occupation' (Sutherland).
The
term covers many types of criminal
activity, including tax frauds, illegal
sale practices, securities
and
land
frauds, embezzlement, the manufacture
and sale of dangerous
products as well as straight theft.
The
distribution
of white-collar crimes is even harder to
measure than that of other
types of crime.
White-collar
crimes can be divided into
two categories by power of the affluent.
Firstly those crimes
that
mainly
involves the use of middle
class or professional position to
engage in illegal activities.
Secondly
Crimes
of the powerful are
those in which the authority conferred by
a position is used in criminal ways
as
when
an official accepts a bribe to
favor a particular policy.
51
Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
The
cost of the white-collar crimes is much
higher than the crimes by the lower
class. In the USA in 1986,
it
has
been calculated the amount of money
involved in white-collar crime (defined as tax fraud,
insurance
frauds,
home improvement frauds and
car repair frauds) is forty
times as great as that in
ordinary crimes
against
property (robberies, burglaries,
latency, forgeries, and car
thefts)
Corporate
Crime
Offenses
committed by large corporations in society.
Pollution, mislabeling, violations of
health and safety
regulations
affect much larger number of people than
petty criminality. The
increasing power and influence
of
large corporations, and their
rapidly growing global reach
means that our lives
are touched by them in
many
ways. Corporations are involved in
producing cars that we drive
and the food we eat. They
also have
an
enormous effect on the natural environment
and financial markets, aspects of
life, which affect all of
us.
Slapper
and Tombs (1999) have listed
six types of violations by
corporations:
·
Administrative
(non-compliance of
rules).
·
Environmental
(pollution,
permits violations resulting in
disasters. Victims).
·
Financial
(tax
violations, permits
violations).
·
Labor
(working
conditions, hiring practices).
·
Manufacturing
(product
safety, labeling).
·
Unfair
trading practices (anti-competition,
false advertising)
Victims
of corporate crime don't see
themselves as such.
Difficult
to see as a victim of whom?
Who is the perpetrator? Great distance in
time and space when the
offence
was committed and its
appearance.
Don't
know who has victimized, how
to seek redress for
crime.
Effects
of corporate crime are often
experienced unevenly in society.
Poor
workers are victims of pollution, safety
hazards.
Violent
aspects of corporate crime are
less visible than in cases of
homicide.
Pollution
leading to physical harm/death,
and there are side effects of drugs as
well as contraceptives. Such crimes are
often seen
as
`complaint-less'.
Organized
crime syndicate such
as the mafia may choose to resemble
legitimate business but employ corrupt or
illegal
organizations
to secure loan repayment, avoid
taxes or to discipline
labor.
Organized
crime refers to the forms of business
that appears to be legal but
actually is illegal. It embraces
smuggling,
illegal gambling (sports, lotteries, and
horse races), drug trade,
prostitution, large-scale theft,
and
protection
rackets. It often relies on violence or
threat of violence to conduct its
activities.
It
has become increasingly transnational
networks in scope. It provides illegal goods
and services to mass
consumer
(Money laundering, sale of nuclear
material)
International
organized crime greatly facilitated by
recent advances in information
technology. Advances in
technology
have provided exciting new
opportunities and benefits,
but they also heighten vulnerability
to
crime.
Cyber-crime i.e. criminal acts committed
with the help of information technology
are already there.
The
examples of technology based crimes
are: eves-dropping, electronic vandalism
and terrorism,
pornography,
telemarketing fraud, stealing telecommunications
services, electronic funds transfer
crimes,
electric
money laundering, criminal
conspiracies
Ethnicity
and Crime
Both
race and ethnicity are
strongly correlated to crime
rates.
In
UK and in USA far more
blacks than whites brought
to court and sent to
prison.
Explanation:
52
Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
Prejudice
related to color or class prompts
white police to arrest black people
more readily and
leads
citizens
more willingly to report
African Americans to police as suspected
offenders, which means
that
people
of color are overly criminalized. It is
just racism.
Race
in USA closely relates to
social standing and affects
one's likelihood of engaging in
street crime. Blacks
mostly
belong to working class (or under
class). Poor people living in
midst of affluence come to
perceive
society
as unjust. They are more
likely to suffer from the feeling of relative
deprivation and are more
likely
to
turn to crime.
Black
and white family patterns
differ. In US 2/3rds of the black
children (compared to one-fifth of
white
children)
are born to single mothers.
They have less supervision
and high risk of growing up in
poverty,
hence
more chances of
criminality.
Official
crime index excludes white-collar
crimes, which are more
committed by whites. This
omission
contributes
to the view of the typical criminal as a person of
color.
Different
ethnic backgrounds are related to
crime rates. In UK the Asians
and the Africans differed in
their
expectations
at new place.
Also
they had different cultural and
colonial background. It has been
seen that the local Asian
communities
support
the new entrants but for
blacks there appears to be no
such resource. Blacks have
been found in
situations
that encountered racism.
Blacks' resistance to discrimination got
politicized in mid 1970s.
The
young
blacks got stereotyped with
mugging problem, hence got
extra attention by police with
the
impression
that the black immigrants
had difficulties in observing the rule of law.
Therefore they got to be
disciplined
and punished. It amounted to
racism
The
black's behavior may have
been due to their sense of
relative deprivation, their subculture,
their
marginalization,
and willingness to challenge
law and order by the
youth.
[Marginalization:
Young blacks feel that they
have been pushed to the edge
of society Doing less
well in
school,
getting badly paid jobs, -being likely to
be unemployed, few outlets for political
expression.
Relative
deprivation: greater expectation of
material success.
[Subcultures
emerge due to mismatch
between aspirations and the
constraints of reality.]
Some
categories of population have
usually low rates of arrest,
and Asians are one of
those. They have
higher
than average educational
achievements, good jobs, and
above average income. Also
the Asian culture
emphasizes
family solidarity and discipline,
and both these factors
inhibit criminality.
53
Table of Contents:
|
|||||