¶ … participation in deviant social structures. What makes people commit to a deviant identity? What makes people adhere to the social structures of deviant groups? Why are members of deviant groups so deeply loyal to each other and to the organization? The paper endeavors to offer insight into these questions and more as part of a quest to understand deviant behaviors, deviant organizations, and the construction of identity.
Exploring the Continuum of Deviant Organizations
For this essay, use Best & Luckenbill's continuum of deviant organizations as outlined in the textbook to explain how a person or group could become increasingly invested in his/her deviance. For example, consider how a youth from a gang-impacted area could move his/her way through from less organized to more organized deviant social organizations and imagine how this would ultimately impact his/her identity formation.
The higher the degree of deviant behavior demonstrated to serve and/or participate in the group, the more desired attention and the more loyalty to the group. Behaviors, deviant or otherwise, bond groups together. A team of soccer players bonds through their shared experiences of tryouts, practices, games, victories, losses, and traveling. Those behaviors are not considered deviant and those behaviors bond the team together through shared experience. The military is one of the most well-known examples of bonding through shared behaviors and experiences, deviant or otherwise. Thus, it stands that young men interested in joining a faction of their local organized crime family bonds through the deviant behaviors committed, as well as the shared experience of the consequences, whether the deviance is perceived as a success or a failure. As newcomers to deviant or normative groups commit additional behaviors so as to join the group or to participate in a group newly joined in, the bonds deepen among all members of the gang or family. After...
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