¶ … Distinguish between thinking about crime as a social problem and thinking of it as a sociological problem).
Taking crime as a sociological issue one would attempt to theories regarding the causes of criminal behavior, social construction of the concept of crime, and solutions to crime on a societal level. Sociological theories and psychological theories of criminal behavior are heavily entwined. There are numerous sociological theories concerning the cause and control of criminal behavior. In general sociological theories of criminality attempt to connect the individual's behavior with broader social structures and cultural variables, discuss how the contradicting factors of these variables interact to lead to criminal behavior, investigate how these structures have historically developed, and view criminal behavior from the standpoint of social constructionism and concentrate on the social causes of criminality.
For instance, Durkheim (1897) coined the term anomie to describe a feeling of a lack of being connected to society or feeling that there is a lack of social norms to help them explain suicide and sociologists later used the term to describe the disconnect of the individual and the collective social consciousness. In this viewpoint criminality results as a consequence of the failure to properly socialize persons and/or a consequence of the unequal opportunities between different groups of people (Merton 1968). Society constructs criminality and therefore certain types of activities are labeled criminal; however, this label is often implied unequally between the different groups and if the definition of criminal behavior was taken literal everyone in society would be engaging in some form of criminal behavior (e.g., Schur 1965). Social programs to increase legitimate...
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