4.3.9

Functionalist Explanations of Crime

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Functionalist Explanations of Crime

Functionalists believe that crime is inevitable as not everyone can abide by the norms and values that are set out by the society.

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Functionalism and crime

  • Functionalists believe that crime performs a function by setting boundaries between acts that are seen as desirable and those that are not.
  • Durkheim suggests that the reason crime is still taking place is because it is ‘an integral part of all healthy societies’; if it wasn't it would cease to exist.
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The functions of crime

  • Boundaries and values:
    • The publicity of a crime and the repercussions of a criminal act are always there to remind the rest of society what will happen to them if they cross the boundaries.
    • Public response to a crime can cause governments to pass new laws.
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The functions of crime cont.

  • Social cohesion:
    • When crimes take place society comes together in shared outrage and this strengthens their bonds.
  • Deviant behaviour as a ‘safety valve’:
    • Functionalists believe that deviant acts can release social pressures. Instead of committing a crime, people commit a minor deviant act.
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Strain theory, Merton

  • Merton believed that people turn to crime because they have experienced a strain as they can’t achieve the goals set from society via acceptable ways.
  • If they can’t find any acceptable ways that will lead to anomie, i.e. the breakdown of norms.
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Subculture theory, Cohen

  • Cohen extended Merton’s theory.
  • He believed that working-class youths experience status frustration as they can’t get what their middle-class counterparts have.
  • Those youths are replacing the mainstream norms with deviant ones which gives them the status that they can’t gain by achieving the shared goals via accepted ways.
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Criticisms of functionalists

  • Functionalists argue that people share the same values and have the same interests.
  • This though isn’t always happening, and this is when societies experience higher levels of crime than the functional one.

Jump to other topics

1The Sociological Approach

2Families

3Education

4Crime & Deviance

5Social Stratification

6Sociological Research Methods

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