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Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand Crime Control and Prevention quickly and effectively.
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Right realist crime prevention techniques:
2)Managing or altering the immediate environment of crime.
📝E.g. target hardening, locking doors, CCTV and security guards to reduce burglary
Underlying situational crime prevention approaches is an 'opportunity' or rational choice of crime.
This is the view that criminals act rationally, weighing up the costs and benefits of a crime opportunity before deciding whether to commit it. So if the rewards are reduced, people won't commit crimes.
This contrasts with theories of crime that stress 'root causes' such as the criminal's early socialisation.
Clarke argues that most theories offer no realistic solutions to crime. The most obvious thing to do is focus on the immediate crime situation since this is where the scope for prevention is greatest.
Most crime is opportunistic, so we need to reduce the opportunities. A02 Example - The Port Authority Bus Terminal: -
Felson (1998) – The Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York was poorly designed and provided opportunities for deviancy.
The toilets were a setting for luggage thefts, rough sleeping and drug dealing.
Reshaping the physical environment helped to design out crime, for example by replacing large sinks in which vagrants were bathing by small hand basins. A03 - Evaluation:
One criticism of situational crime prevention measures is that they do not reduce crime; they displace it. After all, if criminals are acting rationally, presumably they will respond to target hardening simply by moving to where targets are softer. E.g. Chaiken (1974) found that a crackdown on subway robberies in New York just displaced them to the streets above
Displacement can take several forms:
Spatial- moving elsewhere to commit the crime.
Temporal- committing it at a different time.
Target- choosing a different victim.
Tactical- using a different method.
Functional- committing a different type of crime.
Strength:
Situational crime prevention works to some extent in reducing certain kinds of crime. Bowers et al: a review of 44 international studies of targeted policing in high-crime areas found SCP led to neighbouring districts also seeing reductions in crime.
Weaknesses:
It ignores white-collar, corporate and state crime, which are costlier and more harmful
It assumes criminals make rational calculations. This seems unlikely in many crimes of violence and crimes committed under the influence of drugs and alcohol.
It ignores the root causes of crime such as poverty. This makes it difficult to develop long-term strategies for crime reduction.
Poorer neighbourhoods will still have crime, whilst the wealthier ones will be more protected = creating more inequality.
Environmental Crime Prevention (ECP)
Wilson and Kelling use the phrase 'broken windows' to stand for all the various signs of disorder and lack of concern for others that are found in some neighbourhoods e.g. graffiti.
They argue that leaving broken windows un-repaired, tolerating graffiti etc., sends out a signal that no one cares.
In such neighbourhoods, there is an absence of both formal social control (the police) and informal control (the community).
The police are only concerned with serious crime and turn a blind eye to petty nuisance behaviour, while respected members feel intimidated and powerless.
Without action, the situation deteriorates, tipping the neighbourhood into a spiral of decline. Respectable members move out and the area becomes a magnet for deviants.
Wilson and Kelling's key idea is that disorder and the absence of controls lead to crime
Wilson and Kelling's solution to crack down on any disorder is a twofold strategy.
A 'Clean Car Program' in New York was a success for zero-tolerance policing. Subway trains were out of service immediately if they had any graffiti on them, only returning once clean.
As a result, graffiti was largely removed from the subway. Other success programs include drug dealing and fare dodging
In the 1990s "zero tolerance" was hailed as the answer to urban crime following a police strategy in New York City introduced by Bill Bratton, the then Commissioner of the NYPD and now being employed as an advisor to David Cameron.
He introduced a policy of responding with criminal charges to even the most minor offences in segments of the Big Apple for certain periods.
This model coincided with a 73% fall in homicides and a 35% reduction in overall crime, prompting some to claim that "zero tolerance" was the magic bullet for urban criminality. However, it is not clear how far zero tolerance was the cause of the improvements:
The NYPD benefited from 7,000 extra officers.
There was a general decline in the crime rate in major US cities at the time- including ones where police did not adopt a zero-tolerance policy.
There was a decline in the availability of crack cocaine.
Nonetheless, zero tolerance has been very influential globally. Evaluation of ECP:
It ignores white-collar, corporate and state crime, which are costlier and more harmful = wasting resources/greater police emphasis on minor offences
Labelling theorists = zero tolerance can have bad, long-term consequences for people who have committed minor offences. Also, the police will target/label potential offenders (which leads to a self-fulfilling prophecy). E.g. London Riots 2011.
Doesn't' address the wider, social causes of crime like Left Realists do
Do offenders make a rational choice? Lyng and Katz (Postmodernists) = It's the buzz and thrill that makes people commit crime Increased social control:
Links to Hirschi's control theory – individuals are encouraged to choose conformity over crime and deviance when there are strong social bonds integrating them into communities -Right Realists say we should promote conformity and isolate deviant individuals through community pressure. We can identify those 'at risk' Policies include:
Making parents take more responsibility for their children and socialising them more effectively. Synoptic link – 2003 parenting orders
Schemes like neighbourhood watch – informal surveillance
Cracking down on anti-social behaviour
Adopting zero-tolerance policy
Heavier policing + more arrests to deter offending
Fast-track punishment of offenders, with more imprisonment and harsher sentences
Social and Community Crime Prevention:
Left realist approaches to crime prevention recognise that the offenders and victims are more often from disadvantaged communities = marginalised and socially excluded! -They think we should tackle material and cultural deprivation e.g. poverty, poor housing, unemployment, poor education etc, as these generate anger and frustration which leads to crime -Left realists argue that we must both improve policing and control, and deal with the deeper structural causes of crime.
These are longer-term strategies since they attempt to tackle the root causes of offending, rather than simply removing opportunities for crime
Left realists argue we should be improving the relationship between the police and communities:
Kinsey, Lea and Young argue that police clear-up rates are too low to act as a deterrent to crime and that police spend too little time actually investigating crime.
The police depend on the public to provide them with information about crime. However, with the police losing support, especially from inner cities, the flow of information dries up and the police have to rely on military policing such as using random stop and searches. This alienates communities who see the police as victimising local youth.
Left realists argue that policing must therefore be made more accountable to local communities and must deal with local concerns. The police need to improve their relationship with local communities by spending time investigating crime and involving the public in policing policies.
Lewis et al (2011): resentment of a perceived lack of respect from the police and the stopping and searching of innocent people was a major factor behind the 2011 London Riots.
Left realists also argue that crime control cannot be left to the police alone - it must be a multi-agency approach.
The police, the local council, and health and safety probation services must work together with local communities to tackle crime. Left realists argue we should tackle the deeper, structural causes of crime:
Left realists argue that the causes of crime lie in the unequal structure of society and major structural changes are needed if they want to reduce levels of offending. We must become more tolerant of diversity and cease stereotyping whole groups of people as criminals.
We must tackle social deprivation – divert potential offenders away from choosing crime A02 Examples:
Intensive parenting support like the Sure Start Centres to help children in poorer communities a head start as the risk factors for crime are greatest
There was a community programme aimed at reducing criminality - The Perry PreSchool – experimental group of 3-4-year-olds were offered a two-year intellectual enrichment programme. Found that by age 40, they had much fewer arrests than those who didn't undergo the program AO3: although an unrepresentative
A03 - Evaluation:
Strength: seems to tackle the deep-seated root causes of crime, unlike situational and environmental crime prevention strategies.
Weaknesses: deterministic - not everyone living in these deprived areas will turn to crime.
Feminist solutions to the problem of crime:
Radical feminists: Men need to undergo re-socialisation so they no longer commit crimes where they exert their power
Marxist feminists: Women should be better supported so they are not forced to turn to crime to survive. Tackling social inequality is key – a synoptic link to Carlen and her class and gender deals.
Reduction - this justification is an instrumental one (punishment is a means to an end, namely crime reduction
Deterrence – Punishing the individual discourages them from future offending, making them an example to others, not to offend – Margret Thatcher's policies included this ('short, sharp shock')
Garland - changing the roles of prisons:
In the past, prisons were places where people were held before punishment – now prison is a punishment
The culture of control - from Left Realism to Right Realism:
-Garland argues that the changes in criminal justice also reflected in sociological theory
We have moved away from left realist style theories to right realist = from focusing on the deep-rooted causes of crime to focusing on harsher punishment and reducing the opportunities for crime
Garland argues there is now a 'culture of control' – controlling and preventing the risks of people becoming victims rather than rehabilitating criminals
Restorative justice:
Functionalism and punishment - Durkheim:
A key function of punishment is to uphold social solidarity and reinforce shared values
A02 synoptic link - boundary maintenance
Punishment is primarily expressive - it expresses society's emotions of moral outrage at the offence. Two types of justice:
Retributive - in traditional societies, cruel and vengeful punishments were used - but this destroyed social solidarity.
Retributive - modern societies were characterised by reparation.
Through rituals of order, such as public trial and punishment, society's shared values are reaffirmed and its members come to feel a sense of moral unity.
A03 - Evaluation of the functionalist view on punishment:
Marxist - capitalism and punishment:
The function of punishment is to maintain the existing social order.
It is part of the repressive state apparatus - it means defending R/C property against the W/C. 📝E.g. Thompson describes how in the 18th century punishments such as hanging and transportation to the colonies for theft and poaching were part of a 'rule of terror' by the landed aristocracy over the poor
RSA = parts of the state which are concerned with mainly repressive, physical means of keeping a population in line
Althusser claims that these structures are necessary (in conjunction with ISA e.g. media, family, religion) to maintain the reproduction of the relations of production, or in other words, to keep the labourers labouring for the state and the bourgeoisie society
The RSAs include the government, police, courts, prisons, and the military.
They argue that harsh punishments are part of the Repressive State Apparatuses (RSA) which keep the working class in their place.
Rusche and Kirchheimer argued that the types of punishments used by society were determined by what was in the economic interests of the dominant class. 📝 E.g.
Melossi and Pavarini (1981) see imprisonment as reflecting capitalist relations of production. For example: Capitalism puts a price on the worker's time – prisoners 'do time' to 'pay' for their crime, the prison and capitalist factory both have a similar strict disciplinary style, involving subordination and loss of liberty.
A02 Example - 1994 crime bill:
A03 Evaluation of the Marxist view on punishment:
What are alternatives to prison?
Are we living in a surveillance society?
Foucault (postmodernist) - from sovereign power to disciplinary power:
As the power in society changed, so did the punishments
E.g. brutal public punishments demonstrated the supreme power of the sovereign – the monarch – over criminals
This form of state power and control was sovereign power
But once the supreme power of sovereigns declined, a new form of state power emerged
Foucault refers to this as disciplinary power
Criminals were to be controlled and disciplined by surveillance – constantly having their behaviour monitored, managed, controlled and regulated
Now punishments started to change too – from inflicting pain to the development of the prison that is intended to 'correct' the criminal
What is surveillance? "The monitoring of public behaviour for the purposes of population or crime control. It, therefore, involves observing people's behaviour to gather data about it, and typically, using the data to regulate, manage or 'correct' their behaviour"
Evaluation of Foucault and Surveillance Society:
Strengths:
Weaknesses:
Surveillance theories since Foucault:
Actuarial justice and risk management - Feely & Smith (1994) argue new technology of power is now developing throughout the justice system = it differs from Foucault's disciplinary power;
(1) it focuses on groups rather than individuals.
(2) Not interested in rehabilitating inmates – simply aims to prevent crime.
(3) It calculates possible risks.
Feely and Smith combine surveillance and crime control – for example, in airports, security use screening checks, based on known offenders – using information they have gathered from individuals travelling (this form of surveillance, aims to prevent crime). Jock Young argues this method is based on statistical information.
Social sorting and categorical suspicion = David Lyon (2012) argues that the purpose of 'social sorting' is to be able to categorise people so they can be treated according to the level of risk they pose. Similarly, G.T. Marx (1988) calls 'categorical suspicion' – where people are placed under surveillance based on the group they belong to.
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