functionalist responses to crime and deviance

Descrição

A-Level sociology (crime and deviance ) Quiz sobre functionalist responses to crime and deviance , criado por Annaleise Sansum em 13-03-2016.
Annaleise Sansum
Quiz por Annaleise Sansum, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Annaleise Sansum
Criado por Annaleise Sansum aproximadamente 8 anos atrás
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Resumo de Recurso

Questão 1

Questão
Who was the founding father of Functionalism?
Responda
  • Merton
  • Durkhiem
  • Marx

Questão 2

Questão
Describe functionalism social change
Responda
  • It's evolutionary and happens when social institutions naturally change with society
  • There is a radical revolutionary change
  • Functionalism stops social change

Questão 3

Questão
What does Merton's theory focus on?
Responda
  • Subcultural values and why they cause crime
  • looking at focal concerns and what makes the w/c commit more crimes
  • Strain theory

Questão 4

Questão
Which of these sociologists are part of the functionalist subcultural theory?
Responda
  • Cohen
  • Hall
  • Weber

Questão 5

Questão
How many functions of crime did Durkheim discover?
Responda
  • 3
  • 2
  • 4

Questão 6

Questão
What are Durkheim's functions of crime?
Responda
  • social change, reinforcing norms and values, a safety valve, to flag up problems in society
  • to let off steam, to help capitalism
  • to flag up problems in society

Questão 7

Questão
Matza evaluated [blank_start]functional subcultural[blank_end] theory and came up with the main concepts of [blank_start]subterranean values,[blank_end] drift and techniques of [blank_start]neutralisation.[blank_end] He argued that people that commit crimes are still a part of society because people just [blank_start]drift[blank_end] in and out of deviance, so when people are younger they may be more deviant than when they're older. Matza argued that we all are deviant and it's called our subterranean values that go off at the wrong time in the wrong place that make us commit crime. However, he says that people commit crime and then use techniques of neutralisation to [blank_start]justify their actions.[blank_end]
Responda
  • functional subcultural
  • Functionalism
  • Marxism
  • moral panic
  • subterranean values
  • focal concerns
  • neutralisation
  • adjustment
  • justification
  • float
  • slip
  • drift
  • justify their actions
  • get away with the crime
  • to make themselves feel better

Questão 8

Questão
Miller looked at [blank_start]focal concerns[blank_end], as he argued that the [blank_start]working class[blank_end] commit more crime. He argued that in society there is not a [blank_start]value consensus[blank_end] because each class has their own set of values. The classes create their own focal concerns to fit the need of their class; w/c focal concerns [blank_start]Smartness:[blank_end] Looking good/ appearance [blank_start]Toughness[blank_end]: Showing masculinity [blank_start]Excitement:[blank_end] Dangerous activities
Responda
  • focal concerns
  • status fustration
  • middle class
  • working class
  • collective consciouness
  • value consensus
  • Smartness
  • Presentation
  • Toughness
  • masculinity
  • Excitement:
  • Danger levels

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