Study Guide: Crime & Underclass

Glossary:
anomie theory psychopath law
crime deviant subculture total institution
conformity consensus cultural transmission
plea bargaining underclass recidivism rate
deviance status offences primary deviance
organized crime white-collar crime secondary deviance
differential association  victimless crime labeling theory
Anomie Anomia ethnocentrism
ethnicity anomie theory relative deprivation
institutional discrimination stereotypes stratification
minority group prejudice racism
interpersonal violence scapegoating underclass

                      

News:

Please Note:

Biological/psychological/sociological approaches to crime
Death penalty (deterrence)
Demography of crime
Functions of crime
Victimization studies (recent history)
Uniform Crime Reports (recent history)
Types of crime

Names to Know:

Emile Durkheim

Robert K. Merton

Edwin Sutherland 

Graphing the Problem:

 
Tracking Felons Through the System
Persons Under the Death Sentence, 1953-1993
Inmates in Prison, 1970-1995
Characteristics of Prison Inmates
Households Reporting Victimization, 1975-1992
Property Crimes as a Percentage of All Crimes
Violent Crime in the U.S.
Homicide and Young Males--Crosscultural
Public Corruption, 1975-1991
Arrest Rates and Age
Crime Clock, 1993
A Profile of Suicide
Suicide Rates in the U.S. by Age, Sex and Race

Practice Quiz

Essay Questions: 

1) Account for the fact that more crimes seem to be committed by persons aged 15 to 17 than by persons in any other age group.  Why is the crime rate among young females increasing more rapidly than the crime rate among young males?

2) It has often been maintained that crime doesn't pay. Do you believe this to be a true statement? Why or why not?

3) What are some of the reasons why white-collar criminals are rarely caught and, if they are caught, rarely punished severely?

4) Account for the fact that rates of recidivism among ex-convicts are so high.

5) It has been suggested that many behaviors such as public drunkenness, homosexuality, possession of narcotics should be decriminalized.  Choose one of these and answer the following: What would be some of the functions and dysfunctions of removing this behavior from the criminal justice system?

6) According to your instructor (F. Elwell), how can the U.S. most efficiently bring down the high rates of juvenile crime?  How does his reasoning fit in with sociocultural materialism?

7) What is the underclass?  How is it related to violent crime in America?

Bibliography:  

Barak, Gregg. ed.  1991.  Crimes by the Capitalist State: An Introduction to State Criminality. Albany: State University of New York Press.

Box, Steven.  1983.  Power, Crime and Mystification.  New York: Tavistock.

Braithwaite, John.  1984.  Corporate Crime in the Pharmaceutical Industry.  London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

Currie, Elliot.  1985.  Confronting Crime:  An American Challenge. New York: Pantheon Books.

Mokhiber, Russell.  1988.  Corporate Crime and Violence: Big Business Power and the Abuse of the Public Trust.  San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.

Quinney, Richard. 1970. The Social Reality of Crime.  Boston:  Little, Brown.

Wilson, James Q. and Richard J. Hernstein.  1985.  Crime and Human Nature. New York: Simon.

Wilson, William Julius.  1990.  The Truly Disadvantaged : The Inner City, the Underclass, and Public Policy.  Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Wilson, William Julius.  1997.  When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor.  New York: Vintage Books. 

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Continuously updated. ©Frank Elwell
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