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Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

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Page 1: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Anomie and StrainEmile Durkheim and Robert Merton

Understanding Criminology

11th November 2008

Page 2: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Lecture Outline

• Emile Durkheim– Functionalism– Crime as normal– Anomie

• Robert Merton– Strain – Adaptations

Page 3: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Emile Durkheim

• 1858-1917• Early pioneer of

sociology• Positivist• Functionalist• Macro-level sociology

Page 4: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Social cohesion

• How could society hold together during a period of fundamental and rapid social and economic change?

Page 5: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Functionalism

• Societies should be analysed as a organic whole: each aspect of society should be analysed with reference to its function for society as a whole

• Society is essentially consensual

• As deviance was universal across all societies, it must have a function: crime is normal

Page 6: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Crime is normal• What function can crime have to society as a

whole?• Crime, and the reaction to it:

– Reinforced collective sentiment• "Crime brings together upright consciences and concentrates

them" 

– Defined the boundaries of acceptable behaviour• “We must not say that an action shocks the common

consciousness because it is criminal, but rather that it is criminal because it shocks the common consciousness”

– Represented a litmus test for legal codes

Page 7: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Functional Analysis of Deviance

• Example: prostitution (Kingsley Davis, 1937)• Prostitution: a safety valve against sexual

frustration leading to assault• Prostitution is functional to the nuclear family• Adultery would threaten an essential societal

institution• Stigmatisation (informal disapproval) of

prostitution confirms the collective approval of monogamy

Page 8: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Pathological levels of crime?

• Too little crime?– Social control is too excessive– Social stagnation

• Too much crime?– Society’s capacity to regulate is being

swamped: social cohesion is at risk

• There is, therefore, a functionally desirable level of crime

Page 9: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

How can Durkheim explain the continued existence of crime?

• Key concept: Anomie (normlessness)• Anomie as a characteristic of industrial societies

– Unfettered individualism

• Anomie as a characteristic of individuals– “A process whereby social norms lose their hold over

individual / group behaviour”

• A symptom of underdeveloped division of labour

Page 10: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

The Division of Labour• Mechanical Solidarity

– Pre-industrial– Simple normative system: a unified, simplified moral code

• Organic Solidarity– Industrial society (though yet to be achieved)– Complex division of labour– Conscious Collective: social cohesion achieved despite

moral diversity

• Anomie: results from the decline of mechanical solidarity, and the lack of development of regulatory forces

• Individualism > Social Responsibility

Page 11: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Robert Merton and Strain

• Shared Durkheim’s functionalist concerns– Esp. Individualism v. Societal Needs

• Anomie: a strain existing between two powerful sets of normative codes– Goals – material success, power etc.– Means of achieving them legitimately

• The vast majority of the (American) population by definition could not achieve the goals

Page 12: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Al Capone

F.D. Roosevel

t

Page 13: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Merton’s adaptations to Strain

Response: Means Goals

Conformity + +

Innovation - +

Ritualism + -

Retreatism - -

Rebellion Rejects means

Rejects goals

Page 14: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Criticisms of Merton

• Unwarranted assumption of shared goals– Not, though, ignoring the possibility of conflict

• Overly deterministic: everything explained by socialisation: no conscious choice

• Paradoxically, also underplays the importance of structural position e.g. the mediation of expectations in different class positions

• Does not account for different types of “innovation”

• Subjectivity absent

Page 15: Anomie and Strain Emile Durkheim and Robert Merton Understanding Criminology 11 th November 2008

Criticisms of Functionalism

• Consensus based– Functional in whose interests?– Conservative– Ignores conflict

• Tautological:

• Deterministic: little room for consideration of individual agency (choices)

• Other structural explanations still possible e.g. Marxism• Inability to distinguish the functional from the

dysfunctional

Social Cohesion Deviance Social Cohesion