19
psychlotron.org.uk Spot the (alleged) criminal

Spot the (alleged) criminal

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Spot the (alleged) criminal Musician Politician Estate agent What are their alleged crimes?

Citation preview

Page 1: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Spot the (alleged) criminal

Page 2: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Spot the (alleged) criminal

Musician

Politician Estate agent

What are their alleged crimes?

Page 3: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Today’s sessionYou are learning about... You are learning to...• Physiological theories of

criminal behaviour• Critically evaluate

psychological theories

Page 4: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Physiological theories

• Theories that link criminal behaviour to biological form and function– Atavistic form (Lombroso)– Somatotype (Sheldon)– Extra Y syndrome

Page 5: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Atavistic form theory

• Lombroso (1876)– Criminality is inherited– Genetic transmission of throwback/atavistic (i.e.

primitive) features– Physical features indicate criminal tendencies

Page 6: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Lombroso (1876)

Page 7: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

• Can you tell whether someone is a criminal just by looking at them?

• How would you test this idea scientifically?

Page 8: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Lombroso (1876)

• A number of significant flaws:– Lack of a control group for comparison– Sample included people with

psychological/physiological disorders– ‘Crime’ is a social construction– ‘Single defective gene’ theories - doubtful

Page 9: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Lombroso (1876)

• A number of significant contributions:– Later believed that most criminality was ‘acquired’

– environment, poverty, education– Shifted study of crime to an empirical basis– ‘The father of modern criminology’ (Shafer, 1976)

Page 10: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Somatotype theory

• Sheldon (1949)– ‘Constitutional psychology’– Criminality is linked to temperament– Temperament is linked to bodily build• Ectomorph• Endomorph• Mesomorph

Page 11: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Sheldon (1949)

Relaxed and hedonistic

Energetic and

adventurous

Solitary and restrained

Sour

ce: w

ww

.ppo

nlin

e.co

.uk

Page 12: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Sheldon (1949)

• The mesomorph’s personality makes him more likely to engage in criminal activity– Thousands of photographs rated 1 – 7 for

mesomorphy– College students & delinquents compared– Delinquents had higher mesomorphy ratings (4.6

vs. 3.8)

Page 13: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Sheldon (1949)

• Sheldon’s constitutional psychology is no longer taken seriously

• But there is a small association between bodily build and criminality. How could this be explained?– Influence of testosterone on body and behaviour?– Effects of stereotyping and labelling?

Page 14: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

• Last year you looked at the effects of sex chromosome abnormalities on development. What did you learn?

Page 15: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Chromosomal abnormalities

XYXXY

Male with feminine

characteristics

Male with exaggerated male

characteristics

XYY

Page 16: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Chromosomal abnormalities

• ‘Extra Y’ syndrome was suggested to lead to:– High testosterone levels– Powerful bodily build– Heightened aggression– Propensity for violent crime

Page 17: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Chromosomal abnormalities

• XYY males not actually as predicted (Graham et al, 2007):– Normal testosterone levels– Normal aggression levels– Taller, but not necessarily more powerful– Prone to developmental disorders and learning

difficulties

Page 18: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

Chromosomal abnormalities

• XYY males are rare in the general population and over-represented in the offender population– However, their crimes are not violent ones– So why are XYY men at a greater risk of offending?

Page 19: Spot the (alleged) criminal

psyc

hlot

ron.

org.

uk

• Single factor theories of criminality are always likely to fail– ‘Crime’ is not a natural or homogenous category

of behaviour– It is self-evidently the result of interaction

between a range of factors– Different explanations for different types of crime