Chapter 3: The Nature and Causes of Crime
Objectives
- Know the strengths and weaknesses of the Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) and understand the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS).
- Understand how self-report studies add to our knowledge of criminality.
- Be familiar with the “dark figures of crime” and know how they affect crime statistics.
- Know the age, gender, race, and ethnicity of the most likely persons to be criminal offenders or victims of crime.
- Distinguish between choice, trait, and sociological theories.
- Explain the social policy applications of the theories.
Introduction
- Historically, crime has been difficult to measure
- Public information about crime is not very accurate
- Two principal measures
- Official crime statistics (UCR)
- Unofficial crime statistics (NCVS)
- Around the globe
- Chewing gum crime
- Uniform Crime Reports
- One of the earliest measures of crime
- Crime Index offenses
- Part II offenses
- See Table 3–1 UCR Serious Criminal Offenses
- Problems with the UCR data
- Reports only crimes known to the police
- Does not collect all relevant data
- Tells us more about police behavior than it does about criminality
- Still the most widely used data source
- Reforming the UCR
- National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS)
- Crime incident
- Victim
- Nature of the property
- Characteristics of the arrested suspect
- Approximately 36 percent of law enforcement agencies contribute data
- In 2004, FBI discontinued using the Crime Index
- National Crime Victimization Survey
- Table 3–2 Differences Between UCR and NIBRS Data
- NCVS was launched in 1972
- Seven crimes of interest
- Provides a better estimate of the dark figures of crime
- Helps criminologists understand why some victims do not report crimes
- Demonstrates variations in crime reporting
- Allows criminologists to test theories about how crime results from interactions between victim and offender
- Problems with NCVS Data
- Limited in scope
- Interview data may be unreliable
- Memory errors
- Telescoping
- Errors of deception
- Sampling error
- Acclaim for the NCVS
- Trends reported in both sets of data are similar
- Data from both instruments generally reach the same conclusion
- Self-report surveys
- Purpose—identify your own criminality
- National Youth Survey—most comprehensive self-report instrument
- Study has followed the same individuals over time
- Original cohort 11 to 17 years old
- Now 43 to 49 years old
- Problems with self-report surveys
- Data are not always reliable
- Studies often exclude chronic offenders
- Studies typically discover trivial events
- Acclaim for self-report studies
- Quantity of information is substantial
- Real extent of the dark figures of crime being 4 to 10 times greater
- Crime statistics for the United States
- No perfect measure
- Best single source is the UCR
- Violent crime is committed every 22 seconds
- Property crime is committed every 3 seconds
- NCVS reported 14 million property crimes and 3.3 million violent crimes
- Dramatic decrease in crime in recent decades explained by
- The economy
- Prisons
- Policing
- Age
- Figure 3–1 U.S. Crime Clock
- Figure 3–2 U.S. Crime Rate Index, 1991–2007
- Criminal offenders
- 60 percent of persons arrested are between 19 and 39
- African Americans account for 37 percent of arrests for serious violent crime
- Men are arrested for 82 percent of serious violent crime
- Offenders by age
- Figure 3–3 Age Crime Curve
- Crime rates increase during preadolescence
- Peak in adolescence
- Decline steadily thereafter
- Serious violent crime arrests peak at age 18
- Property crime arrests peak at age 16
- Juveniles account for 16 percent of serious violent crimes and 26 percent of serious property crimes
- Arrests in both categories have dropped for the period 1997 to 2006
- Age-crime curve shows older people commit fewer crimes
- Focus on criminal justice
- The criminal unborn
- Offenders by socioeconomic status
- UCR and NCVS stress street crimes
- Actual monetary costs of white-collar crime are unknown
- White-collar crime may be undiscovered, unprosecuted, and/or unpunished
- Crime victims
- There are no victimless crimes
- Criminal behavior always has consequences
- Children
- Vulnerable to crime
- Childhood victimization linked to problems later in life
- Teen pregnancy
- Alcohol and drug abuse
- Criminality
- Roughly 1 million children are victims of maltreatment each year
- Figure 3–4 Victimology Timeline
- Senior citizens
- Are 12 percent of the population
- Seniors experience nonfatal violent crime at a rate of 5 percent of that of young persons
- Seniors experience property crimes at a rate of 25 percent of that of younger persons
- Victims of intimate-partner violence (IPV)
- IPV involves murder, sexual assault, robbery, aggravated and simple assault
- Women are five times more likely than men to be victims of IPV
- Demographics of women most likely to be victims of domestic violence
- African American
- Young
- Divorced or separated
- Low-income, living in rental housing in urban areas
- Hate crime victims
- Legislation passed in the 1980s
- Southern PovertyLawCenter has estimated that 888 hate groups were operating in the United States in 2007—up 5 percent from 2006
- Ku Klux Klan, White Nationalists, Neo-Confederates, Black Separatists, and Racist Skinheads
- Headline crime: The beating of Billy Ray Johnson
- Causes of crime
- Three types of crime theories
- Choice theories
- Trait theories
- Sociological theories
- Choice theories
- Derived from classical and neoclassical schools of criminology
- Classical school
- Cesare Beccaria
- Developed ideas about crime and punishment
- Classical school ultimately failed to explain why people committed crime
- Classical school focused on the criminal act, not the actor
- Neoclassical school
- Focus on the role of the criminal justice system in preventing crime
- Recognized crime may be influenced by factors beyond the control of the offender
- Mitigating circumstances
- Age or mental disease
- Mitigating circumstances became recognized as individual justice
- Individual justice led to the development of the insanity defense
- Rational choice theory
- Explores the reasoning process of criminals and suggests offenders are rational people
- Offenders collect and process information before committing a criminal offense
- Routine activities theory
- Motivated offenders, suitable targets, absence of capable guardians
- Does not identify what motivates an offender
- Overlooks factors that may cause crime
- Lifestyle theory
- Closely related to routine activities theory
- People become victims because of the situations they put themselves in
- The more time spent away from home, the greater the risk
- Social policy implications of choice theories
- Crime control legislation based on classical and neoclassical theories recommends
- Implementing cell-phone tracking surveillance
- Establishing three-strikes law
- Hiring more police
- Making it physically difficult to commit crimes
- Increasing risk of crime
- Reducing rewards of crime
- Trait theories
- Theories rooted in biology and psychology
- Biological theories
- Called scientific determinism
- The positive school of criminology
- Auguste Comte
- Scholars adopting this philosophy are called positivists
- Genetic factors
- Criminality may be partially inherited
- Twins study
- Concordance—the similarity between behaviors of twin siblings
- Discordance—the lack of similarity between behaviors of twin siblings
- Adoptee studies
- Criminality of the adopted child strongly related to the criminality of the biological parent
- Neurological factors
- One of the most consistently documented biological correlates of crime is an underaroused system marked by low resting heart rate
- Growing body of literature confirms that criminality is tied to differences in brain structure
- Environmental factors
- Behavior is under the control of the brain
- Activities shape how the brain processes information
- Environment contributes to both the brain’s content and its wiring
- Mothers who smoke while pregnant
- Parents who smoke around their children
- Evidence suggests that mothers who smoked during pregnancy were much more likely to have children who participated in criminal behavior into adulthood
- Environmental toxins
- Interfere with the ability of the brain to perceive and react to the environment
- Lead
- Damages internal organs
- Psychological theories
- Three popular theories
- Psychoanalytic theory
- Behavioral theory
- Social learning theory
- Freudian psychoanalytic theory
- Id—present at birth and consists of blind, unreasoning instinctual desires
- If you want something, take it!
- Ego—grows from the id and represents problem-solving dimension of the personality
- To minimize guilt, the ego will leave clues at the crime scene
- Superego—emerges from the ego and represents the moral code, norms, and values
- Behavioral Theory
- B. F. Skinner
- Environment shapes the behavior of people
- Behavior is either pleasant or painful
- Behavior is shaped by its consequences
- Social learning theory
- Albert Bandura
- People learn by modeling and imitation
- People may learn to be aggressive
- People may learn aggressive behavior from what they see in the media
- Some disagree
- Cheryl Olson argues video games are a social toy for boys who use them to interact and build friendships
- Social policy implications of biological and psychological theories
- Invest more money in prenatal and postnatal care for women
- Monitor children more closely during crucial developmental years
- Offer paid maternity leave
- Make nutritional programs available for pregnant women, newborns, and young children
- Provide counseling
- Teach people different ways to respond to their environment
- For example, aversion therapy
- Headline crime: should video games be censored?
- Sociological theories
- Causes of crime are outside the offender
- Social factors cause crime
- Cultural deviance theory
- Criminality is blamed on social and economic factors found in the neighborhood
- Neighborhoods provide consistent values and norms
- Low-income neighborhoods are characterized by social disorganization
- Transmission of values begins early in life
- Differential association theory
- Aims to explain both individual and group criminality
- Criminal behavior is learned through social interaction with friends and family
- Strain theory
- Faults American society for teaching everyone to strive for certain goals
- Blames crime on a lack of integration between goals and means
- Crime is a normal response to a social condition that limits opportunities
- Modes of adaptation include
- Conformity
- Innovation
- Ritualism
- Retreatism
- Rebellion
- Table 3–3 Merton’s Modes of Adaptation
- Social control theory
- Argues people are by nature amoral
- Controls are attitudes implanted effectively in most people
- Attachment
- Belief
- Commitment
- Involvement
- People with weak social bonds commit crime
- Best predictor of criminality is the child’s attachment to parents, schools, and peers
- Each component of the bond forms it own continuum; when merged, they provide a gauge of how strongly someone is tied to society
- Self-control theory
- Argues people are self-gratifying and pleasure-seeking
- Some people are impulsive, insensitive, and short-sighted
- Self-control is attributed to early childhood rearing
- Post childhood experiences have little effect on self-control
- Labeling theory
- Deviants and non-deviants are more similar than they are different
- Whether people are labeled deviant depends on how others react to their behavior rather than on the behavior itself
- Behavior is neither moral or immoral; it becomes one or the other depending on people’s reaction to it
- Process
- Commit the deviant act
- Caught and given a label
- Negative label is generalized to the whole person
- Label becomes the person’s master status
- Conflict theory
- Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels
- Views society in terms of inequities in power and influence
- Crime is the product of an oppressed and exploited working class
- Developmental theories
- Career criminals
- Theorists look at what was going on in the lives of criminals before they began their criminal careers
- Social policy implications of sociological theories
- Find a way to alter the landscape
- Mobilize residents
- Large-scale community projects such as the Chicago Area Project (CAP) started in 1931
- Create new opportunities for disadvantaged people
- Opportunities for offenders to “go straight”
- Social policies should focus on strengthening bonds between children and their parents
- Head Start
- Childhood intervention projects that assist single parents
- Parent training curriculum
- Ignore minor violations
- Examine the consequences of structural inequalities
- Programs to strengthen family bonds and effective communication
- Programs designed to address drug use by high school students
- Programs that will assist with an effective transition to the job market and avoiding dysfunctional personal relationships
- Headline crime: PETA activists protest Kentucky Fried Chicken
©2010 Jones and Bartlett Publishers, LLC