SCCJR Causes of Crime
SCCJR Causes of Crime
SCCJR Causes of Crime
causes of crime
Introduction
There is no one ‘cause’ of crime. Crime is a highly
complex phenomenon that changes across cultures
and across time. Activities that are legal in one
country (e.g. alcohol consumption in the UK) are
sometimes illegal in others (e.g. strict Muslim
countries). As cultures change over time, behaviours
that once were not criminalised may become
criminalised (and then decriminalised again – e.g.
alcohol prohibition in the USA). As a result, there is no
simple answer to the question ‘what is crime?’ and therefore no single answer to
‘what causes crime?’ Different types of crime often have their own distinct causes.
(For more about definitions of crime see SCCJR What is Crime? You can also find
out about specific types of crime at: SCCJR Violence Against Women and Girls;
SCCJR Drug Crime; SCCJR Knife Crime)
This briefing provides an overview of some of the key criminological theories that
seek to explain the causes of crime; it is by no means an exhaustive list. Each of
the theories covered has its own strengths and weaknesses, has gaps and may only
be applicable to certain types of crime, and not others. There is no ‘right’ or ‘wrong’
theory.
1) Biological theories
2) Sociological theories
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1) Biological theories
Biological explanations of crime assume that some people are ‘born criminals’, who
are physiologically distinct from non-criminals. The most famous proponent of this
approach is Cesare Lombroso.
Lombroso’s work has long since fallen out of favour. However, biological theories
have continued to develop. Rather than measuring physical features of the body,
contemporary approaches focus on:
These attempts, to locate the causes of crime within the individual, suggest that
there are identifiable differences between offenders and non-offenders. In other
words, the criminal is ‘other’: in some way different or abnormal to everyone else.
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2) Sociological theories
Shaw and McKay explained these patterns by reference to the problems that
accompanied immigration to Chicago at this time. They claimed that areas settled by
newly arrived immigrants experienced a breakdown of social norms due to ethnic
diversity and competing cultural traditions. Conventional institutions of social control
were therefore weakened and unable to regulate the behaviour of local youths.
defensible space theory, which examines how the design of physical space is
related to crime;
broken windows theory, which looks the relationship between low level
disorder and crime; and
routine activities theory, which considers how opportunities to commit crime
are shaped by between people’s everyday movements through space and
time.
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Anomie/Strain Theory
In short, strain theory posits that the cultural values and social structures of
society put pressure on individual citizens to commit crime.
Jock Young draws on Merton’s anomie/strain theory in his recent book, The
Exclusive Society (1999), locating crime in relation to both structural and cultural
processes. Structurally speaking, Young argues that the dismantling of the welfare
state, alongside increasing disparities between the rich and the poor, have served to
further exclude disadvantaged groups. This has occurred alongside high levels of
cultural inclusion. Contemporary consumer capitalism places greater emphasis on
conspicuous consumption and material success, intensifying feelings of deprivation
experienced by the less successful. (See section on ‘Relative deprivation’, below).
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Subcultural Theory
Linked to anomie and strain are concepts of status frustration and differential
opportunity, which North American subcultural theorists used to explain the
delinquent activities of disadvantaged groups in the 1950s and 60s.
Status frustration is associated with the work of Albert Cohen (1955), who
conducted research into group offending by young, lower-class men. Cohen
argued that lower-class youths could not aspire to middle-class cultural goals
and so, frustrated, they rejected them to create their own subcultural system of
values. In school, for example, they gain status and respect by meeting the
expectations of peers not teachers, engaging in delinquent activities such as
smoking, truanting, and acting up in class.
Richard Cloward and Lloyd Ohlin (1960) built on these ideas, pointing to the
differential opportunity structures available to lower-class young people in
different neighbourhoods: criminal (making a living from crime), conflict
(territorial violence and gang fighting) and retreatist (drugs and alcohol).
Researchers at the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research draw on some of
these ideas in their research on young people and ‘gangs’. See, for example, Susan
Batchelor’s research on girls and violence, which emphasises the gendered meaning
of respect in street-orientated youth groups, or Alistair Fraser’s work on territorial
gang identity amongst young men in Glasgow.
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Social Control Theory
Strictly speaking control theory does not address the causes of crime, but
rather focuses on why people obey the law. In other words, it explains
conformity rather than deviance.
Control theory is one of the most frequently used and tested criminological theories.
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Right Realism/Rational Choice Theory
Right realism emerged in the USA and the UK around the 1980s, in response
to rising crime rates and a perceived failure of sociological approaches to
adequately address the real causes of crime. Prominent right realists such as
James Q. Wilson (1975) and Charles Murray (1990) come from political
backgrounds and claim that criminological theory should inform criminal justice
policy.
One of the key theories to emerge from this branch of criminology is rational
choice theory, associated with the work of Cornish and Clarke (1986).
According to this theory, individuals not only decide to commit crime, but
decide when and where to commit crime.
As Walklate observes, this theory lends itself to the range of policy initiatives known
as situational crime prevention, sometimes referred to as designing out crime. This is
the umbrella term for a range of strategies that are used to reduce the opportunities
to commit crime.
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In the 2014 Scottish Government report, ‘What works to reduce crime?’, Part 3
considers situational crime prevention and includes measures such as those as
described above. However, it also includes ‘approaches that extend beyond the
“situation”’ which involve restricting access to weapons and alcohol and investing in
diversionary activities (such as engagement in sport) to encourage people to engage
in pro social, rather than anti-social, activities (such as crime).
Left realists also support two other key theories to explain crime:
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Feminist Perspectives/Gender