Theories of Crime Causation 1 PDF
Theories of Crime Causation 1 PDF
Theories of Crime Causation 1 PDF
framework for examining current policies and past as well as present treat-
ment efforts established to deal with or alleviate the crime problem.
As shown in Chapter 1, theories are important for the development of
political and social policies and treatment programs for dealing with crimi-
nals and their victims. Chapter 1 examined the three major criminological
perspectives on the study of crime and criminal behavior: the functionalist
or consensus perspective, the conflict perspective, and the interactionist per-
spective. Each perspective provides insight into the nature of crime and
helps us to focus on different aspects or dimensions of reality. As this chap-
ter extensively explains and analyzes crime and criminal behavior, you will
see how elements of each of these perspectives are used to help us explain
crime. This chapter focuses on what are considered to be the most important
explanations for crime. In particular, this chapter
• contrasts early spiritual and natural explanations for crime (section 3.2);
• defines and analyzes the classical school of criminology (section 3.2);
• describes the contributions of Cesare Beccaria and Jeremy Bentham to
the development of criminology and criminal justice (sections 3.3, 3.4);
• defines and analyzes the positivist school of criminology (section 3.5);
• describes the contributions of four positivist thinkers to criminology and
criminal justice (section 3.5);
• identifies four present-day forms of classical and positivist theories
(section 3.6).
some manual labor to perform. The Quakers thought criminals would then
reflect on their past wrongdoing and repent. They used the term penitentiary
to describe their invention, a place for penitents who were sorry for their sins.
• Today, some religious individuals and groups still attribute crime to the
influence of the devil and to sinful human nature.
• The problem with these theories is that, because spiritual influences cannot
be observed, they cannot be proved. Thus these theories cannot be consid-
ered scientific.
Source: George B. Vold and Thomas J. Bernard, Theoretical Criminology, 3rd ed., New York:
Oxford University Press, 1986, pp. 6–9.
During the past three hundred years, a variety of scholars have developed
important theories or explanations of crime. These writers have come from
many fields. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, they came from
such fields as philosophy, theology, medicine, and psychiatry. In the twenti-
eth and twenty-first centuries, many of these theorists have come from such
fields as economics, psychology, political science, history, and sociology.
Writers from earlier schools of criminological thought were not primarily
concerned with developing generalizations about crime, criminal behavior,
and the relationship between varying crime rates and social conditions.
Instead, most early scholars who developed theories about crime causation
did so, as the criminologist Donald R. Cressey has stated, “in an attempt to
find a panacea for criminality.” He also indicated that early writers made
few, if any, efforts to “verify the many theological or moralistic assertions by
actually investigating relevant situations; writers usually selected a general
‘cause’ of all criminality and then sought to convince their readers that
elimination of that cause would eradicate crime both by reforming criminals
and by preventing future criminality.”1
Even though writers and philosophers for many centuries have expressed
interest in criminal behavior, criminologists have traditionally marked the
beginning of the discipline of criminology with the establishment of the
classical school of criminology, which purports that people rationally According to the classical school
choose to commit criminal acts. The classical school of criminology was of criminology, human behavior
developed by Cesare Beccaria and Jeremy Bentham in response to the prim- is rational, people have the ability
itive and cruel European justice system that existed prior to the French Rev- to choose right from wrong, and
olution of 1789. Basically, the eighteenth-century classical school people rationally choose to com-
mit criminal acts.
• viewed human behavior as essentially rational in nature;
• felt that people had the ability to choose right from wrong;
• believed that the major element governing a person’s choice of action
was the basic human desire to obtain pleasure and avoid pain.
Leaders of the classical school about two hundred years ago proposed a
number of legal and judicial reforms premised along these lines to curb the
problem of crime in their day. These reforms included the imposition of
penalties and deterrents severe enough to outweigh any pleasure encoun-
tered through the commission of a criminal act. It was thought that people
would willingly refrain from crime once they had calculated that the penal-
ties attached to it would exceed the pleasure involved in the act itself.
Because factors far beyond personal calculation and motivation are involved
in the manifestation of crime, however, proposals such as these had little
effect on the crime problem.2
Before examining Beccaria’s ideas and contributions to criminology, you
should understand that the classical school has its roots in the idea that peo-
ple who commit crime choose to do so after weighing the consequences of
their actions. Classical theory is based on the following three assumptions:
1. All of us have free will to make a choice between getting what we want
legally or illegally.
2. The fear of punishment can deter a person from committing a criminal
act.
3. The community or society can control criminal and noncriminal behav-
ior by making the pain of punishment and penalties more severe than
the pleasure from criminal activities and their gains.
Beccaria’s blueprint for reform had its roots in social contract theory, which
stresses the idea that people were originally without government. People then
created the state through a “social contract,” by which they surrendered many
of their “natural liberties.” In return, people received the security that govern-
ment could provide “against antisocial acts.”6 Beccaria wrote, “Laws are the
conditions under which independent and isolated men united to form a soci-
ety. Weary of living in a continual state of war, and of enjoying a liberty ren-
dered useless by the uncertainty of preserving it, they sacrificed a part so that
they might enjoy the rest of it in peace and safety. The sum of all these portions
of liberty sacrificed by each for his own good constitutes the sovereignty of a
nation, and their legitimate depository and administrator is the sovereign.”7
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Jeremy Bentham was an early clas- An influential early classical theorist was the British philosopher Jeremy
sical theorist who based his ideas Bentham, born in 1748. He believed that people have the ability to choose
on utilitarianism, felicitious calcu- right from wrong, good from evil. His explanation for criminal behavior
lus, and “the greatest happiness.” included the idea that people are basically hedonistic, that is, they desire a
high degree of pleasure and avoid pain. People who choose to commit crim-
inal acts think they stand to gain more than they risk losing by committing
the crime. Bentham believed that the criminal justice system should deter
people from making this choice.
UTILITARIANISM
Utilitarianism is the doctrine that
Jeremy Bentham, a major contributor to the classical school of criminology,
the purpose of all actions should
based his theories on the principle of utilitarianism.
be to bring about the greatest
happiness for the greatest number Bentham’s perspectives on human behavior had its roots in the concept of
of people. utilitarianism, which assumes that all of a person’s actions are calculated.
Utilitarianism is the doctrine that the purpose of all actions should be to
bring about the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people. For
Bentham, people calculate actions in accordance with their likelihood of
obtaining pleasure or pain. Bentham stated that an act possesses utility if it
“tends to produce benefit, advantage, pleasure, good or happiness (all this in
the present case comes to the same thing) or (which again comes to the
same thing) to prevent the happening of mischief, pain, evil or unhappiness
to the party whose interest is considered.”13
Bentham developed a felicitous calculus, or moral calculus, for estimat- Felicitous calculus is a moral
ing the probability that a person will engage in a particular kind of behavior. calculus developed by Jeremy
People, he believed, weigh the possibility that a particular behavior pattern Bentham for estimating the proba-
or action will cause current or future pleasure against the possibility that it bility that a person will engage in
will cause current or future pain. In response to the question of why a per- a particular kind of behavior.
son commits a crime, Bentham would probably reply that the pleasure that
the person anticipated from the criminal act was much greater than the sub-
sequent pain that might be expected from it.
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Beccaria, and the classical school of criminology had many influences on the
American system of criminal justice.
The positivist perspective also stressed the idea that much of our behavior is
a function of external social forces beyond individual control, as well as inter-
nal forces such as our mental capabilities and biological makeup. With the
advent of positivism, people were beginning to be perceived and understood as
organisms that are part of the animal kingdom whose behavior is very much
influenced (if not determined) by social, cultural, and biological antecedents,
rather than as self-determined beings who are free to do what they want.21
There is great diversity in positivist theories on the causes of crime: some
stress external (or social) factors more, and others stress internal (or individ-
ual) factors more. Based on Comte’s positivism, Cesare Lombroso (1835–
1909) and his distinguished pupils Enrico Ferri (1856–1929) and Raffaele
Garofalo (1852–1934) founded positivist criminology—the modern, posi-
tivist school of penal jurisprudence—and led what has been called the Ital-
ian school of criminology.
CESARE LOMBROSO
In his view on crime, Lombroso called for scientific explanations, focused on
internal biological factors, and believed that people who engage in crime are
throwbacks.
psst! Lombroso was one of the first Cesare Lombroso was born in Venice, Italy, in 1835. Educated in medicine
theorists who attempted to and psychiatry, he became a professor of criminal anthropology at the Uni-
scientifically study criminal versity of Turin in 1906.22 In his book The Criminal Man, published in 1876,
behavior. Lombroso explained criminal behavior on the basis of biological characteris-
tics and heredity. Using various physiological and cranial measurements of
known criminals, Lombroso developed the theory that certain persons who
engage in criminal behavior are “born criminals.”
Lombroso believed that criminals could be distinguished from noncrimi-
Lombroso believed that physical nals by a variety of what he termed physical stigmata, such as a long
stigmata, such as a long lower jaw, lower jaw, flattened nose, and long, apelike arms. The stigmata themselves
flattened nose, and long, apelike did not cause criminal behavior; rather they were visible indicators of a per-
arms, identify a criminal. These sonality type that was, in essence, a primitive atavism, a throwback on the
biological characteristics were Darwinian scale of human evolution.23
seen as atavism, or a throwback to Lombroso’s approach “suggested that criminals are distinguished from
earlier states in human evolution. noncriminals by the manifestation of multiple physical anomalies, which
are of atavistic or degenerative origin. The concept of atavism (from Latin
atavus, ancestor) postulated a reversion to a primitive or subhuman type of
man, characterized physically by a variety of inferior morphological features
reminiscent of apes and lower primates, occurring in the more simian fossil
men and, to some extent, preserved in modern ‘savages.’”24 In addition,
Lombroso’s theory implied that the “mentality of atavistic individuals is that
of primitive man, that these are biological ‘throwbacks’ to an earlier stage of
evolution, and that the behaviour of these ‘throwbacks’ will inevitably be
contrary to the rules and expectations of modern civilized society.”25
Although Lombroso is considered the father of criminology, there are
many criticisms of and misconceptions about his ideas. Many scholars,
including Lombroso’s most ardent advocates, criticized his methods of
research, such as his sources of information, his use of statistics, and the
absence of adequate control groups in his experiments (although he did
challenge his opponents to test his research and ideas by a controlled inves-
tigation of criminals and noncriminals).26
Lombroso not only focused on the “born criminal,” atavism, and degen-
eracy; as a positivist, he also expressed concern for factors such as the social
and physical environment of the offender. In Crime, Its Causes and Remedies
(1899), he reported that economic and political developments give rise to
ENRICO FERRI
Ferri coined the term “born criminal” and developed a fivefold scientific
classification of criminals.
Enrico Ferri was born in Mantua, Italy, in 1856. His dissertation, published Enrico Ferri, was a positivist who
in 1878, was entitled Criminal Sociology. It was in its fifth edition when Ferri developed a scientific classifica-
died in 1929. He was, for many decades, an acknowledged leader of the pos- tion of criminals and focused on
itivist school of criminology.29 Ferri studied under Lombroso at the Univer- the causes of crime, criminal soci-
sity of Turin because of his belief that, “in order to formulate principles ology, social reform, and effective
concerning crimes, penalties and criminals, it is first necessary to study. . . criminal justice.
criminals and prisons, since facts should precede theories.”30
In 1880, Lombroso began to edit his periodical, the Archive of Psychiatry. In
its first volume, Ferri contributed a paper on the relationship between criminal
anthropology and criminal law. In this paper, Ferri first coined the term
1. The born or instinctive criminal, who carries from birth, through unfortu-
nate heredity from his progenitors, . . . a reduced resistance to criminal
stimuli and also an evident and precocious propensity to crime
2. The insane criminal, affected by a clinically identified mental disease or by a
neuropsychopathic condition which groups him with the mentally diseased
3. The passional criminal, who, in two varieties, the criminal through pas-
sion (a prolonged and chronic mental state), or through emotion (explo-
sive and unexpected mental state), represents a type at the opposite pole
from the criminal due to congenital tendencies
4. The occasional criminal who constitutes the majority of lawbreakers and is
the product of family and social milieu more than of abnormal personal
physiomental conditions
5. The habitual criminal, or rather, the criminal by acquired habit, who is
mostly a product of the social environment in which, due to abandon-
ment by his family, lack of education, poverty, [and] bad companions . . . ,
already in his childhood begins as an occasional offender32
Ferri carefully pointed out that not every criminal would fit into his clas-
sification system, nor would criminals in daily life appear so well defined as
the system suggested. Classes of criminals do not exist in nature, according
to Ferri. However, they are a necessary “instrument by which the human
mind can better understand the multiform reality of things.”33
Ferri expressed interest in Lombroso’s ideas of the basic biological causa-
tion of criminal behavior, but he stressed the importance and interrelated-
RAFFAELE GAROFALO
Raffaele Garofalo was a positivist who rejected the doctrine of free will,
classified criminals into four types on the basis of moral deficits, and believed
in incapacitation as the best social defense against crime.
Raffaele Garofalo (1852–1934) was the third of the leading exponents of Raffaele Garofalo was a positivist
positivism. Garofalo was born of Italian nobility in Naples in 1852. He was a who rejected the doctrine of free
professor of criminal law at the University of Naples and is known princi- will.
pally in the United States for his major work, Criminology.36
Garofalo also rejected the doctrine of free will. He believed that crime and
criminal behavior can be understood only by using scientific methods, and that
science deals with universals. He, therefore, developed a sociological definition
of crime that was universal and would “designate those acts which no civilized
psst! Garofalo focused on natural
crime, psychic anomaly, the
society can refuse to recognize as criminal and repress by punishment.”37
secondary importance of exter-
Because he believed it to be inadequate for scientific purposes, Garofalo
nal factors, four classes of
rejected the definition of crime as “that conduct for which the law has pro-
criminals, and incapacitation
vided penalties and has denominated criminal.”38 He found this “juridical”
as a defense against crime.
conception of crime inadequate because it included as well as excluded
The murderer is the man in whom altruism is wholly lacking. The sen-
timents of both pity and probity are absent, and such a criminal will
steal or kill as the occasion arises.... Lesser offenders fall into two major
groups: violent criminals, characterized by the lack of pity, and thieves,
indicated by a lack of probity . . . such offenses are committed by a small
minority of the population. . . . The violent criminal may also commit
crimes of passion, sometimes under the influence of alcohol...such
crimes . . . are indicative of inferior innate moral capacities.... Certain
environments . . . contribute to crimes against property...[such as] two
or three evil companions. . . . Nevertheless, many manifestations of
such behavior can only be attributed to “a remote atavism” and in
other cases to a general deficiency in “moral activity.”. . . Lascivious
criminals . . . [are] a group of sexual offenders . . . whose conduct is char-
acterized less by the absence of the sentiment of pity than by a low
level of moral energy and deficient moral perception.47
Garofalo’s concepts of crime and criminals provide a base for his “social
defense” against criminality. For Garofalo, because of the “absence or defi-
ciency of the basic altruistic sentiments,” the criminal demonstrates his
of criminology and the related fields of criminal justice and penology. Most
modern theories combine elements of both the classical and positivist per-
spectives. Four modern examples are described in this section: rational
choice theory, deterrence theory, an economic model of crime, and routine
activities theory.
DETERRENCE THEORY
Deterrence theory stresses that an individual’s choice to commit or not commit
a crime is influenced by the fear of punishment.
Choice theory says that criminals are rational beings who evaluate available Deterrence theory stresses
information to decide whether a crime is attractive and worthwhile. the idea that an individual’s
Deterrence theory, on the other hand, stresses the idea that an individ- choice is influenced by the fear
ual’s choice is influenced by the fear of punishment. Deterrence is the act of punishment.
of preventing a criminal act before it occurs, through the threat of punish-
ment and sanctions. Rooted in the classical perspective, deterrence theory
focuses on the following premises:
Deterrence is the act of prevent-
• For punishment to be a deterrent to criminal behavior, it must be cer- ing a criminal act before it occurs,
tain, swift, and severe. through the threat of punishment
• The severity must be sufficient to outweigh any rewards that the crimi- and sanctions.
nal may obtain from a criminal act.
1. Where there have been increases in police activity, crime rates are not
necessarily reduced; nor are crime rates reduced by increasing the num-
ber of police in a community.57
2. In a famous Kansas City, Missouri, police study, the absence or presence
of police patrols did not affect the crime rates.58
3. At times, high, intense, short-term, levels of police presence and inter-
vention in a community may initially and temporarily deter crime and
lower crime rates. However, once the intervention ends, crime rates
return to previous levels.59
and the justice model. The justice model stresses the idea that offenders
The justice model stresses the are responsible people and therefore deserve to be punished if they violate
idea that offenders are responsible the law. Do criminal offenders deserve the punishment they receive from
people and therefore deserve to be the laws and the courts? Should punishments be appropriate to the type
punished if they violate the law. and severity of the crime committed? These are questions central to the
concept of “just deserts,” which is the pivotal basis of the justice model. Just
deserts is a justice perspective according to which those who violate others’
rights deserve to be punished. The severity of the punishment should also
Just deserts is a justice perspec- be commensurate with the seriousness of the crime.
tive according to which those who In addition to returning to the justice model, the United States in the
violate others’ rights deserve to be 1970s and 1980s reverted to a utilitarian punishment philosophy to
punished. deal with crime. Utilitarianism in punishment is based on the assumption
that punishment is necessary to protect society from crime and also to deter
offenders, a subject that will be addressed in a later chapter.
Suitable targets may be things that are valued (e.g., jewelry, cars, or
cash) or people who, when assaulted, provide positive rewards or pleasure
to the perpetrator. Guardians are defined as objects (e.g. gates, surveillance
cameras, or burglar or auto alarms) or individuals (e.g., guards or police)
who are capable of protecting possible targets or victims. To the offender,
the presence of protective guardians raises crime costs and lessens target
attractiveness.62
RAT studies focus on direct-contact predatory violations—illegal acts Predatory violations are illegal
in which “someone definitely and intentionally takes or damages the person acts in which someone definitely
or property of another.”63 Focusing on crime events and not on criminal and intentionally takes or damages
offenders themselves, RAT examines how structural changes in everyday the person or property of another.
activity patterns influence crime rates by affecting the convergence in time
and space of three requisite conditions for a crime to occur. These three con-
ditions include
1. a perpetrator;
2. a victim and/or an object of property (criminal victimization increases
when motivated offenders and targets converge);
3. a relationship or an opportunity (criminal victimization decreases with
the presence of capable guardians).
3.7 SUMMARY
This chapter discusses many of the early theoretical tion of earlier classical and positivist theories. Rational
explanations for criminal behavior (pp. 60–62). Early choice theory stresses the idea that a criminal ration-
scholarly explanations for crime came from a wide ally chooses the crime to commit as well as the target
variety of fields. Criminologists have traditionally of the crime. It also stresses the idea that a high degree
marked the beginning of their discipline with the of crime prevention can be achieved by focusing on
establishment of Cesare Beccaria’s and Jeremy Ben- the situational aspects that influence particular types
tham’s classical school of criminology, which purports of criminal behavior (pp. 75–76).
that people rationally choose to commit criminal acts According to deterrence theory, an individual’s
(pp. 62–68). The positivist school of criminology, choice to commit or not commit a crime is influenced
founded by Auguste Comte, purports that behavior is by the fear of punishment. According to the economic
determined by measurable factors beyond human model of crime, criminal behavior follows a calcula-
control, a principle developed further in the theoreti- tion whereby the criminal examines the perceived
cal contributions of Cesare Lombroso, Enrico Ferri, costs, rewards, and risks of alternative actions. The
and Raffaele Garofalo (pp. 69–75). chapter concludes with an explanation of routine
All of these theories from the past have formed a activities theory, which stresses the idea that criminals
foundation for modern criminology and related fields. balance the costs and benefits of committing crimes
Rational choice theory is a reformulation and integra- (pp. 77–79).
STUDY GUIDE
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES
• Compare the spiritual and natural explanations for • Write a clear and concise statement
crime. on what Lombroso’s general theory
• Write a brief explanation of the classical school’s per- suggests about criminals.
spective on crime. • Briefly outline Ferri’s scientific classification
• Briefly explain the state of criminal law in eighteenth- of criminals.
century Europe. • List Ferri’s causes of crime, and explain the
• Briefly list the dimensions of social contract theory. “science of criminality.”
• Briefly describe Beccaria’s beliefs on punishment and its • Briefly explain what Garofalo meant by the term
purpose. natural crime.
• Identify and briefly describe the concept of utilitarianism • Briefly describe rational choice theory.
and Bentham’s moral calculus. • Describe deterrence theory.
• Briefly explain “the greatest happiness.” • Briefly describe the economic model of crime.
• Describe Beccaria’s and Bentham’s views on deterrence • Briefly describe the major points from Reading 3.1, on
and punishment. contemporary classicism and contemporary positivism.
• Briefly describe the development of positivism. • Identify the major points of routine activities theory.
KEY TERMS
Atavism (70) Ferri, Enrico (71) Predatory violations (79)
Beccaria, Cesare (64) Garofalo, Raffaele (73) Rational choice theory (76)
Bentham, Jeremy (66) Integrated theory (76) Retribution (77)
Classical school of criminology (63) Just deserts (78) Routine activities theory (RAT) (78)
Comte, Auguste (69) Justice model (78) Utilitarianism (66)
Criminal sociology (73) Lombroso, Cesare (70) Utilitarian punishment
Deterrence (77) Moral calculus (67) philosophy (78)
Deterrence theory (77) Natural crime (74)
Economic model of crime (78) Physical stigmata (70)
Felicitous calculus (67) Positivism (69)
SELF-TEST
SHORT ANSWER
1. List the six major theorists and their “schools” examined 6. List all of Ferri’s causes of crime.
in this chapter. 7. Define natural crime.
2. List three characteristics of law in eighteenth-century 8. List Garofalo’s classes of criminals.
Europe. 9. List Garofalo’s means of elimination.
3. Define social contract theory. 10. Briefly define contemporary classicism.
4. Define utilitarianism and moral calculus. 11. Describe rational choice theory.
5. Briefly state how Lombroso viewed the criminal. 12. Describe routine activities theory.
MULTIPLE CHOICE
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TRUE–FALSE
T F 1. Attempts to explain crime date back some three T F 3. The classical school purports that behavior is
hundred years. determined by measurable factors beyond indi-
T F 2. The positivist school purports that people ration- vidual control.
ally choose to commit criminal acts.
T F 4. The classical school believes that the major element T F 8. Garofalo’s ideas relegate environmental
governing a person’s choice of action is the basic and social factors to secondary levels of
human desire to obtain pleasure and avoid pain. importance.
T F 5. Beccaria’s blueprint for reform had its roots in T F 9. Rational choice theory focuses on the “born
social contract theory. criminal.”
T F 6. Bentham’s perspective on human behavior had T F 10. The economic model of crime challenges the
its roots in the concept of utilitarianism. assumption that a person chooses to commit
T F 7. Beccaria’s general theory suggested that crimi- crime.
nals can be distinguished from noncriminals by T F 11. Routine activities theory focuses on the criminal
the manifestation of multiple physical anomalies offenders themselves, not on criminal events.
that are atavistic.
FILL-INS
1. Criminologists have traditionally marked the beginning studied using methods similar to those used in the phys-
of the discipline of criminology with the establishment ical sciences.
of Cesare Beccaria’s and Jeremy Bentham’s 7. ____________ explained criminal behavior on the basis
____________ school of criminology. of biological characteristics and heredity.
2. The classical school of criminology was founded by 8. Lombroso is considered to be the father of ____________.
____________ and ____________. 9. ____________ thought that the positivist school culti-
3. Beccaria believed bad ____________ , not evil people, vated a “science of criminology and of a social defence
were the basis of the crime problem. against it.”
4. Beccaria believed that punishment should be based on 10. Garofalo presents three means of elimination:
the pleasure/____________ principle. ____________ , ____________ , and ____________ .
5. Bentham developed a moral ____________ for estimat- 11. ____________ theory stresses the idea that an individ-
ing the probability that a person will engage in a partic- ual’s choice to commit or not commit a crime is influ-
ular kind of behavior. enced by the fear of punishment.
6. It was the founder of sociology, ____________ , who 12. ____________ theory explains why crime and delinquency
advocated that human behavior and society should be occur in particular places under specific conditions.
MATCHING
ESSAY QUESTIONS
1. Do you believe that many Americans still explain crime 5. Compare and contrast the major principles of the classi-
using spiritual explanations? Elaborate on your answer. cal and positivist schools of criminology.
2. Why, in your thinking, are many of the principles of 6. Do you believe that social, political, and economic fac-
the classical school of criminology experiencing a tors have anything to do with why a person becomes a
revival in criminology today? criminal? Explain your answer.
3. Do you believe that people have free will and make 7. Does the individual make the choice to commit a crime?
a choice to commit or not commit a crime? Explain you answer.
Explain your answer. 8. How does routine activities theory explain criminal
4. Examine the growth of positivism and its behavior? Do you agree with this theory? Why or
impact on the field of criminology. why not?
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Source: G. B. Vold and T. J. Bernard, Theoretical Criminology, 3rd ed., New York, Oxford
University Press, 1986, pp. 30–34.
Deterrence and Econometrics The individual calculates (1) all his practical opportunities
of earning legitimate income, (2) the amounts of income
The classical school was the dominant perspective in crimi- offered by these opportunities, (3) the amounts of income
nology for approximately one hundred years, until it was offered by various illegal methods, (4) the probability of being
replaced by the positivist search for the causes of crime. arrested if he acts illegally, and (5) the probable punishment
After another one hundred years substantial interest should he be caught. After making these calculations, he
returned to the classical perspective in criminology, begin- chooses the act or occupation with the highest discounted
ning in the late 1960s. This revival of interest was associated return. To arrive at a discounted return he must include
with a dramatic shift away from the positivist-oriented inde- among his cost calculations the future costs of going to prison
terminate sentencing structures and back to the determinate if he is apprehended. It is in this sense that the criminal is
sentences similar to the French Code of 1791.1 understood to be a normal, rational, calculating individual.6
Two principal branches of contemporary classicism can The benefits of a criminal action may include not only
be identified. The whole question of deterrence has been the increases in monetary wealth, but also increases in psychologi-
subject of voluminous literature in criminology in recent cal satisfaction as well as the possibility of achieving these
years.2 Here an attempt has been made to develop the classi- increases with very little effort. The expected cost of the crime
cal perspective in the light of modern knowledge of the is normally computed as the total cost associated with the pun-
human behavioral sciences, as well as through empirical ishment of the crime times the probability that the punishment
studies of the effects of certainty and severity of punishment will be imposed. For example, if the crime is usually punished
on crime rates. While deterrence theory and research has with a fine of $1,000, and the probability of the punishment
been dominated by criminologists and sociologists, the other being imposed is 1/10, then the expected cost of the crime is
branch of contemporary classicism has been dominated by $100. If the person can gain more than $100 in the crime, then
economists. The field of economics holds a view of man that it would be in his interest to commit it.7 Often the costs and
is quite similar to that of the classicists. For example, eco- benefits cannot be computed in monetary terms, such as when
nomic theory holds that a person analyzes the costs and the costs include time in prison or the social disapproval of
benefits when he decides to buy a hamburger instead of a T- arrest and conviction, or when benefits include the satisfaction
bone steak, or a Volkswagen instead of a Cadillac. The costs of revenge or of outwitting the authorities. However, the indi-
and benefits include not merely monetary factors, but fac- vidual must still compare these costs and benefits in order to
tors such as taste, comfort, prestige, and convenience. decide whether the action is “worth it” to him or her.
Econometric techniques3 have been developed to analyze This calculation does not presume that the criminal has
these factors in terms of the resulting economic choice. a crystal ball to foresee future events. Many people make
Beginning with an article by Gary S. Becker in 1968,4 many mistakes in calculating their future pay-offs, and when they
economists have approached crime as a similar economic do, they end up in dead-end jobs or in bankruptcy. When
choice. They have therefore applied their techniques to the criminals make similar mistakes, they may end up spending
analysis of criminal behavior, as well as to the choices of the the better part of their lives in prison. As Sullivan says, “The
criminal justice system. basic economic assumption does not maintain that people
The economic perspective views the decision to commit do not make mistakes but rather that they do their best
a crime as essentially similar to any other decision—that is, given their reading of present and future possibilities and
it is made on the basis of an analysis of the costs and benefits given their resources.”8
of the action. Because crime is seen as a free choice of the Economic theories can also be used to explain the poli-
individual, the theories of crime which discuss cultural or cies of various criminal justice agencies. The economic view
biological “causes” are seen as unnecessary.5 For example, maintains that if society were willing to pay the social costs,
[Richard F.] Sullivan describes the choice of a career as a virtually all crime could be eliminated.9 These social costs
thief as follows: would include a tremendous increase in budgets of criminal
Contemporary Classicism 85