100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Aantekeningen minor criminologie $4.50   Add to cart

Class notes

Aantekeningen minor criminologie

 30 views  0 purchase
  • Course
  • Institution

Aantekeningen van de colleges van de minor criminologie in bulletpoints.

Preview 4 out of 59  pages

  • January 22, 2023
  • 59
  • 2022/2023
  • Class notes
  • .
  • All classes
avatar-seller
Week 1,

part 1: Understanding crime and criminology

- Crime: legal/law
- Deviance: social point of view
- What is criminology?
- -Logy = systematic (scientific, methodolical) study of something
- Crimen (latin) = act of breaking a law, or the judicial process, and/or the process of
criminalization
- Term criminology goes back to the 1850s
- Criminology as a discipline originated in England, italy, France & US
- Roots of criminology as a social science
- Italy/France - criminal anthropology – Cesare Lombroso (1835-1909)
- Italy – philosophy/penology - cesare beccaria (1738-1794)
- UK – philosophy/penology - Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)
- France – social psychology – Gabriel Tarde (1834-1904)
- France – sociology – Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
- USA - (urban) sociology – W.E.B. Du Bous (1896_1917) + Chicago school (1920/30s) (Robert
Park)
- Multi-disciplinary science – disciplinary hybridity
- Sociology, psychology, legal studies, anthropology, public management, economics
- Also uses insights from exact sciences
- Defining, understanding & controlling crime
- Sub-disciplines
- Sociological/critical approach
o How society influences crime
o Power dimension: political-economy
o Global-local
- Definitions:
o The study of crime, criminals and criminal justice
o Making laws, breaking laws and of reacting towards the breaking of laws
- Sociological:
o Focus on human society, rather than individuals
o Social divisions – class, race/etnicity, gender, age
- Sociological imagination (Mills):
o Questioning common sense
o Personal problems – public and political issues
o Connect history, biography & society
- Criminological imagination (Young)
o Biography- history – society
o Crime is a sociological concept
o Crime is a social construct
o Crime control and punishment shaped by history and society
o Critical: power dimensions and inequalities
o Cultural: meaning
o The twilight zone between the legal and the illegal
- What is crime according to criminologists? Ongoing debate

,- Traditionally: violation of criminal law (legalistic)
- Paul tappan (1947):
- Only when prosecuted and found guilty
- State defines what crime is
- Edwin sutherland (1940):
- What about white-collar crime?
- Social injury + posible legal sanctions – criminal AND civil
- Howard S. Becker (1963)
- Crime is an act that is labelled as crime
- Deviance (violation of social norms)
- Social context matters
- Crime is a social construct
- Moving away from state-defined acts
- Herman schwendinger & Julia Schwendinger (1970):
- Violations of human rights of individuals
- Including imperialistic war, racism, sexism, poverty
- Any state can make laws to suit proposes of the ruling political party
- Criminologists are not defenders of order, but guardians of human rights
- William (Bill) Chambluss (1988)
- Violation of a state’s own laws
- State-organized crime
- David Friedrichts (2007):
- Criminologists must distinuish between
o Those governmental or political actions prohibited by international law, and
o Those actions regarderd as criminal on some other criteria or harmfulness not
necessarily recognized by either the state’s laws or international law
- Social harms perspective
o Not the law but harm as a criterium
- what's different?
o Challenges power (who makes the laws?)
o Includes mass harms
o Allocates responsibility
o Focuses policy responses on reducing harms
- Take away 1: Broadening perspectives on crime
- Crime as contested concept to use as basis for a scientific discipline
- Legalistic approach: formal legal definition; defined by the state; proscribed by criminal law,
state sanction
- Legalistic but beyond criminal law: also civil and administratie penalties
- Social constructionist approach: labelling: crime exists only when a particular act is labelled
as crime by the state and/or by society; should not necessarily attract penalty
- Social constructionist: social harm conception: some type of harm; harm should attract some
sort of penalty
- Universalist approach: crime is what violates human rights – also by states
- Public perceptions of the seriousness of crime plays an important role in modern criminal
justice systems: sentencing, allocation of police resources, prioritizing the prosecution of
offenders

, - Takeaway: the public's perception of the (moral) wrongfulness of a given act often does not
reflect the perceived or objective harm that it causes
- Take-aways 2: defining crime
- Society's perception of the seriousness or (moral) wrongfulness of a given act does not
reflect the perceived or objective harm that it causes
- The legality and illegality of behaviour varies widely according to (national, cultural,
historical) context;
- BUT often reflects the interests of those with the most political-economic power and
influence
- Cultural and historical variation, but similar implicit assumption: the power to determine
what is or is not a crime resides in the nation state;
- Can a global community define what crime is?

Part 2; criminalization & victimization

Worldbank building of dam in Thailand

- Criminalised due to:
o Health, harm, psychological, environment (biodiversity) perspectives
- Legalistic notion of crime: when the crime is in the law to be punisehd etc.
- Something is too insignificant to be a crime when
- Crime can be defined in terms of:
- Criminal offences – determined by law to be a crime
- Social construction – determined by society/individuals to be a crime
- Often no agreement on criminalization
- Changes with person, time, place, cultures etc.
- Criminologists defining crime
o Garofalo (1885): natural crime .. religious idea of sin
o Durkheim (1895): link to culture... crime as normal and functional/ part of society
o Bonger (1932): social harm/ moral idea (subcategory of immorality
o Sutherland (US, 1945): shouldn't look at criminal law, powerfull ones have
criminalised it
o Paul Tappan: democracy decides
o Becker (1963): labelling, crime as a social construct / crime as a reaction / start of
criminology – influence of the powerful
o Hulsman (1986): abolitionism (restorative jsutice) / no ontological reality /
problematic events
o Hagan (2001): crime because someone criminalized it/ criminal jstice system &
government
o Late modern conceptions of crime
- Becker – moral entrepreneurs
o Moral crusaders
 Moral panics
 Ends > means
 Rely on experts to make laws
o Rule enforces
 Institutionalized crusade
 Justify own position
 Win respect

, - Smoking ban
- Grounds for criminalization (making something a crime):
o Harms
o Wrongs (might not harm anyone but is not accepted in the society)
o Instrumental – to maintain public order (Covid lockdowns)
o Symbolic
o Grounds often overlap
- Victimization
- Emergence of victims in criminology and criminal justice
o Victim historically forgottten in criminology and in criminal justice systems
o Focuses on the public vs the offender
o Interests of victims in criminal justice system (Margery Fry – victim movement)
o Influence of feminist movement
o Mass media influence
o Since 1960s focus on vulnerable groups
- Victim surveys so more knowledge
o 1989, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2005
o International crime and victim survey:
o 300,000 people in 78 countries
o Very valuable since many countries do not have trustworthy police statistics
o Internationally comparable
o Types of crime, fear of crime, attitude towards police, safety measures taken
o Questionable because not everyone responds and not everyone is honest
- Some important findings:
- 25% of citizens living in urban areas have suffered at least one form of victimization over the
past 12 months
- Significantly higher levels of victimization in developing countries (33-34%)
- Victims in western europe, north america (US and Canada) and Australia and New Zealand
are much more likely to report their victimization to police
- Because of trust in the police, cultural components, social consequences, higher rates of
corruption
- The extent of victimization:
o Considerable geographical and social patterning to crime: many offenders commit
offences within short distance of their own homes
o In nearly 50% of cases, offender is known to victim
o Social variation in crime victimization:
o Socio-economic class: socially marginalized living in poor areas are most vulnerable
to crime
o Age: 16-24 most likely to be victims
o Gender: men , more likely victims of physical violence; women: more likely
victimized in the home
o Ethnicity: ethnic minorities face substancially greater risk of victimization
o Intersectionaility: a victim is a victim because of all different reasons
- Victim surveys; pros and cons
o Pros:
 Measures both reported and unreported crime
 Independent of changes in reporting

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller noacornet. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $4.50. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

80189 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now

Start selling
$4.50
  • (0)
  Add to cart