Sociological perspectives

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Anomie

French sociologist Émile Durkheim viewed deviance as an inevitable part of how society functions. He argued that deviance is a basis for change and innovation, and it is also a way of defining or clarifying important social norms. Reasons for deviance vary, and different explanations have been proposed. One reason people engage in deviant behaviour, for example, may be a state of anomie, which is social instability arising from an absence of clear social norms and values. To understand what these norms are, the rules need to be tested occasionally. Inappropriate behaviour is likely to be regulated by informal social processes such as disapproval from friends or family.

American sociologist Robert Merton’s theory of anomie holds that deviance is often a response to situations in which goals cannot be achieved through conventional behaviour. In democratic societies, people from wealthy, highly connected, and privileged circumstances have relatively easy routes to personal success and prosperity. When others realize that routes to achievement are blocked, they experience strain and frustration and are likely to turn to tactics that will help them move past the blockages. Merton proposed five types of reaction to such circumstances: conformity, innovation, ritualism, retreatism, and rebellion. Both innovation and rebellion are forms of deviance. Whereas innovation is likely to involve breaking rules to achieve normative objectives (e.g., stealing to become rich), rebellion involves challenging the rules or objectives themselves (e.g., protests or campaigns to change laws).

Various types of social control inhibit deviance. Primary groups, such as families, work groups, or teams, and close social groups may control deviance through direct or immediate sanctions over their members. If a child is disobedient, a parent can respond immediately, just as a sports referee can immediately exclude a cheating player. In close-knit communities, there is a high level of primary control, so if a member breaks an important rule, that member is in significant danger of exclusion from the group.

In some cultures, the reputations of family members may be put at risk if a member engages in a criminal or shaming activity. Extreme reactions, such as the so-called honour killing of women for committing adultery or even for having been raped, highlight the fact that deviance is not easily defined in terms of a specific behaviour. Instead, deviance is defined by the formal or informal rules imposed by other people in the social context in which the behaviour occurs. Social control is also exerted through secondary groups that are more abstract, such as organizations that use formal power and regulations, as well as through membership in larger social categories such as gender, which are associated with wider social norms.

Labeling

Primary deviance involves relatively trivial, but generally tolerated, departures from rules. For example, many people occasionally take items of office stationery (pens, tape, etc.) for personal use. When committing such acts, most people feel able to sustain the idea that they are still honest and law-abiding. Linked to those forms of primary deviance, sociologists also observe that societies allow certain norms of evasion. For example, drivers on freeways often travel a little faster than the official speed limit. It is widely accepted that breaking the limit will be tolerated but only up to a point. Such norms provide flexible boundaries. Individuals who show that they conform to most rules are usually given a small amount of freedom to bend some rules; if authorities so choose, however, they can impose the rules strictly. Secondary deviance describes a situation in which a person has been publicly identified as deviant, such as by being classified as mentally unstable or criminal.

Labeling theory emphasizes that being labeled can generate a self-fulfilling prophecy whereby others behave toward the labeled person in ways that confirm or reinforce the label. Critics of labeling theory have argued that it underplays the personal responsibility of deviants for their own behaviour.

Socially defined deviance

Sociologists distinguish between deviance at different levels of analysis. Some deviance departs from cultural norms and values, such as the use of birth control by some women in Roman Catholic countries. Other deviance is defined in terms of individual pathology (e.g., psychosis, extreme neurosis). Some deviance is expressed by individuals within a group (for example, a student who wears unusual clothes), and other deviance can be expressed by a group within society (for example, a gang or a cult). The idea of deviant subcultures is important because it highlights that groups can generate their own sets of norms, and people within those groups feel that they are not deviant even though the group as a whole may be viewed as deviant by others.