Learning Theories
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Transcript Learning Theories
Learning Theories
Crime is learned
Crime is learned, like other behaviors
Focus on content and process of learning
– What crimes can be learned?
– What behaviors that support crime can be learned?
– How does this learning take place?
– What cultural supports for this learning are present?
Link with strain theory
– Social structure may set the stage where learning takes
place
What is learning?
Habits and knowledge that develop when individuals interact with their
environment
– Not instinctual or biological
Current learning theories based on association
– Classical conditioning – passive learning
Associating bell with meat produces salivation when bell rings
– Operant conditioning – active learning
Organism learns how to get what it wants
Press a lever to get food – associate lever with food
– Social Learning – active learning + cognition
Direct - reinforcement through rewards and punishments
Vicarious - reinforcement by observing what happens to others
Criminological Theories - crime is a “normally learned behavior”
Learning crime through
differential association (Sutherland)
Criminal behavior is learned from persons who transmit ideas or
“definitions” that favor law-breaking
Two basic elements of the theory
– Content of what is learned
techniques of committing the crime
the underlying drives, rationalizations and attitudes
– Process by which learning takes place
Learning occurs in intimate groups
Motives and drives for behavior originate in attitudes towards legal
codes by a person’s social group
– “Normative conflict” – societal and group norms may be in conflict
– “Definitions” can be favorable/unfavorable to lawbreaking
– Delinquency is caused by an excess of definitions favorable to
lawbreaking
Views on differential association
Criticisms
– It focuses on juvenile crime committed in groups
Perhaps delinquents simply “flock together”
Not all who associate with delinquents become delinquent
– Hard to test: How can we identify and count the definitions
favorable and unfavorable to law in each setting?
Cannot apply to all kinds of crime
– Difficult to use to explain differences in crime rates in different places
and between different demographic groups
Defenses
– Strength, intensity of associations vary
– It includes a cognitive (active processing) component in learning
– Those with more delinquent friends do commit more crimes
– Those reporting more definitions favorable to crime commit more crime
–
Cultural & subcultural
learning theories
Walter B. Miller:
Learning to be delinquent from a gang
Lower and middle-class cultures are distinct
Middle-class emphasizes achievement
Lower-class has different concerns, which are a breeding
ground for crime
– toughness, smartness (street sense), excitement, fate,
autonomy
– Male role models often absent, so an exaggerated sense of
masculinity results
– Crowding and domestic conditions send boys to the street,
where they form gangs
Wolfgang and Ferracutti:
Learning violence from a violent subculture
Violence is a cultural expression for lower socioeconomic status
males
Many homicides result from very trivial events
– Defending honor of relatives, neighborhood
Significance of an event (e.g., a jostle) is differentially perceived
by races and socioeconomic classes
– Persons who respond as socially expected are admired those who do not are put down
– Causes of “passion” behavior are ideas - norms, values,
expectations - that originate in social conditions
Don’t focus on the origin of a subculture
– Worry instead about the ideas it generates
– Remedy is to disperse and assimilate the subcultures
Elijah Anderson:
Learning violence in a black “street” subculture
Criminogenic environment
– High concentration of poverty
– Decline in legitimate jobs, increase in illegitimate jobs
– Drugs, guns, crime and violence
– Declining welfare payments, no hope for the future
– Lack of faith in C.J. system
Mainstream code of civility, respected by “decent” people, has no value
on the “street”
Code of the street
– Cultural adaptation to living in declining circumstances
– “Respect”, “disrespect” and “manhood”
– Spreads to “decent” children through contagion and necessity
Theory is partly cultural, like Wolfgang & Ferracutti; partly
social/structural, like Merton
Social learning theories
Akers:
Learning through differential reinforcement
Behaviors can be learned as well as ideas
Differential association – Behaviors can be learned socially, from
others and from “reference groups” whose definitions are favorable or
unfavorable to lawbreaking
Differential reinforcement – Behaviors can be learned socially and nonsocially, according to their actual or anticipated consequences
(“differential reinforcement”)
– Learned socially through approval/disapproval by others
– Learned non-socially (e.g., getting sick/high on drugs)
– Learned vicariously by observing consequences of behavior for
others
Once criminal behavior begins, it continues if reinforced either socially
or non-socially
Structural conditions (inequality, strain) affect a person’s differential
associations, definitions, models and reinforcements
Athens:
Violentization
How do persons become violent criminals?
– Based on his observations growing up in a violent environment
– Theory developed through in-depth interviews with 58 prisoners
Three steps
– Brutalization - victim of intra-familial violence, and coached in
violence
– Belligerence - person decides to stop being the victim and take
charge of their situation
– Violent performances - person experiments with violence
Failures may lead to exit from violence
Successes may lead to more violence & acquiring weapons
– Virulency - person treated differently by others, embraces image
Sees violence as best response to many situations
Discussion
If criminal behavior can be learned by “normal” individuals, then
the cause may lie in the social structure
– How society is organized
– Rules and values that support thats structure
So...
– Is crime whatever is so defined by the ruling class?
(precept of conflict criminology)
– Or does culture mediate between social structure and
behavior?
Social structure culture/subculture behavior