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Unit 4: Crime and Deviance

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1 Unit 4: Crime and Deviance
Ethnicity and Crime Unit 4: Crime and Deviance

2 Predictions Which ethnic group do you think is most likely to be stopped and searched by the police? Which ethnic group commits the most crime?

3 Match the statistics – country profile
91% Asian 9% Afro-caribbean 5% White 2% Non White 2% Mixed and other

4 The facts 91% of people in the UK are white 9% are non-white 5% Asian
2% Afro- Caribbean 2% mixed and other

5 Ethnicity & Crime Of the 80,000 men in prison approximately 74% are white, 15% Afro-Caribbean, 7% Asian, 3% mixed and 1% Chinese. Of the 7,000 women in prison 70% are white, 21% Afro-Caribbean, 5% mixed, 2% Asian and 2% Chinese and other. The situation in the USA is very similar – Black Americans make up 13% of the total population and 50% of the prison population.

6 In 2008, the Ministry of Justice reported that, compared to white people:
Afro Caribbean's were: more likely to be arrested for robbery; three times more likely to be cautioned by the police; three and a half times more likely to be arrested; if arrested, more likely to be charged and face court proceedings than to receive a caution; more likely, if found guilty, to receive a custodial (prison) sentence; five times more likely to be in prison. Asians were: twice as likely to be stopped and searched (mainly for drugs); more likely to be charged and face court proceedings than to receive a caution; more likely to receive a custodial sentence if found guilty; more likely to be arrested for fraud and forgery.

7 How can we explain these patterns?
Explaining this… How can we explain these patterns?

8 Victims of Crime Ethnic minorities are also more likely to be victims of crime disproportionately to their numbers, and this is particularly s for ethnic minority women. Why do you think this is the case?

9 Ethnicity And Victimisation
The BCS (British Crime Survey) and victim surveys are the main providers of information about the type and incidence of racially motivated crimes Most recorded racist incidents are crimes against property and verbal harassment Most incidents are unreported

10 Reasons for Criminality
There are two main strands of thought as to why ethnic minorities are more likely to be seen as criminals and be victims of crime. They are: Structuralist views: They are more criminal Social Constructionist views: The justice system is unfair

11 Reasons for High criminality of Afro-Caribbean (Structural)
Lea & Young (left realists) – first criminologists to acknowledge that black people were not simply victims of a racist police force and criminal justice system but are actually more likely to be involved with street crime than whites. Reasons Marginalisation Relative Deprivation Sub cultural response Their explanation of crime is based on the concepts of relative deprivation, marginalisation and subculture. Minorities suffer relative deprivation not only in areas shared with sections of the white working class (high unemployment and poor environment), but also racial discrimination and racially motivated attacks. Young unemployed blacks are marginalised in that they are unorganised and have few pressure groups to lobby on their behalf, so their frustrations are more likely to be expressed in illegal activity. Subcultural responses include the hustling subculture described by Pryce in his ethnographic study of St Paul’s in Bristol, with young blacks involved in petty street crime, drug dealing and prostitution, getting by from day to day.

12 Lea & Young Read the information on Lea & Young’s study on explaining crime rates and highlight key points. Do you agree with the findings of the study? Justify your answer. How is their research evidence of left realism?

13 Other reasons for higher rates of street crime amongst blacks
Educational success 2006 – only 23% of Afro-Caribbean boys achieved 5 GSCE’s Affects self-confidence, employability (think Merton and sub cultural theorists) Family Structure 60% of young black males live with just one parent (normally the mother) Single parent families also tend to be poorer than nuclear families so the link could be related to poverty as well Mass Media Influence of black ‘Rap Artists’ According to some New Right and conservative thinkers ‘Rap music’ encourages ‘BLING, VIOLENCE AND CRIMINALITY’ This view has been challenged because it is questionable to simply blame one form of entertainment

14 Influence, Values, Socialisation, Expectations
Rank the explanations Most significant Education Family structure Mass media Beside each you need to explain why you have ranked them in this order – You must include the following terms in your explanation: Influence, Values, Socialisation, Expectations Least significant

15 Crime among other minorities.
Don’t underestimate the impact of a declining influence of religion in the lives of some minority groups. In addition you could refer to a rise in some forms of fundamentalism (which is linked with terrorism and criminal activity. Linked with globalisation when you refer to countries such a Yemen, Afghanistan etc).

16 Stereotypes and Racism
What do you think the impact of such events has had on Asian citizens today?

17 On the other side of the argument ….
The over-representation of Afro-Caribbean's in crime statistics is a social construct, created as a result of discrimination towards blacks and Asians by the police and other criminal justice agencies. There is considerable evidence of racist views held by police officers.

18 Unfair Treatment and Racism
Reiner (2000): Canteen culture amongst the police, including: suspicion, macho values and racism, which encourages racist stereotypes and a mistrust of those from non white backgrounds. Bowling and Phillips (2002): Higher levels of robbery among black people could be the product of labelling that arises from the use of regular stop and search procedures, which in turn leads to the self fulfilling prophecy.

19 Sharp and Budd (2005) Black offenders were most likely to have contact with the criminal justice system in their lifetime and were more likely to have been arrested, been to court and convicted. This is despite their lower levels of offending compared to white people generally and white youths in particular. Black and Asian offenders are more likely to be charged rather than cautioned, remanded rather than bailed, given prison sentences rather than probation/communitity punishment compared to white people. This suggests that they are treated unfairly by the criminal justice system.

20 Waddington (2004) Published in the British Journal of Criminology argues that the police do stop a proportionately higher number of blacks compared to whites. However, he argues that there are more ethnic minority youths out at night in inner cities and that the police simply target those in high risk areas. If the areas is disproportionately represented by young black males they are more likely to be stopped and searched – because of where they are rather than their ethnicity

21 Test Your Knowledge What are the trends linking ethnicity and crime?
What is black criminality? What is the link between the police and institutional racism?

22 The Political nature of Black Crime (Gilroy)
A Neo-Marxist who agrees that young blacks are targeted by the media and the police, but argues that black crime is different in that it is a conscious continuation, in a new context, of anti-colonial struggles in the West Indies. It is therefore political and potentially revolutionary, a political response to inequality and discrimination. Rastafarianism, for example, is not just a religion; it contains a set of revolutionary political ideas about overthrowing white authority (“Babylon”), and tends to bring its followers into confrontation with the police over, for example, marijuana use.

23 Stephen Lawrence (AO2a)
Stephen Lawrence, a black British teenager (born 13 September 1974) from Eltham, southeast London, was stabbed to death while waiting for a bus on the evening of 22 April 1993.[1] After the initial investigation, five suspects were arrested but never convicted.[2] It was suggested during the course of investigation that the murder had a racist motive and that Lawrence was killed because he was black, and that the handling of the case by the police and Crown Prosecution Service was affected by issues of race leading to an inquiry.[3] In 1999, an inquiry headed by Sir William Macpherson examined the original Metropolitan police investigation and concluded that the force was "institutionally racist" and has been called 'one of the most important moments in the modern history of criminal justice in Britain'.[4] The case is important in British legal history as it heavily contributed to the creation and passing of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 that altered the centuries-old principle of double jeopardy—which stipulated that a person could not be tried twice for the same offence.

24 BBC Report on Stephen Lawrence

25 Evaluation (AO2b) It has often been claimed that black crime is no higher than crime by the majority, that the official statistics reflect discriminatory practices by the police and courts. Sometimes questioning this claim can be presented as racist. On the other hand, however, and sometimes in the same accounts, it is claimed that high rates of some crimes, especially street crimes, are to be expected, part of the survival strategy of a reserve army of labour which finds itself unwanted, an understandable response to disadvantage and discrimination. Like other Marxists studying crime, Gilroy can be seen as reading meanings which may not be there into the behaviour of young blacks; they are unlikely to agree with his explanation of their behaviour.

26 Conclusion Institutional Racism Structural factors
Ethnicity may just be one element in a complex web of courses. Should never neglect power relations. Should consider which social groups have the most power in creating and enforcing the law.

27 Ethnicity and the criminal justice system 1. Policing
Many allegations of oppressive policing from minority ethnic communities are made. Key facts Official statistics say black people are: 7 times more likely to be stopped and searched. 3 ½ times more likely to be arrested. 5 times more likely to be in prison than their white counterparts. Victim studies say black people are more likely to be identified as offenders & most crime is intra –ethnic meaning it takes place among rather than between ethnic groups. Self-report studies conclude that black people have similar rates of offending to whites if not lower. Stop and search Lots of stop an search is perhaps due to racism and the targeting of ethnic minorities. 3. Arrests and cautions More likely to be arrested and cautioned perhaps due to a mistrust of police and not admitting to the offence. Ethnicity and crime 4. Prosecution & conviction Crown prosecution Service more likely to drop cases against ethnic minorities. Black and Asian defendants are less likely to be found guilty. 5. Sentencing and Prison Custodial sentences more likely to be given to black offenders. Blacks and Asians over-represented in prisons and more likely to be given longer sentences.

28 Neo-Marxist - Paul Gilroy
Black people commit more crime because they resent the cultural experience of colonialism i.e. being taken over and having black slaves sent to Britain to work. This experience causes resentment in young black males which makes them commit crime. Neo-Marxist - Stuart Hall et al (Policing the crisis) Combines Marxism and Labelling theory. Economic conditions in the 1990’s were bad, government look for a scapegoat. Young black muggers are labelled and a moral panic is created about their behaviour in the media. Young black males commit no more crime than any other group but labelling and the economy makes it seem like they do. Explaining differences in offending Left realism Ethnic minorities commit more crime because racism in wider has caused them to be marginalised, coupled with economic exclusion such as high unemployment and poor housing. Left realists don’t believe that racism in the police can account for higher crime because black people have a higher offending rate than Asians. Ethnicity and crime Victimisation Police recorded 61,000 racists incidents while the BCS reports 184,000 many go unreported. People from mixed ethnic backgrounds were more likely to be victims of crimes. Stephen Lawrence The death of Stephen Lawrence in 1993 by a white gang caused outcry as police botched the investigation. The inquiry called the Macpherson report declared institutional racism in the police.

29 How this applies to the exam…
(b) Using material from Item A and elsewhere, assess the view that ethnic differences in crime rates are the result of the ways in which the criminal justice system operates. (21 marks)

30 Plenary In pairs you have a set of concepts and sociologists on cards.
One of you has the card and has to describe the concept on the card. You cant say the name. The other person has to try and guess what you are talking about. Keep swapping roles – so you both get turns at describing and guessing.


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