500 Word Essay

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Humanities

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You will complete a critical analysis and reflection. This written exercise must be in APA style and format, a minimum of 500 words in length excluding the abstract. When writing your papers, think in terms of providing a critical overview of the reading, identifying and highlighting the significant facts revealed, and closing with your own well-reasoned and informed scholarly deduced conclusion(s). Keep in mind the required 500 words without the Abstract is the minimum requirement for average performance relative to the wording volume. Refer to the course Syllabus for more detailed instructions.

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' Society as Insulation The Origins of Control Theory Walter C. Reckless 1899- 1988 Ohio State University Author of Containment Theory T he most important step in the solution to a problem, theoretical or otherwise, lies in asking the right questions about it. The proper formulation of the problem often may make the answer obvious. At the very least, asking the right question in the right way will contribute greatly to a solution. Asking the wrong question, or asking the right question in the wrong way, will result in. no progress at all, although there may be an illusion of getting somewhere. Unfortunately, the first step also usually is the most difficult one. Not only does it require a thorough understanding of the nature of the situation with which one is faced, but it also demands the capacity to think about it in new and creative ways. Because one is not likely to ask questions about aspects of the situation that one takes for granted, different criminologists have been led to see very different questions as the key to an understanding of crime and delinquency. What one takes for granted needs no explanation, but what one takes for granted depends on assumptions-in this case, assumptions about human nature 'and social order. Most criminologists have taken conformity for granted as part of the natural order of things and have concentrated on trying to explain the "crime problem:' As we have seen, they have found their explanations in spirits and demons, in theories tracing the nonconformity to individual factors such as biological abnormalities or personality defects, or in theories tracing the nonconformity to social factors such as social disorganization, subcultural traditions, and inequality of opportunity, all of these being factors presumed to ' . 94 Society as Insulation operate so as to distort the natural order of conformity. But is conforml.ty really the natural order of things? To what extent should it be taken for granted? By the time a person is a certain age, he or she speaks a certain language shared by others, drives a car in general obedience to traffic regulations, avoids urination or defecation in public, and in most other ways "goes along:' All this tends to be taken for granted, but the evidence indicates that it is not at all "natural" (Davis, 1948). In fact, great effort is expended by parents, teachers, and the individual involved in a concerted.attempt to produce these results. Viewed in this way, all of this conformity is a striking thing much in need of explanation. That is the focus of control theory, which takes the position that because conformity cannot be taken for granted, nonconformity such as crime and delinquency is to be expected when social controls are less than completely effective. · In this sense, control theory is not so much a theory of deviance as a theory of conformity. It does not ask the question, "Why do people commit crimes and acts of delinquency?" Rather, it suggests that crime and delinquency are going to occur unless people conform to all of the social demands placed on them and then asks, "Why do people conform?" That is, if crime is gratifying-fun, exciting, physically enjoyable, emotionally satisfying, and/or materially rewarding-why don't individuals just break the law? From this perspective on human nature and social order, the potential gratifications offered by crime and delinquency will be resisted only when sociocultural controls are operating effectively to prevent such behavior. Control theory has been at the center of American criminology for the better part of a century-so much so that we devote two chapters to this perspective. Much of its appeal is the simplicity of its main theoretical premise: When controls are present, crime does not occur; when controls are absent, crime is possible and often does occur. Except for the fact that control and crime can be measured independently and the strength of the relationship assessed empirically, there is a tautological quality to this thesis: The very existence of crime seems to be persuasive evidence that controls have been rendered ineffective. Although the organizing premise of control theory is simple-no control permits crime-the perspectives that fall under the umbrella of the control paradigm offer a complex view of how control is linked to criminal conduct. In this chapter, we explore the thinking of early control theorists, selecting those scholars whose work still resonates today. These include Albert Reiss's insights on personal and social controls, F. Ivan Nye's work on family controls, Walter Reckless's influential containment theory, Gresham Sykes and David Matza's revelations about techniques of neutralization, and Ma~za's extension of that collaboration into his theory of delinquency and drift. In Chapter 6, we chiefly explore the work of Travis Hirschi, arguably the most influential criminologist of the past half century. Hirschi developed two dominant control perspec. es: fust his social bond theory and then, in conjunction with Michael Gottfredson, -control theory. We also consider some more recent variants of control theory that prest more complex ideas on how control is implicated in crime and delinquency: Hagan's er-control theory, Tittle's control balance theory, and Colvin's diffe'l:ential coercion the. Finally, at the end of Chapter 6, we review the·policy implications of control theory. Before embarking on this excursion across control theory, however, we first examine some ers of modern control theory. As in Chapters 3 and 4, here we stress the significance Work of Durkheim and the Chicago school. Both bo
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Running head: THE ORIGINS OF CONTROL THEORY

The Origins of Control Theory
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THE ORIGINS OF CONTROL THEORY

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The Origins of Control Theory
The chapter explains the crime problem by looking at ways in which one can understand
a problem and come up with solutions. It starts by stating that the best way to answer or come up
with the solution to a problem that is theoretical or otherwise is to ask the right questions about
it. This will help formulate the problem and in this the solution will be very easy to come up
with. Sometimes if the problem is very well formulated, the solution will be very obvious...


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