A General Theory of Crime - University of Minnesota Duluth



A General Theory of Crime

Gottfredson and Hirschi (1990)

“OOPS” -Travis Hirschi

The Nature of Crime and Criminals

Criminal Acts…

Provide immediate gratification

of desires

Are risky/thrilling

Are easy/simple

Require little skill/planning

Provide few/meager long term

benefits

Result in pain/discomfort to a

victim

Criminals are therefore…

Impulsive

Risk-taking

Physical (as opposed to mental) Low verbal ability

Short-sighted

Insensitive

Low Self-Control

The cluster of traits (impulsive, insensitive…) tend to come together in people

They are present before “crime”

They tend to persist through life

Personality? G&H argue against this

Causes of Low Self-Control

We are all born without self-control

Self Control is established in early childhood (age 8)

Causes must be in early childhood

Parents failure to supervise, recognize, punish

Straight from Patterson, but no role for “positive learning” (positive reinforcement)

Biology? Infants might differ on “impulsiveness or verbal ability…but all can be socialized.

Is Gerald Patterson a Control Theorist or a Learning Theorist?

In the field of Psychology = Social Learning

In the field of Criminology?

Most likely a control theorist

Assumption about human nature, “direct controls”

BUT, has elements of learning theory, which Akers notes

Implications of Low Self-Control

The sole cause of crime and “analogous behaviors”

All Crime?

“Analogous Behaviors?”

Explains “stability” of criminality

Low self-control is stable over time

What does this mean for Hirschi’s social bonds?

2 Explanations

Empirical Support

Tautology Problems

Only if self control inferred from“behavioral measures” (e.g., delinquency)

Confusion over “criminality” and “crime”

Attitudinal measures

I would you rather read a book than engage in physical activities.

I tend to be value the “here and now” and do not like to plan my life.

Empirical Support With Attitudinal Measures

Moderate correlation with delinquency, crime, and “analogous behaviors”

Controlling for low self-control weakens, but doesn’t eliminate “social” causation

In other words, it appears as though low self-control is not the sole cause of crime

Are white collar offenders different from “street” offenders? (Some evidence they are)

Policy Implications

Low self-control stable after age 8

Only “early prevention” can reduce crime

Train parents, support parents??

Typical “rehabilitation” won’t reduce crime

Changing “bonds” won’t reduce crime

Early intervention with parents?

REIVEW

Scope?

Parsimony?

Criticisms?

Why do people desist from criminal activity?

Not the “sole” cause of crime

Bonds still more important?

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