Social Class and Youth Deviance Flashcards

1
Q

HARDING ‘STREET CASINO’

A

Gangs are seen as a social arena for competition where members struggle for distinction, status, position, and survival.

Success is determined by acquiring and receiving ‘street capital’.

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2
Q

YOUNG ‘SOCIOLOGY OF VINDICTIVENESS’

A

We live in a ‘bulimic society’ where citizens worship money and are excluded if they can’t access these desires.

There’s an intensity of exclusion felt by the underclass.

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3
Q

MACDONALD AND MARSH ‘ REJECTION OF ACADEMIC SUCCESS’

A

Young working-class people rejected academic success and believed teachers weren’t bothered about them.

Due to peer pressure and anti-school subcultures, many had to retake their GCSE’s at local colleges.

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4
Q

LACEY ‘PRO-SCHOOL NORMS’

A

Pro-school norms and values which set pupils in terms of ability led to demoralization amongst pupils of lower ability. They became disenchanted and formed anti-school subcultures.

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5
Q
Anti-school subcultures and social class
WILLIS 'LEARNING TO LABOUR'
A

Lads saw themselves as school failures and turned this into a good thing.

They knew they’d work in factories like their fathers and didn’t share the school’s value for education.

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6
Q
Anti-school subcultures and social class
BROWN 'RESPONSES TO EDUCATION'
A

'’Getting in’’ - Low achievers wanting manual occupations.

'’Getting out’’ - High achievers who use education to improve their social situation

'’Getting on’’ - Ordinary working-class youths that simply got on

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7
Q
Anti-school subcultures and social class
MAC AN GHAIL 'MACHO LADS'
A

‘Ordinary lads’ weren’t academic and were indifferent to school.

‘Academic achievers’ were pro-school.

‘Macho lads’ formed an anti-school subculture where they valued acting tough and saw academic work as effeminate

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8
Q

Links between gang membership and social deprivation

DECKER AND VAN WINKLE ‘PUSH FACTORS AND PULL FACTORS’

A

Push factors come from social, economic and cultural factors (feeling excluded pushes youths to gangs).

Pull factors are factors that attract people to join gangs (e.g. hierarchy, respect, money, safety)

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