Is there a single definition of deviance agreed by upon the objectivism side of the deviant debate
- >some see it as statistical rarirty, some base it on harm
Does statistical rarity mean the action or person is deviant
What is social harm
-they interfere with the smooth running of society
What is ontological harm
-there is a threat to the fundamental ways we understand the world and our place in it
eg; when relegious beliefs of people contrast with those of another people
->this threatens the fundamental way that people in the world understand their place in it
Was masturbation viewed as deviant during the victorian era
- >beds were hard, intense exercise promoted, cold baths, anti-masturbation devices
What is normative violation
-it is that deviance refers to people, behaviors, or characteristics that violate society’s norms
Describe the absolute moral order
How do objectivists today view norms in opposition to before
Are norms associated with the Canadian Criminal code
- >these norms then become laws
What is the consensual views of laws
-they see it as arising out of social consensus and then it is equally applied to all
What are critiques of the consensual views of law
-the critiques are that laws only reflect the behavioural expectations of only some of its citizens
What is the conflict view on laws
What is the interactionist view on criminal law
- >ignoring the interest groups of those who appeal to those in power to rectify a perceived social ill
What did the researcher Theo suggest about deviance
-he used the terms high-consensus deviance and low-consensus-deviance to distinguish between forms of deviance that have differential levels of support in the broader society
What is the foundation of the moral codes that subjectivists use
-note groups that hold the most power are more likely to dictate which moral codes become dominant
What are the two different types of constructionism
- the other is labelled as soft and or contextual
How is social constructionism socially significant as a process(describe the three ways)
1) It does not refer to the individual behaviour or characteristic
- >rather the place in social order
2) Roles assigned to people who exhibit that behaviour or characteristic
3) Meanings attached to the behaviour or characteristic
What is the sociocultural aspect of the social construction hierarchy
-beliefs, ideologies, values and systems of meaning
What is the global aspect of the social construction hierarchy
Describe deviancy along a continuum with obejctivism and subjectivism being at either end
How do objectivism and subjectivism differ in the way that they focus on social processes or on the individual itself
-subjectivism focuses more on the social processes(perceptions and reactions to the act) that make the act deviant
What is the deviance dance
What is the definition of moral enterpreneurs
What is the process of social typing
- >it is essentially society typing or categorizing individuals as deviant