Important: Are you really a deviant?
Deviance: Commonly refers to violations of social norms (including legal norms) but many sociologists reject this behavioral or normative definition of deviance and see deviance instead as simply a label. Deviance in this view is that which we react to, through social control responses, as deviance.
Deviant behavior usually evokes formal and informal punishment, restrictions, or other controls of society. These formal and informal controls constrain most people to conform to social norms. Despite the social sanctioning and controlling, however, we sometimes observe deviant behavior around us. Then, why do some people engage in such deviant behavior even if social punishments are expected? Sociologists have attempted to explain it in various aspects.
Deviation, Primary:Where the individual commits deviant acts but does not adopt a primary self-identity as a deviant.
Deviation, Secondary: Where the individual commits deviant acts and although recognizing that these acts are socially defined as deviant remains committed to continue them. This results in the adoption of a deviant self identity that confirms and stabilizes the deviant life style.
The distinction between primary and secondary deviance is important in the development of social policies that reduce the chances of primary deviance inducing secondary deviance.
Primary Deviance is an initial deviant act. Deviant behaviors that are short-term or cease with adult status.
Primary Deviance is correlated with social, cultural, structural and psychological conditions.
Secondary deviance is deviance that results from being labeled as deviant. It evolves out of the offender's self-concept. It evolves from other's conception of a person.
Secondary Deviance is long-term and does not cease with adult status. Secondary Deviance includes chronic deviant behavior by people who come to identify themselves as deviant.
The concept of deviance:
A. Deviance or norms are created or defined by society through a general consensus. Therefore, what is deviant is not a property inherent in the thing or act.
B. Deviance does not conform to expectations and norms that exist within a society.
C. Group interests play important role in defining deviance.
D. Large or powerful segments of society determine norms and thus determine what is or is not deviant:
1. People at the bottom of the socio-economic scale are most often labeled as deviant, because the powerful in society determine what is deviant
2. However "deviant" something may be, unless the powerful disapprove, it is not deviant
3.Thus a behavior participated in by all or a majority of people can still be considered deviant.
4.For conflict theorists, deviance is defined & enforced in a way that perpetuates the dominance of elites over the less powerful or powerless.
5.Studies of the sociology of rule-making show that what is defined as deviant is the outcome of a political process
6.Group interests play an important role in defining what behaviors are considered deviant or normal
E. Observations of social interaction reveal that definitions of deviance tend to vary according to who performs the act.
F. Few people are arrested and processed as criminals, whereas, self-report surveys reveal most people violate rules.
G. Behavior must be context appropriate: what is normal in one context may be deviant in another.
H. The nature of deviance changes from culture to culture.
1.The nature of deviance changes from culture to culture due to the fact that behavior is socially labeled as deviant or normal and the individual cultures and societies define deviance in their own ways.
2.Cross-Cultural Analysis indicates that notions of right and wrong vary among cultures.
I. Deviance is noticeable historically because the nature of deviance changes over time
J. Deviant behavior is not a violation of anything absolute i.e., it is not inherent in any particular forms of behavior
K. In an analysis of deviance, the concept of relativism denotes that no behavior is "naturally" or morally deviant or bad.
1.All behavior is socially labeled either as deviant or normal, but this does not mean that any behavior is acceptable.
2.Relativism is the contention that what is deviant in any society is the consequence of social or political processes.
Examples of Deviance as a violation of social norms
A. Folkways are the most informal of norms
Examples of a Folkway include manners, etiquette, customs, etc.
B. Mores are serious norms that may or may not be written into law
Examples of a More include flag burning, questioning someone's religion or politics, etc.
C. Laws are a type of norm with the support of the state or government sanctioning either criminal or civil punishment
1.Criminal law is law which the state will prosecute. The body of rules or principles prescribed by authority or established by custom, which a state, community, society, or the like recognizes as binding.
2.Civil law is law which allows one citizen to prosecute another.
Social control includes all social processes used to minimize deviance from social norms; e.g., culture, norms, socialization, law, etc. There are two types of Social Control
1.Direct Social Control is Regulation through the enforcement of normative standards. It is often done by a person(s) with authority and responsibility.
2.Indirect Social Control is Regulation through ideological or cultural manipulation. It is often done by surrogate human authority such as rules, customs, laws, even machines. Indirect social control is accomplished through socialization.Indirect social control is the most powerful type of social control.
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- -Because this is my first CSS Journal i'm very happy the way i just start to be more detailing in choose my colors i like and reflects my surroundings, my culture and my retina. The colors are only a way to interct with the world. The optic nerve and the central retinal blood vessels enter the back of the eye at the disc (also called the blind spot). The back 2/3 of the eye is called the retina and gives us our wide field of view vision.
It contains millions of rod and cone cells which convert light energy into electrical signals sent to the brain via the optic nerve. The macula (6x7 mm) is the tiny spot on the retina where finer detail focus occurs. The fovea (1.5 mm) is just behind the macula where the highest concentration of cone photoreceptors are concentrated. Light rays are focused by the lens onto the fovea for straight ahead vision and fine detail. The sclera is the tough outer wall of the eye and the choroid is the thin spongy layer between it and the retina filled with blood vessels. Next: Optical Illusion and Op Art
It contains millions of rod and cone cells which convert light energy into electrical signals sent to the brain via the optic nerve. The macula (6x7 mm) is the tiny spot on the retina where finer detail focus occurs. The fovea (1.5 mm) is just behind the macula where the highest concentration of cone photoreceptors are concentrated. Light rays are focused by the lens onto the fovea for straight ahead vision and fine detail. The sclera is the tough outer wall of the eye and the choroid is the thin spongy layer between it and the retina filled with blood vessels. Next: Optical Illusion and Op Art
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