1 / 13

Introduction to Theory

Introduction to Theory. Its not as boring and useless as you might think. What is theory?. Not “ivory tower” BS that doesn’t apply to the “real world” Quite to the contrary: Maahs’ cardinal rule of theory: EVERY THEORY HAS A POLICY IMPLICATION

freya
Download Presentation

Introduction to Theory

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Theory Its not as boring and useless as you might think

  2. What is theory? • Not “ivory tower” BS that doesn’t apply to the “real world” • Quite to the contrary: Maahs’ cardinal rule of theory: • EVERY THEORY HAS A POLICY IMPLICATION • Corollary: Every policy implication is derived from a theory

  3. Definition of a Theory • Set of statements that explain how and why concepts are related • In our case, what set of concepts explain crime? • Concept = abstract idea that can be measured or “operationalized”

  4. How to recognize a good theory • Empirical Support • “Real world data” (observations) • Survey or Experiment • Other Criteria • Scope • Parsimony • A good theory explains a lot with a little

  5. Micro and Macro • Micro level theories • Why do some individuals have a higher probability of committing crimes than others? • Biology, psychology, but also sociology • Individual differences, but also environment • Macro level theories • Why do some aggregates have a higher crime rate than others? • Mostly sociology, mostly “culture” or “social structure”

  6. Barkan Example • Explaining Bulimia and Anorexia Disorders • Macro • Why “young women?” Why higher rates of these disorders in certain countries? • Barbie doll culture? • Micro • Why, even in countries with high rates of the disorder, do most young women not have the disorder? • Effective parenting, high self-esteem…

  7. Establishing Causation • X (Cause) precedes Y (effect) • Causal ordering • X statistically related to Y • Correlation (need not be perfect) • Relationship is not “spurious” • How to rule out spuriousness? • Experimental Designs • Survey Research and Statistical Control

  8. The Experimental Design Experimental Group Get “Treatment” ALL SUBJECTS RANDOM ASSIGNMENT MEASURE OUTCOME Control Group (Get “placebo”)

  9. Statistical Control • Barkan Example: • Survey reveals that “pimple saturation” related to “time spent listening to rock music” • What would you want to control for? • “HOLDING CONSTANT” or “INDEPENDENT OF” • Similar: Survey reveals that abused children and likely to be violent when they reach adolescence

  10. A Brief History of Criminological Theory • Prior to 1700s, no real theory • Humans as “depraved” • Classical School (1750s-late 1800s) • Age of enlightenment (Locke, Rousseau) • Humans as “enlightened” (rational, hedonistic) • Utilitarian Thinkers • Beccaria (Italian Economist) On Crime and Punishment • Bentham (England): focus on English justice system

  11. What killed the Classical School? • The percieved failure of classical school reforms • Changing legal code did not “cure” crime • Development of physical sciences • Darwin, Galileo, Newton • There are cause-effect relationships that can be deduced from observation and manipulation • August Compte • Apply this logic to the study of human behavior

  12. The Positive School • 1900-Present • Humans as “determined” • Determined by what? • Biology • Psychology • Sociology • Criticims of Positive School • Legal Definitions controlled by those in power • Overly “deterministic” • Criminals as “different” and “inferior”

  13. Classical School II: Resurrection • Social Context of the 1970s • Perceived failure of rehabilitation • “Neo-classical” theory • Deterrence theory, Rational Choice theory, Routine Activities Theory • These theories still compete with “positive” theories today.

More Related