Criminology Trait Theory PDF

Title Criminology Trait Theory
Author Emily Lubas
Course Introduction to Criminology
Institution The University of Tampa
Pages 10
File Size 253.9 KB
File Type PDF
Total Downloads 83
Total Views 136

Summary

Biochemical, Neurological, Genetic, Evolutionary, Psychodynamic, Behavioral, Cognitive...


Description

Chapter 5 Trait Theory Introduction to Trait Theories - Trait Theory -

The view that criminality is a product of abnormal biological or psychological traits Subdivided into two major categories: - Those that stress biological makeup

- Those that stress psychological functioning - What do we mean by “personality traits”? - Personality reflects the totality of beliefs, attitudes, behaviors, and ways of interacting with the social world - Personality is comprised of an array of traits (discrete human characteristics) - Vary across people - Stable throughout life course Development of Trait Theory - 1975: Renewed interest for human trait explanations of criminal behavior - Sociobiology (Wilson, 1975) - The view that human behavior is motivated by inborn biological urges to survive and preserve the species -

Assumes that while social behavior is genetically transmitted, it adapts to and is shaped by existing environmental conditions - Behavioral traits are shaped by both inherited traits and the environment - Biological and genetic conditions affect how social behaviors are learned and perceived - Behavior is determined by the need to ensure survival of offspring and replenishment of the gene pool - Biology, environment, and learning are mutually interdependent factors

- Now more commonly referred to as Biosocial Criminology Contemporary Trait Theory - Compared to the original trait theorists (Lombroso, etc), contemporary trait theories don’t suggest that one biological/psychology trait explains all criminality - Explanations vary based upon the person - Inheritance of criminal tendencies vs neurological deficits vs blood chemistry disorders - Interaction of personal traits (with a genetic/biologic origin) with environmental factors - Individual vulnerability model - Some people develop physical or mental conditions at birth, or shortly thereafter, that affect their social -

functioning regardless of their environment Differential Susceptibility model - Some people possess physical or mental traits that make them vulnerable to adverse environmental influences

Biological Trait Theories

 Biochemical Conditions and Crime -

Diet -

-

Improper diet can cause chemical and mineral imbalance and can lead of cognitive and learning deficits, which are associated with ASB - Lack of proper nutrition in childhood possible pathway to violence Sugar and Hypoglycemia -

-

Mixed evidence on sugar intake and ASB High levels of reactive hypoglycemia found in groups of habitually violent offenders Hormonal Influences -

-

Abnormal levels of androgens can produce aggressive behavior - Related to sensation-seeking, impulsivity, dominance, and reduced verbal skills - Testosterone - Prenatal exposure to unnaturally high levels of testosterone permanently alters behavior - Age-Crime Curve, Gender differences Premenstrual Syndrome

-

- Females more likely to be aggressive and commit suicide just before or during menstruation - Significant number of incarcerated females committed crimes during premenstrual phase - Small percentage of women appear vulnerable to cyclical hormonal changes associated with anxiety and hostility Lead Exposure -

Low levels of lead in the blood have been shown to affect IQ, ability to pay attention, and academic achievement - Delinquent children have much higher bone lead levels than the general population - Linked to mental illnesses such as schizophrenia - Trends in crime associated with environmental levels of lead exposure

-

About 3% of all US children under the age of 6 are exposed to high levels of lead; more heavily concentrated in minority populations

-

Environmental Contaminants - Prenatal exposure to PCBs has been linked to lower IQ and attention problems - Severe air pollution shown to cause cognitive deficits and changes in the brain structure - Affects intelligence, cognitive control - Causes neurological deficits associated with school failure - Especially harmful to babies and small children b/c it may affect their developing nervous systems Neurophysiological Conditions and Crime - Neurophysiology: The study of brain activity - Studies show that violent criminals and substance abusers have impairment in the prefrontal lobes (higher cognitive functioning), thalamus (relay station, sleep), medial temporal lobe (long-term memory) -

- Cognitive misfirings and suppressed neural activity Executive Functioning (EF) - Higher-level cognitive skills used to control and coordinate your other cognitive abilities and behaviors - Mental processes that enable us to plan, focus attention, remember, and juggle multiple tasks - Reduction in EF is associated with a range of developmental, neuropsychiatric, and medical disorders -

-

-

ADHD, CD, Schizophrenia, major depression, diabetes, alcoholism

Brain Structure - Aggressive behavior may be linked to abnormal activity in the amygdala AND a lessening of activity in the frontal lobe - Amygdala- an area of the brain that processes information regarding threats and fear - Frontal lobe- brain region linked to decision making and impulse Control - Age-crime curve, Gender differences - Reactive vs Proactive aggression - Successful vs unsuccessful psychopaths Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) - Inappropriate lack of attention, impulsivity, hyperactivity - Associated with poor school performance, grade repetition, bullying, stubbornness, lack of response to discipline - Various causes -

-

Brain anatomy and function, genes, head injury, prenatal exposure to alcohol or nicotine, environmental toxins Linked to the onset of criminal career - Highly comorbid with CD

-

-

- More likely to be arrested, to be charged with a felony, and have multiple arrests as adults Brain Chemistry - Neurotransmitters: chemical compounds that influence or activate brain functions - Abnormal levels of various neurotransmitters have been linked to aggressive ASB - Dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin, COMT, GABA -

-

Associated with higher likelihood of using illicit drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, be physically aggressive, engage in sex offenses in adolescence

- MAOA- “warrior gene” possible explanation for gender gap Variance in neurotransmission can be caused by genetics, structure/function abnormalities in the brain, exposure to toxins prenatally or in early childhood

Arousal theory -

-

People seek to maintain a preferred level of arousal but vary in how they process sensory input - A need for high levels of environmental stimulation may lead to aggressive, violent behavior patterns (sensation seekers) Causes are thought to be brain chemistry and/or low resting heart rate - Raine et al. (2014) found that low heart rate may produce a need for stimulation that is associated with aggressive behavior patterns -

Strong predictor of chronic aggression and violence, especially when combined with an aggressive personality and adverse environment Fearlessness hypothesis

Genetics and Crime - Gene-crime association may be direct or indirect - ASB is inherited; genetic makeup of parents is passed on to children; genetic abnormality is directly linked to a variety of ASB - Genes are related to some personality or physical trait linked to ASB - Parental deviance - Cambridge Youth Survey -

-

Adoption studies - Adoptees who had a criminal biological parent AND who had a criminal adoptive parent had the highest rate of being convicted of a crime - Adoptees who had a criminal biological parent and a noncriminal adoptive parent had the second highest rate of being convicted of a crime Twin Studies - Monozygotic (MZ) twins share 100% of their DNA - Dizygotic (DZ) twins share 50% of their DNA (similar to non-twin siblings) - Minnesota Study of Identical Twins Reared AparT

-

-

MZ twins who are raised together are no more similar to each other than twins who are raised apart, showing a strong genetic component for behavior Inheritability of Crime: Is Crime Inherited? -

Partially: heritability estimates from twin studies show that variance in antisocial behavior is about 50% genetic factors and 50% environmental factors - Biosocial criminologists recognize that environments play a significant role in genetic expression and brain functioning

Evolutionary Views of Crime - Evolutionary theory focuses on the fact that the ultimate goal of ALL life is reproductive success

-

-

Over the course of human history, the most aggressive violent people have gained reproductive advantages that ensure survival of their genetics and have created a population of aggressive young males Competition for scarce resources influenced and shaped human species - Aggression was crucial to human survival, and therefore those traits were passed down to future generations The evolution of gender and crime - Survival of the gene pool - Aggressive males have had the greatest impact on the gene pool

- Risk-takers: more sexual encounters with a variety of females - Aggressive: more resources and higher social status - Evolutionary benefits of indirect aggression for women Biological Trait Theories: Summary 

Biochemical

•The major premise of the theory is that crime, especially violence, is a function of diet, vitamin intake, hormonal imbalance, or food allergies. •The strength of the theory is that it explains irrational violence and shows how the environment interacts with personal traits to influence behavior. •The research focuses of the theory are diet, hormones, enzymes, environmental contaminants, and lead intake.

Neurological

•The major premise of the theory is that criminals and delinquents often suffer brain impairment. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and minimal train dysfunction are related to antisocial behavior. •The strengths of the theory are that it explains Irrational violence and shows how the environment interacts with personal traits to influence behavior. •The research focuses of the theory are CD, ADHD, learning disabilities, brain injuries, and brain chemistry.

Genetic

•The major premise of the theory is that criminal traits and predispositions are inherited. The criminality of parents can predict the delinquency of children. •The strengths of the theory include the fact that it explains why only a small percentage of youths in high-crime areas become chronic offenders. •The research focuses of the theory are twin behavior, sibling behavior, and parent-child similarities.

Evolutionary

•The major premise of the theory is that as the human race evolved, traits and characteristics became Ingrained. Some of these traits make people aggressive and predisposed to commit crime. •The strengths of the theory include its explanation of high violence rates and aggregate gender differences in the crime rate. •The research focuses of the theory are gender differences and understanding human aggression.

Psychological Trait View -

Focuses on the psychological aspects of crime, including the associations among intelligence, personality, learning, and criminal behavior The Psychodynamic Perspective - Freudian psychology: humans carry with us “residue” of significant emotional attachments and turmoil during childhood, which which then guides our future interpersonal relationships -

- Human personality has 3 “structures:” Id, Ego, Superego Links crime to a manifestation of feelings of oppression and the inability to develop the proper psychological defenses and rationales to keep these feelings under control - Criminality enables troubled people to survive by producing positive psychic results

- Id, ego, superego closely resemble brain functioning Attachment Theory - The ability to form an emotional bond to another person has important psychological implications that follow people across the life span - Failure to develop proper attachment during infancy and early childhood leads to a number of psychological disorders -

Impulsivity, difficulty concentrating, difficulty in school

-

Meta analysis- lack of attachment predicts involvement in a broad spectrum of criminal activity

The Behavioral Perspective - Behavior Theory - Behavior is reinforced with rewards and extinguished by punishments - Social Learning Theory - People learn to be aggressive through life experience - Behavior modeling:

-

- Family interactions - Environmental experiences – Mass media Factors that may contribute to violent behavior: An event that heightens arousal

-

Aggressive skills

- Expected outcomes - Consistency of behavior with values Cognitive Theory - Focus is on how people perceive and mentally represent the world around them and solve problems - Information processing theory: -

How people process, store, encode, retrieve and manipulate information to make decisions - Influences perceptions of the world - Influences views of where one fits into the world - Environmental and biological factors can alter information processing abilities -

-

Chronic offenders may continuously use information incorrectly when making decisions

Mental Scripts - Internal Dialogue which has the power to shape our realities - Scripts change over life-course - Narrative identities that promote desistance from crime ( Maruna, 2001)

Psychological Trait View: Summary  Theory

Psychodynamic

Major Problems The development of the unconscious personality early in childhood influences behavior for the rest of a person’s life. Criminals have weak egos and damaged personalities.

Strengths

Research Focus

Explains the onset of crime and why crime and drug abuse cut across class Mental illness and crime. lines.

Behavioral

People commit crime when they model their behavior after others they see being rewarded for the same acts. Behavior is reinforced by rewards and extinguished by punishment.

Cognitive

Individual reasoning processes influence behavior. Reasoning is influenced by the way people perceive their environment.

Explaining the role of significant others in the crime process shows how the media can influence crime and violence.

Shows why criminal behavior patterns change overtime as people mature and develop their reasoning powers. May explaining the aging-out process

Media and violence; effects of child abuse.

Perception; environmental influences

Personality and Crime - Personality - Reasonably stable patterns of behavior that distinguish one person from another - Various personality traits have been empirically linked to a variety of aggressive antisocial behaviors, drug addiction, and white collar/business crimes -

Impulsivity, hostility, narcissism, hedonism, and aggression highly correlated with criminal and antisocial behavior - Hans Eysenck’s PEN Model: Three major elements of personality - Psychoticism, Extraversion, Neuroticism (PEN) - Extroverts: energetic, enthusiastic, action-oriented, chatty, glib, and self-confident - Introverts: quiet, low-key, deliberate, detached from others - Extreme extroverts or introverts at risk for antisocial behavior Personality and Crime - Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD) and Psychopathy - Often the term APD is used interchangeably with the term psychopathy, however there are clinical differences -

-

Causes -

DSM does not list psychopathy as a personality disorder Psychopathy is primarily defined by a lack of emotional empathy, or “callous/unemotional” traits APD is defined by combination of traits such as impulsivity, hedonism, habitually and pervasively disregard /violate the rights of others  without remorse, pattern of irresponsibility, lying and manipulation, failure to obey laws/norms which warrant criminal arrest. Family experiences Genetics

- Abnormal brain structures Intelligence and Criminality - Nature Theory - Intelligence is largely determined genetically and low-intelligence is linked to criminality - Nurture Theory - Intelligence is not inherited but is largely a product of the Environment - Low IQ does not cause crime but may result from the same -

environmental factors IQ-Crime Link Controversy - Travis Hirschi and Michael Hindelang suggested a link exists between intelligence and crime - Low IQ in youths cause poor performance in school, and school failure is highly related to delinquency and adult criminality

Mental Disorder and Crime - Complex link between mental illness and crime - Incarcerated offenders are significantly more likely to suffer from a severe mental illness compared to gen pop. - Certain types of mental illness are more closely linked to certain types of offenses - Only a small minority of seriously mentally ill individuals commit violent crimes. -

More of crime risk when other factors are present Drug/Alcohol Addiction Stressors like Family Dysfunction and Unemployment Lack of access to appropriate treatment

-

-

-

Link between mental illness and crime may also be spurious - Risk of violent victimization - Police more likely to arrest mentally ill - Commonality in root cause: e.g., child abuse Possible origins of mental illness - Genetic predisposition - Traumatic family and upbringing - Genetic predisposition - Traumatic family and upbringing - Brain trauma - Substance abuse - Learning, such as in an abusive home Possible relationships between crime and mental disorders/illness Mood disorder, oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder

Evaluation of Trait Theory - Trait Theories should not be confused with historical determinist theories (Lombroso, etc) -

-

-



Some people carry the potential to be violent and/or antisocial, and such behavior occurs when these pre-existing tendencies are triggered by environmental/social conditions How are trait theories used to create programs that address crime? - Primary Prevention Programs - Secondary Prevention Programs - Treatment Programs These programs incorporate various therapeutic techniques and rationales to address different behavioral issues - CBT - Multisystemic Therapy - Medical and physiological components...


Similar Free PDFs