"Becoming Deviant" describes a process by which people move from
an affinity for certain prohibited behaviors to full-blown
deviance. This process includes affiliation with circles and
settings that include or sponsor offenses, followed by
understanding and identification of the offenses as prohibited
behavior by the transgressor. The process can be summarized as
affinity, affiliation, and signification.
The sequential process Matza describes allows for non-recurrent
offending behavior, recidivism, and offending again. His
perspective is motivated by the view that criminological theories
do not explain a number of the fundamental empirical features and
nuances known to be associated with delinquency. This includes the
frequent termination of delinquent behavior at the onset of
adulthood, the often conformist nature of delinquent behavior, and
the large numbers of non-delinquents that are often found in
otherwise ""high-delinquency areas.""
In "Becoming Deviant" Matza reasons that most, though not all,
delinquent behavior constitutes relatively uniform phenomena that
is developmental in character. Individuals proceed from trivial to
more serious infractions. He argues that delinquent behavior
represents youths searching for adventure and is accompanied by
withdrawal from conventional values and associated behavior. Matza
further claims that many delinquents are not fully committed to a
delinquent lifestyle, and this explains why delinquent behavior
often ends with adulthood. Matza's compelling and integrated
theoretical explanation makes this a classic in the increasingly
sophisticated criminological literature. Thomas Blomberg's new
introduction shows why Becoming Deviant remains of central
importance to the field.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!