Critical
criminology was developed in America and Britain. Among its proponents were
George Vold Bonger Taylor, Young Walton, Quinney Reiman and
trick. They were influenced by the works of Karl Marx and Friedrich
Engels, and derived much strength from conflict sociology
it was critical of the criminal justice, and politico economic
structures of bias, discrimination and exploitation which they claimed were the reasons
why certain people commit crimes ,others are not
and why the poor are criminalized and the rich are not and variously called new
criminology, conflict radical or liberal criminology.
Critical
School of Criminology
The
critical criminology is also known as the radical school or new criminology.
This Radical Approach to criminology gave expression to the feelings of
disenchantment and disappointment arising from the alienation of the poor
people in the society. The new
criminology sought to offer a way out and replace the old order, which would
automatically bring a new dawn in the history of criminology.
The radical approach perceives crime as a great feature of capitalist
society and its system of political parameters, which gives more promise to the
position of the exploiting elites. This explanation has support in the works of
Karl Marx (1818- 1883) and Friedrich Engels. (1820-1895) although they were a
long way from being criminologists. Their observation was that high incidence of crimes was
associated with capitalism. In fact, the thrust of Friedrich Engels is the
deficiencies of the capitalist economic system resulting in high levels of
crime. According to him, “Immorality is fostered in every possible way by the
conditions of working class life. The worker is poor, life has nothing to offer him, and he is deprived of virtually
all pleasures. Consequently, he does not fear the penalties of the
law. Why should he restrain his wicked impulse? Why should he leave the
rich man in undisturbed possession of his property? Why should he not take at
least a part of this property for himself? What reason has the worker for not
stealing? Distress due to poverty gives the worker only the
choice of starving slowly, killing himself quickly or taking what he needs
where he finds it – in plain English - stealing.
And it is not surprising that the majority prefers to steal rather than
starve to death or commit suicide” (Carrabine,
2004).
Karl Marx’s theory of criminal behaviour was enshrined on
the capitalist tendency to maximize profits in order to expand its wealth and
property and by implication exploit; the working class (Proletariat) the result
is that, the worker feels alienated, estranged, from his labour. Which lead to
criminal behaviour. Crime of violence, property offences and drug crimes are
the by-products of this economic oppression and alienation and societies
contradictions that are apparent in capitalist.
Working-class
crime is an expression of “rebellion” against inequality and against a system that used the legal system –
including the law, the police, court and prison as weapon in the class war.
A number of writers have adopted this perspective in
opposition to the “left idealism” that crime is not a problem of the
working-class people” and have developed a realistic approach to law and order.
The left idealist position has been criticized for its apparent lack of interest in issues of policy. John Lea
and Jack Young (1984), for instance, argue that, in contrast to the left
idealist view, crime really is a problem for the working classes; and a problem
that needs talking with realistic policies and practices. This is not to deny
the impact of crimes of the powerful but to suggest that the working-classes
are most often the victims of crime.
Young
and Matthew (1992) distinguish between what they term the realist and the
radical positions. The classical Marxist approach is linked with radical
notions that the criminal justice
system does not work in the interest of the mass of
working people and should therefore be abolished. The legal system, as
they observed is just another aspect of the ruling – class domination.
Nevertheless,
this left radical view has been attacked by sociologists and criminologists
writing from the left realist position. The left realists believed that much to
the injustices and marginalisation of some sections of the population encourage
crimes. And they proffered no solutions.
The Marxist approach believed that socialism will reduce
crimes fundamentally as crimes are rooted in social inequality. Young and
Matthew (1992) stressed the need for an adequate criminal justice system that
works in the interests of all social groups and provides adequate protection
for the poor. Left realism is advocated for a social democratic approach to
crimes as well as the development of effective
policies.
Richard
Quinney (1977) allying with Bonger argued that under capitalism the law is used to oppress the working-classes. He
suggests that what we now regard as “criminal” will disappear only once
capitalism itself has disappeared. He contends that there will be no greed and
profit – seeking under socialism; and
the ruling class will not exist
to use the law as a weapon to define as deviant the working class activities they do not wish to allow.
The vital issues of the traditional or orthodox Marxists such as Bonger and
Quinney were that crime is the product of inadequate social conditions.
Williem Adrian Bonger (1876 – 1940) believed that there was
a relationship between economic situation and criminality. He argued that the
propensity to commit crime is higher in the working class than the capitalist
class. He suggested that the major shift was in the emergence of capitalism. To
him, it was capitalism that generated an egoistic culture-with capitalists
being greedy and workers becoming
demoralized. In other words, he sought to establish a causal
link between crimes and material conditions by looking at the effects of competition and “egoism” on criminal thought. By “egoism”
people become self-seeking and think only of themselves. Since the capitalist
economic system generally widens the gap
between the capitalists class and the working class. . As a result of this extreme
gap created, often make the working class to steal from the capitalists in
order to survive. Therefore, Bonger concluded that crime can only be eliminated
through a radical reorganisation of the mode of production and the dethronement of capitalism.
Jeffrey Reiman considered the preponderance of working class
in the criminal group from another perspective. He argued that poor people are
often arrested and charged of crimes .Conversely, the crimes of the rich such
crimes as embezzlement and
serious tax evasion, are treated as trivial as if not criminal offences. There
was a distortion of criminal
justice. Reiman therefore
called for an equal distribution of wealth and income to
enable an equitable opportunities for all and
sundry.
The
neo-Marxists, argued that limitations were found in the early theories i.e.
(the classicism and positivism) on the explanations of control of crimes but
should be discovered on the critical school of criminology; the radical
theories (labeling , new deviance, neo-Marxism, etc) .This is what
they referred to as the wider structural explanations of control of crimes . To
them, that is the roots of criminal behaviours.
From the works of Taylor, Walton, young, Bonger, Reiman and
Quinney appeared the neo-Marxist positions, based in the “materiality” of crime
and were called the critical criminology, working-class criminology or
neo-Marxist criminology. The background of the exposition was that the poor and
the working class were trulymthe
problems of crime. They believed that the poor and the working class are
marginalized and deprived of the means of production. Therefore, crime became
manifested as a result of the relative deprivation and marginalisation. They
concluded that the causes of crime need to be looked for in deep structural inequalities
(Carrabine 2004). This approach implies that its law and other cultural norms
are created directly by the rich and
powerful. The analysis implies that criminality springs up only to the extent
that a society treats its members unequally. In other words, the point of
departure is that the Marxists
framework for the analysis of
crime was that crime is a product of the competitive and exploitative
conditions of capitalism and as such should be overthrown .But the view of the
neo-Marxists was that the elites dominate society and they use the criminal law
as an instrument for coercion and domination; a violation of certain inherent
rights, a crime based only on a ruling- class conspiracy. In the contrary, it
is the crimes of the powerful, (the elites of capitalism). The works of the
neo- Marxists were borrowed from the conflict theory and Marxism
REFERENCES
Carrabine, Eamonn, et al (2004). Criminology: A Sociological Introduction.
London: Routledge.
Ferdinand, Theodore N. (1966). Typologies of Delinquency: A Critical Analysis.
New York: Random House.
McGuire, Mike, et al, eds. (2002). The Oxford Handbook of Criminology. 3rd edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Neubeck, Kenneth J. and Davita S. Glasberg (2005). Sociology: Diversity, Conflict, and Change. Boston: McGraw-Hill.
Williams, Hall J. E. (1984). Criminology and Criminal Justice. London: Butterworths.
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