Newman, T., (2014). How should our society deal with people who use drugs? Drug Policy…
What are the main social influences on an individual’s health in the area of the use of illicit drugs? 2-5 marks…
“Deviancy is not a quality of the act a person commits but rather a consequence of the application by others of rules and sanctions to an ‘offender’. Deviant behaviour is behaviour that people so label.”…
A deviant act is one that challenges the social norms of society. According to Erikson, “Deviance is not a property inherent in certain forms of behavior; it is a property conferred upon these forms by the audience which directly or indirectly witnesses them” (Erikson, 1962, p.308). An act of deviance is judged upon and determined by society. What one person sees as deviance does not mean that everyone else shares the same viewpoint. Time is another contributing factor that weighs heavily on a society’s definition of deviance. Over time society’s norms change and thus a person’s perspective of what is deviant will also be likely to change. Nonetheless, a deviant act generates attention and this paper will focus on the social norm of a person’s personal space.…
“Deviance in sociological context describes actions or behaviors that violate cultural norms including formally-enacted rules (e.g., crime) as well as informal violations of social norms.”…
In “Criminal Constructions of Drug Users”, Kevin Whiteacre explores how academia has contributed to the demonization of drugs and users. Instead of viewing drug use as something recreational, or something that provides “immediate, easy and certain short-term pleasure”, academia takes it upon itself to “explain drug use... Results in a continuous stream of publications showing whatever statistically significant (though rarely robust) differences between users and nonusers that can be found” (Whiteacre 5). Drug use is seen as something that inherently belongs to a group that has typically deviated from societal norms and practices. The distinction between users and nonusers can be seen as an Othering tactic which separates the deviants from the accepted members of society. Academia and criminology have been keen with focusing on particular groups of people within society in order to create negative attitudes towards them.…
When it came to choosing just one viewpoint that I thought I agreed most with I found it to be a difficult task. I would have to say that psychodynamic and sociocultural viewpoints are the ones that I just could not choose one over the other. The reason I had such a difficult time choosing, I believe is because substance abuse there are so many different factors that make the subject at hand so extensive.…
References: Baker. J. (October,2004). The Sociological Origins of “White-Collar Crime.” [The Heritage Foundation; leadership for America], Retrieved from Ebesco database.…
In 2005, NIDA released “Drug Abuse and Addiction: One of America 's Most Challenging Public Health Problems”. In this article, they name top social problems related to drug abuse. They name drugged driving and violence as two additional problems. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates between 10 and 20% of drivers in motor vehicle accidents are under the influence of illegal drugs. Further proof of the negative effects of drugs on society, a study has shown that more than half of arrested criminals tested positive for drug-use at time of crime (Bachman 2001).…
NIDA InfoFacts: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction. (2011, March). Retrieved June 18, 2011, from National Institute of Drug Abuse: http://www.drugabuse.gov/infofacts/understand.html…
A drug can be described as a substance that has a physiological effect on the body when it is ingested or otherwise introduced into the body. Illicit Drugs are drugs that the sale, supply and manufacture of has been forbidden by law. When a person becomes mentally or physically dependent on a substance they are described as being ‘addicted’. Two of the main questions when trying to understand drugs and drug consumption are establishing who takes drugs and why do people take drugs. The Crime Survey for England and Wales 2012/13 (CSEW) estimates that 1 in 3 adults have taken illicit drugs and 8.2% have taken illicit drugs in the last year the same survey estimated that 36.7% of 16 to 24 year olds have taken illicit drugs in their lifetime whilst 16.3% of them have taken illicit drugs in the last year. There may be many reasons why people consume drugs; social causes of drug use, Different social…
Gabbidon, S. L. , & Greene, H. T. (2009). Code of the Street is Keeping Crime…
Cited: Macionis, John J. "Deviance." Society: The Basics. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2013. 162-63. Print.…
In society today, we all want to put a stop to crime and illegal drug activity. In our daily lives, we do not think about how drugs affect the crime rate until it has happens to us or someone close to us. One of the issues that warrant this kind of attention to this problem is that we don’t fully understand the relationship between drug use and criminal activity. As we know it today, there are three contextual relationships between drug use and criminal activity. There are those drug users that commit crimes because they are under the influence, those who look to crime for the support of their drug addiction, and environmental factors and biological factors that can be responsible for a person to use drugs and commit crimes. We can take a close look at how these three situations relate to criminal activity and we could be taking a step closer to understanding why there is a problem today.…
Every interaction that occurs is a product of societal teachings of what is considered deviant. It has a hand in every aspect of a person’s actions and emotions. The teaching of society dictates when it is appropriate to initiate the use of a certain action and express a particular emotion so that no act of deviance occurs. These teachings of deviance are made under this notion to understand people who act different from the social norm. This creates the question, why do these acts of deviance occur or why is this person a deviant? Society uses the question why, as a basis to create theoretical perspectives regarding deviance and social control to produce an answer relative to that time period. The perspectives are molded around what the majority of society does, the social norm, in order to fix or scare the deviant behavior out, thus the root of social control is created. As society progressed and the same question why was ask, perspectives shifted to fulfill the question of the origin of deviant acts. The three key perspectives start with Christian demonology then shift to Classical criminology followed by Medicalization of deviance. These three theoretical perspectives were each molded out of the social norm associated with that era. These perspectives each highlighted a point of reality in which to build upon in the creation of the perspective and discounted other aspects to generate what is considered deviant.…