Gender and Crime
Attempts in various fields have tried to explore a possible relation between gender and crime. Such studies may belong to criminology, sociobiology (which attempts to demonstrate a causal relationship between biological factors, in this case sex, and human behaviors), etc. Despite the difficulty to interpret them, crime statistics may provide a way to investigate such a relationship, whose possible existence would be interesting from a gender differences
perspective. An observable difference might be due to biological
factors (as sociobiological theories claim) or to social and cultural
factors. Furthermore, the nature of the crime itself must be considered. Gender and crime matters are often viewed through the perspective of violent crimes, in an attempt to justify common stereotypes that men are more "aggressive"
than women. However, such a thesis has yet to be proven. It first
requires a pre-definition of "aggressivity", usually related to alleged
masculine traits.
Aggressivity and gender
- Further information: Aggression
Although it is a common stereotype that in the human species, males
are more aggressive than females, a perspective which violent crime
statistics may allegedly support (with the possible exception of crimes of passion, which have been highly reduced with the legalization of divorce
during the 20th century), not all scientists agree on the definition of
"aggressivity." Some researchers have suggested that females are not
necessarily less aggressive, but that they tend to show their
aggression in less overt, less physical ways. For example, females may
display more verbal and relational aggression, such as social rejection. [1] [2].
Sociobiological perspective
- Further information: Sociobiology
Contrary to what has been postulated in outdated studies and by
certain sections of the media, aggressive behaviour is not typically
seen in hypogondal men who have their testosterone replaced adequately
to the eugonadal/normal range. In fact aggressive behaviour has
associated with hypogonadism and low testosterone levels, and it would
seem as though supraphysiological, low levels of testosterone, and
hypogonadism cause mood disorders and aggressive behaviour, with
eugondal/normal testosterone levels being important for mental
well-being. Testosterone depletion is a normal consequence of aging in
men. One consequence of this is an increased risk for the development
of Alzheimer’s Disease (Pike et al, 2006, Rosario 2004). In other
words, testosterone has a calming effect on men.
One study showed that women were more likely than men to deem certain
behaviors that are criminal or unethical, such as inflating an
insurance claim or using "cheap foreign labor", to be less acceptable
(Fisher, 1999).
Sociology of Gender and Crime
- Further information: Feminist school of criminology
Considerations of gender in regard to crime have been considered to
be largely ignored and pushed aside in criminological and sociological
study, until recent years, to the extent of female deviance having been
marginalised (Heidensohn, 1995). In the past fifty years of
sociological research into crime and deviance sex differences were
understood and quite often mentioned within works, such as Merton's
theory of anomie, however, they were not critically discussed, and
often any mention of female delinquency was only as comparative to
males, to explain male behaviour's, or through defining the girl as
taking on the role of a boy, namely, conducting their behaviour and
appearance as that of a 'tomboy' and by rejecting the female role Gang Violence In The PostIndustrial Era, adopting stereotypical masculine traits.
One key reason contended for this lack of attention to females in
crime and deviance is due to the view that female crime has almost
exclusively been dealt with by men, from policing through to
legislators, and that this has continued through into the theoretical
approaches, quite often portraying what could be considered as a
one-sided view, as Mannheim suggested Feminism and Criminology In Britain (Heidensohn, 1995).
However, other contentions have been made as explanations for the
invisibility of women in regard to theoretical approaches, such as:
females have an '...apparently low level of offending' (Heidensohn,
1995); that they pose less of a social threat than their male
counterparts; that their 'delinquencies tend to be of a relatively
minor kind' Girls In The Youth Justice System(Heidensohn,
1995), but also due to the fear that including women in research could
threaten or undermine theories, as Thrasher and Sutherland feared would
happen with their research (Heidensohn, 1995).
Further theories have been contended, with many debates surrounding
the involvement and ignoring of women within theoretical studies of
crime, however, with new approaches and advances in feminist studies
and masculinity studies, and the claims of increases in recent years in
female crime, especially that of violent crime Girls In The Youth Justice System more attention seems to be becoming of this topic.
Statistical data
Warning: crime statistics may be difficult to interpret and should be subject to caution.
In the United States
- Further information: Crime in the United States
In the United States, men are much more likely to be incarcerated
than women. Nearly 9 times as many men (5,037,000) as women (581,000)
were incarcerated in a State or Federal prison at year end 2001.
However, women are the fastest-growing demographic group in prison [1].
In 2004, males were almost 10 times more likely than females to commit murder. Men are also far more likely than women to be the victims of violent crime, with the exception of rape.[2][3]
In Canada
- Further information: Crime in Canada
According to a Canadian Public Health Agency
report, the rate of violent crime doubled among male youth during the
late 1980s and 1990s, while it almost tripled among female youth. It
rose for the latter from 2.2 per 1,000 in 1988 to a peak of 5.6 per
1,000 in 1996, and began to decline in 1999. Some researchers have
suggested that the increase on crime statistics could be partly
explained by the stricter approach to schoolyard fights and bullying,
leading to a criminalization of behaviours now defined as "assault"
behaviours (while they were simply negatively perceived before). The
increase in the proportion of female violent crime would thus be
explained more by a change in law enforcement policies than by
effective behaviour of the population itself. According to the report
aforementioned, "Evidence suggests that aggressive and violent
behaviour in children is linked to family and social factors, such as
social and financial deprivation; harsh and inconsistent parenting;
parents’ marital problems; family violence, whether between parents, by
parents toward children or between siblings; poor parental mental
health; physical and sexual abuse; and alcoholism, drug dependency or
other substance misuse by parents or other family members." [3].
See also
References
- ^ Bjorkqvist, Kaj, Kirsti M. Lagerspetz, and Karin Osterman. "Sex Differences in Covert Aggression." Aggressive Behavior 202 (1994): 27-33. 6 Dec. 2006
- ^ Hines, Denise A., and Kimberly J. Saudino. "Gender
Differences in Psychological, Physical, and Sexual Aggression Among
College Students Using the Revised Conflict Tactics Scales." Violence and Victims 18 (2003): 197-217. 7 Dec. 2006
- ^ Aggressive Girls, Public Health Agency of Canada, last updated 10 June 2006, URL accessed on April 13, 2007
Bibliography
External links
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