Programs
Assignment #3 – Programs
The Hawaii Opportunity Probation with Enforcement (HOPE) is a community supervision strategy for substance-abusing probationers. The main goals of HOPE are to reduce drug use, recidivism, and incarceration. Conduct an internet search to learn more about this program.
Develop an essay addressing the strategies that are used to achieve their goals. You can use this program or write about any other program out there with the same goals mentioned above. Be sure to cite your resources.
Acceptable Length: 2-3 pagesFormatting Requirements:
- Put your name, course and section number, and assignment title at the top of the document.
- Use one-inch margins.
- Use a 12-point Times New Roman font.
- Use double line spacing in the document.
- Use MLA_Citation_Style
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
Lecture Notes
Learning Objectives
7-1 Examine the history of race, crime, and
deviance
7-2 Analyze stock theories of race, crime,
and deviance
7-3 Apply the matrix lens to the relationship between
crime and deviance
7-4 Formulate transformative narratives of crime and deviance
I. A History of Race, Crime, and Punishment
A. Behavior may be criminal and/or deviant – there is a difference between the two
1. Deviance refers to all actions or behaviors that defy social norms
a. This includes from crimes to social expectations
1. For example, wearing the wrong colors to a football game or just
not wearing anything at all
b. When deviance violates ethical standards (like murder) it becomes a crime
II. Building a Foundation of Whiteness
A. Before they ventured to settle the Americas, Europeans were formulating the
foundations of whiteness
1. English colonists arrived with racist stereotypes in reference to Africans and
Native Americans
2. Elite European males institutionalized whiteness to control blacks, Native
Americans, women, and others
a. Laws affecting racial, ethnic, and class groups helped create and sustain
white privilege
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
B. White privilege refers to laws, practices, and behaviors which preserve benefits
for only people identified as white
1. White normative structures are those norms and institutions that obscure the
racial intent of such laws
III. Legislating White Privilege
A. Racial consciousness refers to the awareness of race shared by members of both a
group and the wider society
1. Racial consciousness normalized racial hierarchies by making the notions of
white privilege real at the expense of
people of color
2. White racial consciousness linked to notions of normalcy was first engraved
into our national laws as early as 1790 with the passage of the U.S.
Naturalization Law
a. This law limited citizenship to those immigrants who were “free white
persons of good character”
1. Children born abroad, only those whose fathers were U.S. residents,
were granted citizenship
B. White privilege originated as a set of rules created and preserved through a series
of laws, mores, and beliefs that guaranteed white personal privilege over blacks,
Native Americans, Asians, Hispanics, and others
1. Only blacks could be whipped naked; slave women could be raped, and any
offspring that resulted would be slaves
2. Any white or free woman of color that elected to have sex with, or marry a
male slave, could be forced into slavery themselves
a. These laws were codified into Slave Codes
1. Under this, white males were further empowers when they joined
slave patrols
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
C. Slave patrols were organized groups of white men with police powers used to
regulate a
specific
population by enforcing the Slave Codes
1. The first patrols began in 1757 in Georgia, where the white landowners and
residents were required to serve in slave patrols
a. Patrols would consist of no more than 7 members and would ride
throughout the night, challenging any slaves they encountered and
demanding that they prove they were not engaging in unlawful activities
(Cooper 2015)
1. These patrols were active throughout the south until the end
of the Civil War
D. With the end of the Civil War came new laws aimed at controlling freed blacks
1. Jim Crow laws held sway in the United States from the 1880s into the 1960s
a. These laws were used for white social control and the construction of
deviance
IV. Defining Whiteness in the West
A. During the latter half of the 19th century, whiteness was being defined on the
Western Frontier at the expense of Native Americans
1. Hundreds of Native Americans were held as prisoners and subjected to
military trials
a. Most adult males were found guilty and
sentenced to death
1. The presumption of guilt had nothing to do with whether or not they
were actually warriors, but whether they were merely present at the
scene of fighting
B. In the largest mass execution in U.S. history, 38 Dakota Indians were hanged in
1862 in Mankato, Minnesota on orders of the President of the United States,
Abraham Lincoln
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
1. They were accused of killing 490 white settlers during the Santee Sioux
uprising
2. The Sioux were actually angered by repeated broken treaties and the failure of
the United States to live up to its promises
a. Enraged and starving, the Native Americans attempted to take back their
lands by force
b. After the execution, and under executive orders, the remaining Native
Americans were resettled on “reservations”
1. From this period, and for the next few decades, Native Americans
were consistently vilified as criminals
c. The consolidation of Native American lands, along with the end of the
Civil War, marshaled a new period of whiteness and social control
V. The Effects of Immigration
A. During the California Gold Rush of 1848–52, the Chinese began to migrate into
the United States to labor on large construction projects
1. Their efforts helped construct the First Transcontinental Railroad and they
were quite successful at mining
a. As gold became scarce, job competition increased, and anti-Chinese
bigotry intensified
2. As early as 1862, the state of California passed “An Act to Protect Free white
Labor against Competition with Chinese Coolie Labor, and to Discourage the
Immigration of the Chinese into the State of California”
a. This act was a reaction by white labor that feared competition with
Chinese immigrants
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
1. It imposed special taxes on Chinese miners, restrictions on
immigration, and led to the forced segregation and creation
of what came to be known as China Town
B. At the beginning of the 20th century, there was a massive immigration of Southern
Europeans
1. A new set of white fears were launched
2. Southern Europeans including the Irish, Italians, and Jews, now joined blacks,
Native Americans, and Asians as collectively perceived as the principal
source of criminality
VI. A Legacy of Racial Profiling
A. Crime, laws, and perceptions of deviance create, (re)produce, and reinforce status
hierarchies based on race and ethnicity
1. At the intersections of these racial hierarchies are both gender and class
a. When we look at how deviance is constructed and enforced, we find that
people of color are most likely to be racially profiled by police
B. Racial profiling is the use of law enforcement and private security to target
people of color
1. It is based upon the perception that certain racial, ethnic, religious, or national
origin groups are guilty until proven innocent
a. While it violates U.S. Constitution guarantees of equal protection and
freedom from unreasonable search and seizure, it continues to be utilized
2. Racial profiling has been a law enforcement tool since slave patrols
a. Today, Blacks, Hispanics, the Roma, Moslems, and Native Americans
experience the most profiling
C. New York Police Department stop-and-frisk policies demonstrate the dangers of
racial profiling
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
1. Stop and frisk began in 2004 and has involved as many as 4 million citizens
a. At least 83% of these have been black and Latino, while 9 out of 10 are
completely innocent (Bergner 2014)
2. Differential policing and enforcement not only stigmatize marginalize people
of color, it socially constructs them as deviants
VII. Sociological Stock Theories of Crime and Deviance
A. The disciplines of sociology and criminology have been concerned with crime
and deviance
1. These concerns have mirrored society’s attempts to justify racial, gendered,
and class hierarchies
a. As such, the standard theories within sociology and criminology may be
considered stock stories
1. Most of the theoretical orientations of these stock stories fall into
two broad categories: biosocial theories of deviance and ecological
perspectives
VIII. Biosocial Theories of Deviance
A. Our earliest and most systematic attempts to understand deviance linked it to
biology
1. Cesare Lombroso ascribed crime and deviance to ethnicity and race
a. He held that Africans, Asians, and American Indians were prone to
crime and deviance (Green and Gabbidon 2012: 96)
b. He held that biological indicators (such as body type and brain size)
were associated with a more primitive form of human being
1.These were signs that someone was likely a criminal
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
2. Lombroso asserted that all non-Europeans were likely to be criminals
because they were lower on the evolutionary scale
B. Biological determinism holds that behavior is innately impacted by
physiology
1. By the time his work reached the United States at the turn of the 20th
century, biological determinism was the dominant explanation for crime
and deviance
a. Within the United States, the overrepresentation of African Americans
(and some immigrants) in crime statistics caused many to link race and
ethnicity to crime and deviance (Gould 1981)
2. While some scholars have revived the discourse linking crime and biology,
they have stressed that a person’s behavior is influenced by both their
biology and environment
a. Critiques of this approach have quickly pointed out the implicit racial,
gendered, and class biases inherent in it
b. Opponents say it also fails to take into consideration social
environment, which can lead quickly to the biological and social
determinism of previous periods (Gould 1981)
VIIII. Ecological Perspectives on Crime
A. The ecological approach situated human behavior within the social
structure external to the individual
1. The cause of crime is found in the community structure in which
people live and interact
a. Community members interact to (re)create the conditions that
account for criminal and non-criminal behavior
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
B. Several theoretical strands derive from the ecological approach to crime
and deviance
1. Social disorganization
a. Social disorganization links crime to neighborhood ecological
patterns
b. Place matters and differences in crime rates are explained by
structural and cultural factors in communities
1. For example, large levels of immigration and migrations
often produce rapid community changes
2. These rapid changes may then lead to either the disruption
or the breakdown of the structure of social relations and
values resulting in the loss of social controls over
individual and group behavior
3. During the period of stress, social disorganization prevails
and crime (which is thus situational and not group-specific)
develops and persists
2. Culture of poverty
a. Rather than the community, some theorists began to conceive the
culture as the nexus for deviance
1. Different levels of crime among groups arose from
differences in morality (Wirth 1931)
b. Differential association theory elaborated on this perspective by
proposing that differences in criminal involvement among groups
resulted from their different definitions of criminality
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
c. The culture of poverty approach views poverty as a set of choices
made by unwed mothers that perpetuate a crime, deviance, and
other pathologies across generations
1. The process produces children who are both morally
deficient and more apt to commit crime, produce more
unwed mothers, and unwanted children
2. This perspective ignores the structural inequities that
underlie poverty
3. The broken windows theory
a. The broken windows theory (Wilson and Kelling 1982) argued
that a significant way of decreasing serious crime was to halt
vandalism
1. Police may be a means of controlling crime, but it does not
eliminate or curtail it
b. Abandoned properties, vandalism, litter, and filth not only
demoralize community residents, but also produce a form of
nihilism (an extreme form of fatalism where people feel
overwhelmed by life and circumstances) that leaves people feeling
hopeless
1. While fixing broken windows may lead to increasing sources
of pride in a community, it does not explain lower levels of
crime and deviance
IX. Applying the Matrix to Crime and Deviance
A. The matrix approach posits that powerful elites construct and enforce laws that
protect their interests
1. Du Bois (1904) was the first to theorize and document the intersectional or
matrix approach to crime and deviance
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
a. He dismisses the biological basis of crime and points out how social
structures influence crime and deviance
B. The matrix perspective helps us interrogate our assumptions associated with what
is deviant and normal, or between what is criminal and noncriminal
X. The Spaces and Places of Crime and Deviance
A. One of the seminal theoretical approaches observes that spaces and places where
stress were greatest were also more likely to have higher levels of deviance
1. General strain theory (Agnew 1992) proposes that racism produces stressful
events and environments which can lead to crime
a. It is suggested that African Americans view the United States from a
perspective where race matters because it significantly alters their life and
chances for success (Unnever and Gabbidon
2011)
2. Systemic racism occurs when a system of inequality based on race, often
within institutional settings such as police, prisons, or court systems, are often
associated with differential outcomes in crime and deviance
a. Because of systemic racism, people of color are more likely to be victims
of police abuse, racial profiling, and differential criminal sanctioning
B. Racialization, gender, and disempowerment interact within communities
1. They produce increased surveillance, criminalization, and
incarceration
2. Inner city black males find their lives more difficult as police assume they are
neighborhood problems that should be “fixed”
3. The increased prevalence of non-white males in the criminal justice system is
more about this increase in surveillance than an actual increase in
criminalization
4. Inner-city communities are surrounded by forces beyond residents’ control
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
a. Challenges to identify “manhood” only intensify perceived problems
b. The only thing of value many young men can control is their “rep”
1.Losing rep means losing credibility
C. The “Code of the Street” enforces respect, justice, and rights
1. While the Code puts a check on wholesale violence, it actually perpetuates a
climate of violence (Anderson 1994, 1999)
a. At the intersection of race, class, gender, and age, young men of color
face a double bind where, thwarted in their efforts to be identified as
“hardworking men,” they choose “hypermasculinity” and deviance as a
means of demonstrating their manhood (Rios 2006, 54)
1. This hypermasculinity has been romanticized and glorified
in hip-hop and is linked to increasing levels of interpersonal
conflicts, group violence and gang violence, and sexual
exploitation of young women of color (Nettleton 2011:140)
b. Those who internalize the code of the street and live by it are more
likely to be involved later in reported acts of violence
XI. The Structure and Context of Crime and Deviance
A. Sociologists have pointed to structural inequities (such as racism and social
isolation) as the causal link to understanding differential outcomes in crime and
deviance (Massey and Sampson 2009)
1. Racism, differential education funding, and the lack of opportunities may lead
to a culture of poverty (not the other way around)
a. All of these factors are structural
B. The matrix informs us that crime and deviance are situational and contextually
specific
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
1. For example, spaces and places like urban centers will produce different types
of deviance possibilities than spaces and places such as corporations
XII. The Prison Industrial Complex
A. The prison industrial complex refers to the policies that target and greatly
expand the U.S. inmate population
1. It describes a system which merges government and industry use of
surveillance, policing, and imprisonment to solve economic, social, and
political problems
a. Political support for these policies is influenced by private prison
companies and businesses that supply goods and services to government
prison entities
B. Richard Nixon made “law and order” significant in his 1968 bid for the
presidency
1. He asserted that “we must declare and win the war against the criminal
elements which increasingly threaten our cities, our homes, and our lives”
a. In his call for action, the “war on drugs” became the most visible
outcome (Soss, Fording, and Schram 2011: 32–5)
C. The key force driving mass incarceration in the United States is the war on drugs
1. Its policies have resulted in the disproportionate increase in the
criminalization of poor, non-white offenders (Alexander 2011; Mauer 2006;
Provine 2007)
2. Blacks and Latino males are disproportionately targeted by police in many
major municipalities
a. Many states’ anti-immigration laws are thinly disguised racial profiling
laws (targeted law enforcement which purposefully single out select
individuals due to their race or ethnic group membership)
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
XIII. The Poverty Link
A. Poverty (aggravated by racial isolation and coupled with inadequate funding of
schools, lack of employment, and aggressive policing) has both immediate and
lasting effects
1. Racial gapes in income, already evidenced between various groups, are
reflected in less than obvious ways
a. When we compare incarcerated with non-incarcerated people aged 27–
42, stark differences are apparent
b. While the racial gaps remain, males see the greatest declines in average
income
c. This reflects that males, and white males, start off with the highest
earnings to begin with
1. Considering this, it is not a surprise that white males see the
greatest income loss after incarceration
d. The smallest income losses are observed among Hispanic women, who
have the lowest wages to start with
B. Among black males without college degrees, about 12% born after World War II
were incarcerated (compared to 36% of those reaching their thirties) in 2005
1. Even higher incarceration rates were observed among black males born in the
mid-1960s who dropped out of school
a. Among this group between 60% and 70% were incarcerated
b. During this period, while the rate of incarceration for those without
college more than tripled, it less than doubled among those with college
degrees
1. A black male dropping out of high school has an incarceration rate
almost 50 times greater than the national average (Western
2006:18)
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
2. Ultimately, it is the community that bears the cost of so much imprisonment
a. As reported by Gonnerman (2004), this has produced “million dollar
blocks” on which some urban areas spend $1 million or more to
incarcerate their residents
XIV. Different Sentencing Outcomes
A. Race, ethnicity, gender, and class disparities in sentencing outcomes has
also been identified
1. Men are 15 times more likely to be convicted than women, and on
average receive about 63% longer sentences than women
a. Women are twice as likely as men to avoid incarceration, even
when convicted
2. The girlfriend theory suggests that women are minor players caught
up in the criminal acts of their boyfriends, which might explain
how/why women are more likely to avoid incarceration
a. It is also suggested that women commit less severe crimes, and
thus warrant less severe
punishment
b. In addition, prosecutors might be lenient to female defendants
because of their family status
c. Women may also be more likely to cooperate, and thus be
granted plea deals (Starr 2012)
3. Black women are three times more likely, while Hispanic women are
69% more likely than their white female counterparts to be
incarcerated (The Prison Project 2005)
B. Drug use among middle class youths is often ignored
1. Drug abuse among the middle class is typically more hidden, more
likely to be in prescriptions, and thus less likely to be criminalized
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
2. Middle and upper class are more likely to have access to health
insurance and consequently prescription medication
a. Drugs such as oxycodone and codeine are now outpacing heroin
and cocaine combined
b. Death rates from prescription drug overdoses nearly tripled
between 1998 and 2006
1. White males, aged 35–54, constituted the highest
proportion of deaths (Warner, Chen, and Makuc 2009)
C. Depending on type of offence, most research finds greater leniency when
the victim is black or Hispanic
1. This is particularly true in sexual assault cases when the victim is a
racial minority
a. Whites are more likely to receive lower bail, suggesting a higher
likelihood of prison time for blacks or Hispanics
2. Hispanics, followed by blacks, were more likely to be denied release
options
a. Blacks in the south are least likely to have felony cases
dismissed
b. White males are more likely to have charges reduced compared
to Hispanics or blacks (Warner, Chen, and Makuc 2009)
c. Those with less income and education are most disadvantaged
(Mustard 2001)
XV. Capital Punishment
A. The United States is the only industrialized Western democracy that still allows
capital punishment
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
1. Hispanics have constituted almost 20% of the new admissions to death row
since 2009 (Snell 2009)
2. Phillips (2008) documents that blacks are 1.75 times more likely than whites
to face the death penalty, and 1.5 times more likely than whites to actually be
sentenced to death
a. Currently, 54% of those on death row are either black or Latino, yet they
make up only 27.9% of the total U.S. population (CIA World Fact Book
2011)
B. Disparities in the application of the death penalty are obvious indicators of more
deeply engrained inequalities across institutional structures
XVI. Identifying Types of Crime
A. Some types of crime, victims, and criminals have become closely associated with
race, class, and gender
B. Differential labeling occurs when some individuals and groups are systematically
singled out and declare deviant by virtue of being in that particular group
1. It derives from social constructions of crime and deviance
2. Differential labeling is a belief within the United States that blacks, Hispanics,
and other disadvantaged groups are more prone to crime, violence, disorder,
and welfare
a. The persistent stereotypes may lead members of these groups to respond
in ways that confirm the beliefs
b. Women, particularly of color, bear the historic scars of being labeled
whores, gold-diggers, and dykes (Farrell and Swigert 1988:3)
3. It makes us more likely to associate racial minorities with crime
a. This can lead to police brutality and unlawful use of force
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
C. Hate crimes are defined as the use of violence and intimidation to further
stigmatize and marginalized disenfranchised individuals and groups
1. In 2014, the FBI reported that law enforcement agencies across the country
reported a total of 5,479 hate
crimes
a. About half (47%) were racially motivated
1. Others included sexual orientation, religion, ethnicity, gender
identity, disability, and gender
D. Throughout history, race, class, and gender have provided a rationale for targeting
select groups for victimization
1. Among women of color, sexual abuse has been used as a means of social
control
2. The most common violent crime on college campuses involves the rape of
women (Sampson 2002)
a. One in six women report that they have been either victims of attempted
or completed rape
1. Of the 17.7 million women that fall into these categories, Native
American and Mixed race women are the largest group (34.1% and
24.4% respectively)
2. Since many rapes go unreported, the figure could be much higher
b. Among all groups, persons in the poorest households have more than
double the rate of violent victimizations than persons in higher income
households (Harrell and Langton 2014)
3. Domestic farm workers (particularly undocumented workers) may be hidden
victims of sexual abuse
a. These victims, isolated physically, legally, or both, are least likely to
report or be able to prove the charge of rape or abuse
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
b. In 2006, 33% of domestic workers experienced verbal or physical abuse
or were made to feel uncomfortable by their employers
1. A third felt their race/ethnicity or immigration status contributed to
their employer’s behavior (Domestic Workers United and Data
Center 2006)
E. Gangs range from the more or less informal groups who frequently commit
crimes to more formal groups with clear hierarchies, histories, and culture
1. The latter groups participate in what can be classified as organized crime
2. Urban gangs associated with organized crime have expanded their operations
to include alien smuggling, human trafficking, and prostitution
a. Today, four major gang regions can be identified
1. U.S.-based gangs operate behind prison walls (where they also
recruit), in the military (where there are at least 53 separate
gangs), and internationally in Central America, Mexico, Africa,
Europe, China, and the Middle East
b. 3 of 5 gang members are adults (Howell and
Moore 2010)
c. Most gang members are male
d. Latinos and African Americans dominate gang membership
1. White gangs are more prevalent in rural areas (National Gang
Center 2012)
3. Gangs are associated with poorer, urban communities
a. Their resistance is seen as a response to unemployment and other services
(Egley, Howel, and Harris 2014)
b. Racial and ethnic gangs serve many purposes
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
1. They provide a sense of belonging, order, purpose, community,
defense, and resources (status, drugs, and money) (Howell and
Moore 2010)
F. White-collar crime is referred to as crime committed by a person of
respectability and high social status in the course of his (or her) occupation
(Sutherland 1939)
1. African Americans and other disadvantaged groups are extremely unlikely to
engage in corporate-level white-collar crimes like antitrust activities
a. Women are also less likely to participate in white-collar crime
1. These differences manifest the clear structural opportunities that
coincide with race, class, and gender
2. In contrast, a particular form of white collar crime, welfare fraud (the illegal
use of state welfare systems to knowingly withhold or make false statements
for the purposes of obtaining more funds than allowed) has been historically
linked to poor women, especially of color
3. White-collar crime is often a crime of opportunity and not deviousness
4. Sentencing judges tend to be more persuaded toward leniency by highly
respectable and privately compensated counsel
a. Judges are also more likely to be swayed by histories of philanthropy and
community service (Shover and Hochstetler 2006: 98)
5. Among prominent white-collar offenders are large corporations such as Rite
Aid, Xerox, and K-Mart (Simon 2006)
XVII. Transforming the Narrative of Race, Crime, and Deviance
A. How people perceive themselves (particularly youth) is often framed by
the media
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
1. We do not often see positive portrayals of youth or their communities
(Waymer 2009)
a. The effect of a steady stream of negative reporting on crime and
violence associated with inner-city areas is rarely considered
1. Without counter-stories, the pictures many youths have of
themselves (and the pictures others form) are negative,
deviant, and violent
B. The matrix lens alerts us to the reality that groups and individuals
throughout the American narrative have been quite effective at both
resisting and surviving oppressive systems
1. Resistance is the conscious and unconscious attempts by individuals
and groups to challenge the dominant values of society
XVIII. Scientific Advances
A. DNA evidence is being used to exonerate innocent people falsely convicted of
crimes
B. A group entitled the Innocence Project has been tracking cases associated with
exoneration after DNA evidence is assessed
1. Over the 17 years the Innocence Project has been tracking cases, a total of 344
convictions have been overturned
a. Among 344 cases, 20 were on death row
b. On average, they served 14 years
c. Of these, 215 were African Americans; 105 were Whites; 25 were Latinos;
2 were Asian Americans (Innocence Project 2016)
XIX. Alternatives to Incarceration
A. Some state legislators are now proposing alternatives to incarceration
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
1. In 2010, the U.S. Supreme court ruled that sentencing juveniles in
homicide cases to life without parole was both cruel and unusual
punishment
2. Judges are looking for more creative ways to both hold youth responsible
while at the same time diverting them from prisons
a. Community service has replaced incarceration for many youth
1. This allows youth to evaluate their behavior and gain a better
understanding of how their actions impact others
B. The next part of the solution requires us to invest in alternatives to detention and
incarceration
1. Most criminal acts are drug related and tend to be non-violent
a. We term these as victimless crimes
2. Many states, such as Maryland, have begun to explore cost-effective
approaches that divert offenders from prison
a. Their program provided by community based drug treatment, life skills
training, literacy training, education, and job skills training have been
highly successful
1. Many believe that investing in this human capital will
produce a higher return to society than incarceration
(McVey, Schiraldi, and Ziedenberg 2004)
XX. Emphasizing Choice
A. Any remedy must take into consideration individual agency
1. People make choices, including the choice to commit crime
B. Neither crime nor deviance is caused by race, ethnicity, gender, or class
Instructor Resource
Coates, The Matrix of Race
SAGE Publishing, 2018
1. These choices are circumscribed by environments, histories, and structural
inequities
C. The prevalence of one specific type of crime and/or deviance are determined by
the kind of resources available within a particular community, institution, or
situation and the kinds of choices people make
1. While society cannot force individuals to make difference choices, it can hold
them accountable and provide effect alternatives to deviance
2. Even for those currently caught up in deviance, alternatives to detention have
been demonstrated to effectively deter further criminality
a. These include suspended sentences, probation, fines, restitution, and
community service
XXI. Adjusting the Narrative of Race and Deviance
A. We must shift away from an individualistic approach that defines specific
individuals and communities as in need of “fixing”
1. Using the matrix lens, we must understand that some differences in life
outcomes are rooted in structural inequities
B. The matrix lens does not present people, communities, and groups as victims,
though they might have been victimized
1. It projects them as agents, who see not only what is available but also what
obstacles they must overcome to achieve it
- Chapter 7: Crime, Law, and Deviance
Learning Objectives