CULT 1005 Crime, Deviance and Society
Credit Points 10
Legacy Code 102039
Coordinator Ashlee Gore Opens in new window
Description This unit introduces students to the theory and practice of criminology and the sociology of deviance. It considers the ways in which social order is produced, maintained and transgressed from a range of perspectives, including the Chicago school, labelling and deviance theory, Marxism, feminism, and post-colonial theory. These perspectives are explored through a discussion of contemporary issues and controversies, such as terrorism, asylum seeking, the criminalisation of protest, Indigenous incarceration, alcohol and other drug use, and transnational crime.
School Social Sciences
Discipline Criminology
Student Contribution Band HECS Band 4 10cp
Check your HECS Band contribution amount via the Fees page.
Level Undergraduate Level 1 subject
Equivalent Subjects CULT 1009 - Introduction to Criminology LGYB 0467 - Introduction to Criminology CULT 1006 - Crime Deviance and Society (WSTC)
Learning Outcomes
- Summarise the major theories in criminology and the sociology of deviance.
- Demonstrate knowledge of the historical, intellectual and political origins of theoretical perspectives.
- Identify meanings and examples of key concept and theories.
- Discuss the ways in which social norms, and concepts of crime and deviance are socially and culturally constructed.
- Apply theories of crime and deviance to contemporary social and political debates.
- Apply research skills to select and evaluate sources for use in academic writing.
Subject Content
The criminogenic city
Durkheim and strain
Youth and subculture
Radical deviance and labelling theory
Marxism, poverty and class
Feminism and critical masculinity theory
Ethnicity, race and post-colonialism
Culture and deviance as edgework
Sexuality, Foucault and disciplining bodies
Globalisation and neo-liberalism
Explaining crime and deviance
Positivism
Place and Crime
Anomie and Strain
Deviant and Criminal Subcultures
Labelling: Constructing Crime and Deviance
Race, Indigeneity and Postcolonial Theories
Feminism and Critical Masculinities
The Surveillance Society and Social Control
Political Economy and Crimes of the Powerful
Green Criminology
Cultural Criminology
International Dimensions of Crime and Deviance
Assessment
The following table summarises the standard assessment tasks for this subject. Please note this is a guide only. Assessment tasks are regularly updated, where there is a difference your Learning Guide takes precedence.
Item | Length | Percent | Threshold | Individual/Group Task |
---|---|---|---|---|
Short Answer | 1,000 words | 40 | N | Individual |
Annotated Bibliography | 500 words | 20 | N | Individual |
Essay | 1,500 words | 40 | N | Individual |
Prescribed Texts
- White, R, Haines, F and Asquith, N 2017,?Crime and Criminology, 6th?Edn, Oxford University Press, Melbourne.
- Rodas, A, Simpson, M, Rawlinson, P, Kramer, R, Ryan, E, Taylor, E, Walters, R, Beckley, A, Cunneen, C, Gore, A, Porter, A, Poynting, S and Russell, E 2020. Crime, Deviance and Society: An Introduction to Sociological Criminology. Cambridge University Press, Port Melbourne.
Teaching Periods
Sydney City Campus - Term 1
Sydney City
Day
Subject Contact Andrey Zheluk Opens in new window
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WSU Online TRI-2
Wsu Online
Online
Subject Contact Ashlee Gore Opens in new window
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Spring
Penrith (Kingswood)
Day
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Liverpool
Day
Subject Contact Ashlee Gore Opens in new window
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Online
Online
Subject Contact Ashlee Gore Opens in new window
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Sydney City Campus - Term 3
Sydney City
Day
Subject Contact Andrey Zheluk Opens in new window