What is Deviance?

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Deviance can be defined as an absence of conformity to the social norm. Not all deviant behavior is necessarily illegal or harmful to individuals, these behaviors can range from standing in another’s personal space to murdering another individual. In some cases, it can be looked upon as a positive change or a unique and favorable act. Although, considered deviant because it is not the social norm, it still can have a very positive social aspect or lead to social change. Culture and the societies within these cultures have a significant impact on what is considered deviant and what is acceptable or even lawful behavior. The degree of deviance is measured by society’s reaction towards the action and the lawful sanctions that may take place. The definition of what is deviant is ever-changing and will continue to change as long as society evolves.
Looking at society today, compared to what it was 50 years ago, it can be seen that what a culture considers deviant can change overtime. Although this may not be true with all societies and cultures, the preponderance of them have seen this trend over time. This change in a culture’s definition of deviance can change how a culture may act, their moral values, and how these values are upheld and enforced. “The most stimulating ideas to appear in social control studies in the past two decades are surely that a society’s mechanisms of control form a coherent whole; that the principle of that coherence change over time; and that examining the mechanisms of control, their principles of coherence, and the process through which both change provides a window on larger matters.” (Messinger and Greenspan, 58)
Deviance in the cultural setting has its pros and cons in many communities in a s...

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...alth, stature, or other means that society deems as desirable.

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