Essay On Social Disorganization Theory

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In result of the growing criticism and the consistent use of official data to empirically evaluate the theory, social disorganization theory, in result, began to decline. Recent theoretical and empirical work however, has led to important refinements of social disorganization theory and an expansion to include constructions beyond the original macro level components that were first specified by Shaw and McKay. Through the work of Robert Bursik, Robert Sampson, and others who have critiqued the theory, social disorganization theory resurged when scholars refined the propositions associated with the theory and clearly defined what social disorganization was. In essence, scholars began to focus on the informal social control aspect of social …show more content…

Sampson and Groves (1989) demonstrated that through the analysis of British Crime Data, ecological characteristics, such as poverty and residential mobility, influenced both informal social control and neighborhood cohesion, therefore showing that social disorganization was in fact a good predictors of rates of crime victimization and explaining the rates of criminal victimization. Due to how strongly related cohesion and control were, Sampson later coined the term collective efficacy and proposed it was the key mechanism in predicting neighborhood violence, thereby explaining higher or lower levels of crime in a community or neighborhood (Sampson, Raudenbush, and Earls, 1997; Sampson 2008). The two important dimensions of collective efficacy in which Sampson noted were social cohesion and mutual support and shared norms or expectations for social control (Sellers and Akers, …show more content…

From a policy perspective, many individuals might focus on one or both of these ecological factors. As a result, (Reisig, 2010) mentioned that some police sponsored programs, such as Neighborhood Watch and community policing, are often associated with the type of informal control implicated in social disorganization theory. Although both these programs have had some impact in reducing crime rates, often times it is not clear as to whether or not what aspect of these programs reduce crime, thus resulting in the need for further investigation (Bennett, Holloway, and Farrington, 2006; Reisig,

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