Conflict Theory In Criminal Justice

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Conflict theory in criminal justice is that the law is used to maintain the power of the dominate group in society and to control the behavior of the individuals who threaten that power (Walker, Cassia, & Miriam, 2012, p. 22).” Conflict theorists believe that laws were designed so the punishments were harsher for typical crimes committed by the lower class. An example of this is street crimes, even minor financial ones are routinely punished quite severely, while large scale financial and business crimes are treated much more leniently. Theft of a television might receive a longer sentence than stealing millions through illegal business practices. Another example when it pertains to juveniles comes from “William Chambliss, in a classic essay “The Saints and the Roughnecks,” which compared the outcomes for two groups of adolescent misbehavers. The first, a lower class group of boys, was hounded by the local police and labeled by teachers as delinquents and future criminals, while the upper-middle class boys were equally deviant, but their actions were written off as youthful indiscretions and learning experiences (Greek, 2005).” “The consensus model assumes that as people gather together to form a society, its members will naturally come…show more content…
The Conflict theorist believes the purpose of the criminal justice system is to maintain economic and political control by the dominant class. Conflict theorists also believe that laws were designed so the punishments were harsher for typical crimes committed by the lower class. Consensus theories focus on believing that societal norms and values are shared among almost everyone in society so the laws are created to protect society as a whole. According to Consensus theorists, society as a whole makes the laws of the criminal justice
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