Therefore they become less integrated and thus are perceived as subject to higher risk from all forms of social deviance. |
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He intends for his work to respond to gaps in both the history of prostitution and the sociology of deviance and social control. |
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We all have our own opinion as to where normal behaviors end and deviance begins but there is no need for me to spell that out here. |
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The country hardly needs lectures about the social roots of crime and deviance. |
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External control refers to rewards that reinforce conformity and punishments that discourage deviance. |
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Such structural disadvantages provide a social context in which crime and deviance can thrive. |
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The deviance from the general standard was both in the architecture of the networks and the activation function itself. |
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We are, it seems, quite intolerant of any deviance from the straight and narrow. |
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In traditional noir, black American communities featured as an exotic place of inscrutable deviance. |
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Best devotes considerable energy to situating himself in the historiography of the sociology of deviance and social control. |
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Ms. Landolt suggests that such liberal interpretations of the Charter's freedom of expression guarantees give licence to extreme social deviance. |
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Known for its dubious deviance from its claims, this issue is no different. |
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Women's involvement in war and violence has often been perceived in terms of deviance and abnormity. |
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None may chastise him for deviance, nor catechize him about the path to take. |
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The Kharijites tolerated no slight deviance from their orthodoxies and ideas of morality. |
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To phrase the first insight simply, deviance will occur because of normative pluralism. |
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The ugly body is thus a body whose difference from the normal body is turned into deviance. |
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Haywood said the sharp-eyed inspectors are on the lookout for the slightest deviance from the rules. |
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He reinforced an Australian cultural stereotype which equated intellectualism with sexual deviance. |
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Almost always used by outsiders rather than inhabitants of the communities so labeled, the term connoted both poverty and deviance. |
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Around the same time, Durkheim was proposing that deviance served an important social function. |
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Thus gendered patterns of socialization and social control were linked to gendered patterns of deviance and delinquency. |
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Acceptance that this kind of deviance is a fact of society is what is necessary. |
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But marks are deducted for any sort of imagination or deviance from the text. |
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But this business seemed to be defacing its own windows, in a reflexive act of social deviance. |
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What role do state institutions play in shaping identities and constructing beliefs about deviance that privilege some groups and pathologize others? |
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Significantly, they have been hugely overlooked as a source of knowledge about criminality within histories of criminology and theories of crime and deviance. |
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Misogyny, psychopathy, and deviance are not disorders that will become extinct if section 213 is repealed. |
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A study in 2000 found increased rates of deviance and conflict on polar and space missions during the period. |
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Various studies of police deviance directly identify police culture as a contributing or casual factor. |
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And it must indeed show its determination to help young people to resist all the forms of excess or deviance in the surrounding environment. |
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The goodness-of-fit of the final model will be tested using the deviance test. |
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By pleading economic necessity, the company tacitly rules out of court all arguments based on morality or claims that they are supporting deviance. |
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They were found guilty of practicing habitual debauchery and inciting others to sexual deviance because of the footage. |
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But his sexual deviance, sporadic drug addiction, and overreliance on hand-to-hand combat may not hold up to scrutiny. |
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The extent of police abuse at any time is unascertainable, and for obvious reasons there is likely to be a substantial dark figure of hidden police deviance. |
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What is important to keep in mind is that the pathologization of sexual deviance is everywhere and at all times a function of power enacted over pleasure. |
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However, the data also reveals that students who engage in various forms of crime and deviance are much more likely to receive police attention than students who do not break the law. |
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Whether the choice behind entering the profession is hunger, deviance, mental illness, drug addiction, sexual liberation, or being forced via criminal activity, that choice is really manifold and unknown to us. |
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While there may be an attitude problem or interpretation at the organizational level, individual deviance must be appropriately addressed as well, not all problems are structural. |
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Chapter four focuses on deviance and disavowal with regard to the desexualization of Chinese North American women. |
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Legal definitions emphasize parental deviance and wrongdoing, thereby directing the focus predominantly on the implicit intent to inflict harm, or the incapability of the parent to protect the child from harm. |
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Taking into account national circumstances, any Party included in Annex I may apply different values, providing relevant elements in support of such a deviance. |
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And maybe some of those people come to think that the explanation for America's deviance is that its road has been easier or that, and this is seductive, that its engine just has more horsepower. |
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This is a novel about sexual deviance, relentlessness, and desire. |
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Not a nanosecond of loneliness or feeling of deviance for being alone. |
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Some definitions amount to neutralization, preparing people to engage in deviance. |
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Here is an artist who dares to jostle together the criteria of beauty and harmony, setting them in opposition to offensiveness and to a deviance of form well-adapted to the reality of a society in crisis. |
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She committed these atrocious acts on the very people she had been trusted to care for and targeted their vulnerabilities in order to satisfy her own sexual deviance. |
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The researchers used positive deviance to design their Web-based program. |
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Since deviance became the focus of concerns, Mashai has been described in terms that fall only barely short of painting him with pointy ears and a tail. |
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The working convict is a rare exception, sometimes envied because his time is occupied, sometimes derided for his deviance from the yardbird norm. |
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