Anomie, Social Change and Crime
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Bernburg, Jon Gunnar (Author)
Title
Anomie, Social Change and Crime
Abstract
The last decade has seen a revived interest in using anomie theory in crime and deviance research. The present paper contributes to this development by offering an examination of a particular extension of anomie theory, namely, Messner and Rosenfeld's Institutional-Anomie theory. Explicating Institutional-Anomie theory relative to the sociologies of Durkheim, Merton and Polanyi, I find that this theory goes beyond Merton by using a strain of thought that is critical of liberal society. By bringing in the notion of the disembedded market economy, a central notion in the institutionalism of Polanyi and Durkheim, this theory links crime, anomie, and contemporary social change. I also discuss some of the limitations of linking crime with societal level processes in a Durkheimian rather than Mertonian manner.
Publication
British Journal of Criminology
Volume
42
Issue
4
Pages
729
Date
September 2002
Journal Abbr
British Journal of Criminology
Language
English
ISSN
00070955
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Bernburg, Jon Gunnar. 2002. “Anomie, Social Change and Crime.” British Journal of Criminology 42 (4): 729.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- anomie
- crime
- criminology
- disembeddedness
- DURKHEIM, Emile
- MERTON, Robert
Link to this record
Comments and observations
Be the first to comment!
Please email us your comments, and we will gladly review your submission.