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Home » Anomie Theory

Anomie Theory

Taylor, Walton & Young – The New Criminology (1973)

Social and Academic Context Emerging during a period of massive societal upheaval—including civil rights movements, anti-colonial struggles, and student protests—The New Criminology reflects the desire for a sociology that not only explains but also transforms the world. The authors take a clear stance against the dominant American sociology of the 1960s and advocate for a

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Robert K. Merton – Social Structure and Anomie (1949)

With his essay “Social Structure and Anomie”, published in 1949 in the volume Social Theory and Social Structure, Robert K. Merton presented a key text of modern sociology. The essay first appeared in 1938 in the American Sociological Review, but is best known from its extensively revised versions in Merton’s Social Theory and Social Structure

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Kesselventil zur Versinnbildlichung der nomietheorie

Social Structure & Anomie

Anomie theories — frequently subsumed under the broader category of strain theories — are concerned with explaining why violations of social norms and deviant behavior exhibit systematic variations across societies and historical periods. These theories examine the relationship between crime and the structural organization of society, positing that deviance emerges as an adaptive response to

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Dollarscheine – Anomietheorie nach Merton

Anomie theory (Merton)

Robert K. Merton’s Anomie Theory expands Émile Durkheim’s concept of anomie by linking deviant behavior to social structures that create unequal access to culturally approved goals. Crime is understood not as individual pathology but as a collective adaptation to blocked opportunities in a stratified society. Merton argues that when socially approved goals (such as economic

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