Monday 22 September 2008

Social Engineering: The creation of a criminal society

The Daily Telegraph tells us today that virtually all of us are criminals, that we break the law every day, in fact it says that millions of us who consider ourselves law abiding citizens break around 7 laws per week.

The most common offences are speeding, texting or talking while driving, dropping litter, downloading music illegally or riding bicycles on the pavement. Other daily crimes include eating or drinking while driving, parking on pavements or not wearing a seatbelt.

But that surely depends on what you consider to be a crime. We all understand that Bank Robbery and Murder are crimes because they are assaults on the person or property, but do we also consider that putting to much rubbish in your bin is a crime, driving at 75mph on the motorway, or dropping an apple core is a real crime.


The Open University tries to explain Crime thus.

The Meaning of Crime.

What is a crime? Good question, but how to go about answering it? For most of us, most of the time, crime is something other people do. So why not check that against personal experience? Have a go at the questionnaire below, private and confidential we assure you. Estimate the total fines and prison sentences you might have under gone had you been caught, charged and convicted of these offences.

Table 1

Incident Offence Maximum Penalty
1 Have you ever bought goods knowing or believing they may have been stolen? Handling stolen property £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
2 Have you taken stationery or anything else from your office/work? Theft £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
3 Have you ever used the firm's telephone for personal calls? Dishonestly abstracting electricity £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
4 Have you ever kept money if you received too much in change? Theft £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
5 Have you kept money found in the street? Theft £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
6 Have you taken ‘souvenirs’ from a pub/hotel? Theft £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
7 Have you ever left a shop without paying in full for your purchases? Making off without payment £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
8 Have you used a television without buying a licence? Using a television without a licence £1,000 fine
9 Have you ever fiddled your expenses? Theft £5,000 and/or 6 months imprisonment
10 Have you ever been in possession of cannabis? Misuse of drugs £2,500 and/or 3 months imprisonment
Total Fine =
Prison Sentence =

(Source: Muncie and McLaughlin, 1996, p. 37)


How can these different senses of crime be reconciled with each other? Have another look at the questionnaire. Does it assume a particular way of thinking about crime? The Maximum Penalty column is the give-away. All of the offences carry fines or the possibility of imprisonment. So there is an assumption that crimes are acts that are codified in law; in this case a law that has been created, policed and enforced by the UK state (the police, the criminal justice system, parliament, the Home Office, etc.). Crimes are acts which break the law of the land. Think of this as the legal definition of crime.

Another place to start answering a question like What is a crime? is a dictionary. And even the Oxford English Dictionary sees things in a more complex light than the legal definition of crime. The OED defines crime as:

An act punishable by law, as being forbidden by statute or injurious to the public welfare … An evil or injurious act; an offence, sin; esp. of a grave character.

But this definition begs a whole host of questions. Ones that come immediately to mind are: Does the law cover all acts that are injurious to public welfare? Does that include disastrous economic decisions taken by the government? Does the law forbid all the sins of this world? Is it against the law to fail to honour one's mother or father? For an orthodox Muslim consuming alcohol is a sin, but it is hardly a crime codified by UK law. Is it always against the law to take another life? What about conduct in wartime or assisting euthanasia?

The reason that the OED's definition raises more questions than it answers is that the definition combines at least two ways of thinking about crime which are often in practical conflict with each other. On the one hand, crimes can be thought of as acts which break the law – the legal definition of crime. On the other hand, crimes are acts which can offend against a set of norms like a moral code – the normative definition of crime. So, the two meanings of crime can not be reconciled because a great deal of legally-defined crime is not considered to be normatively-defined crime.

However, norms come in different forms. Potentially criminal acts can be judged against formal moral systems, like religious beliefs. Quakers and pacifists, for example, would not accept that refusal to fight in a war was a normative crime, whatever the state might say. Alternatively, some legally-defined crimes might not be unacceptable when judged against the norms, codes and conventions of socially-acceptable behaviour. Many personal telephone calls from work are routinely considered a reasonable perk of the job. Keeping money we find in the street, in small amounts, is just good luck – who's going to ask at lost property anyway? Most office cultures assume that employees service some of their private stationery needs from the office cupboard.

We all want to crack down on crime

Looking again over the questionnaire, we wondered what someone reading it a hundred years ago might have made of it. For a start they might have wondered what a television or a telephone is. Can there be a crime of not paying your licence fee before there are televisions? Even on a narrow legal definition of crime, what is a crime varies over time. They might also have been surprised that possession of cannabis is a crime. It certainly wasn't when cannabis tincture was routinely available from Victorian pharmacies as a painkiller. It isn't a crime now in parts of the Netherlands.

So what a crime is depends on whether you view it from a legal or a normative perspective; what formal and informal normative codes and conventions you are guided by; what moment in history you are considering; and which particular society you are looking at. There is no simple, fixed, unassailable, objective definition of crime. The meaning of crime cannot be separated from the many and varied uses of the term in a particular society. Social scientists would describe this by saying the meaning of crime is a social construction.

The upshot here is that the current government whilst attempting to create a society where the rules and totally black and white, to keep the people in line totally, in its creation of over 3000 new criminal offences, have obfuscated the law, skewed what people in the UK have always seen as normative, i.e. civil law misdemeanour's, for which they are now faced with overbearing criminal law, the loss of liberty, fines and the criminal records that goes with it.

I feel that it is time to put Crime back in the box, redefine what is and is not a 'Crime', essentially an assault upon person or property, and return the smaller indiscretions back to the civil arena where they belong.

In making everything a crime, creating a nation of criminals, storing every detail on databases and making it available to anyone willing to pay for it, it is small wonder that people have little respect or regard for either the law, or those whose job it is to uphold it.

The priorities are skewed, the real crime goes unpunished in favour of meeting vacuous targets fulfilled by detecting the minor misdemeanour's, it is little wonder then that the citizen feels, and is to all intents and purposes oppressed.

1 comment:

Robert said...

NuLabour gives us nothing except ridicule, hatred, contempt and oppression. NuLabour ignores our interests, laughs at us and reviles us, picks our pockets, discriminates against us with affirmative action and racial quotas, and kicks us in the teeth when we try to protest or petition for the redress of just grievances. NuLabour rigs the electoral process so that no one without ten million dollars in the bank should even think about running for office, and so that only criminals, incompetents, and mentally unbalanced mediocrities can win. NuLabour passes laws that give foreigners who are in our country illegally, and perverts who literally wallow in their own filth during sexual acts, a preferred and privileged status over us.

Simple problems demand simple solutions.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VY0cwk88BVQ

or

http://tinyurl.com/46o4hq