Concept information
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criminology and criminal justice
criminology
criminological theory
psychological theories of crime
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criminal justice
juvenile justice
delinquency theories and theorists
psychological theories of crime
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law and justice
juvenile justice
delinquency theories and theorists
psychological theories of crime
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prisons and correctional facilities
juvenile justice
delinquency theories and theorists
psychological theories of crime
...
race and crime
juvenile justice
delinquency theories and theorists
psychological theories of crime
Preferred term
neutralization theory
Definition
- In the 1950s, the criminologists Gresham Sykes and David Matza sought to explain how juveniles who commit delinquent acts are able to do so while still accepting conventional social values and norms. They concluded that juveniles would be able to commit such acts only if they could temporarily overcome their sense of a moral obligation to obey the law by using one or more of the mental techniques of neutralization, mechanisms to block the potential guilt and negative self-image associated with violating social norms. [Source: Encyclopedia of Social Deviance; Neutralization Theory]
Broader concept
Belongs to group
URI
https://concepts.sagepub.com/social-science/concept/neutralization_theory
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