Social Control: Views from the Social SciencesJack P. Gibbs This stimulating collection of original essays offers the reader a number of scientifically-based projections about the future regulation of crime and behaviour. As a state-of-the-art guide to interdisciplinary perspectives on social and bahavioural control, this innovative work will be welcomed by researchers, teachers and students in criminology, sociology, psychology, and the other social sciences. |
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Page 14
... Sigmund Freud , and Jean Piaget in Europe , argued in their otherwise often divergent manner that human nature , the human self , far from being simply given , was in fact developed through social interaction . As Cooley once said ...
... Sigmund Freud , and Jean Piaget in Europe , argued in their otherwise often divergent manner that human nature , the human self , far from being simply given , was in fact developed through social interaction . As Cooley once said ...
Page 15
... Sigmund Freud's construct , the superego , is too well known to require discussion here . It is arrived at from a different point of view than Durkheim's or Mead's conceptualizations , and Freud uses a different terminology , yet it ...
... Sigmund Freud's construct , the superego , is too well known to require discussion here . It is arrived at from a different point of view than Durkheim's or Mead's conceptualizations , and Freud uses a different terminology , yet it ...
Page 25
... Sigmund Freud , this system of moral knowledge is called the superego . Perhaps the most important assumption of psychoanalytic theory for the analysis of control is that the conflict with parents during the oedipal period serves as a ...
... Sigmund Freud , this system of moral knowledge is called the superego . Perhaps the most important assumption of psychoanalytic theory for the analysis of control is that the conflict with parents during the oedipal period serves as a ...
Contents
Preface | 7 |
The Notion of Control in Sociological Theory | 13 |
The Notion of Control in Psychological Theory | 23 |
Copyright | |
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action activities American argued argument audience authority structures Bandura become behavior modification central coercive Communication conception of social concern conflict context corporations Coser crime criminal cultural decisions definition deterrence deviance differentiation division of labor divorce Durkheim E. A. Ross economic edited effect empirical functions human behavior human energy implies increase individuals industrial influence institutions interaction internalization issues Journal Krasner learning theory legal realism less major manipulation Marxist mass media minority moral nonhuman energy normative consensus notion party percent person political population problem proposition punishment question regimes regulation regulatory relations relationships role sector social control social learning social learning theory social order Social Psychology social scientists society sociologists sociology sociology of law suggests superego television tion token economy University Press values viability women York