NCJ Number
              118941
          Date Published
  1989
Length
              14 pages
          Annotation
              After examining some of the problems and objections to integrating theories of crime and deviance, this chapter pursues theory integration under social learning theory.
          Abstract
              There is apparently a consensus that theoretical integration is desirable to eliminate duplication and to centralize and prune related concepts. There is no serious barrier to integration caused by differing conceptions of the dependent variable of crime and deviance so long as the dependent variable is measured empirically as a dichotomy or a scale in which the absence of deviance is counted as conformity and its reciprocal is counted as deviance. Social learning is one kind of integration which has been given considerable attention in the criminological and deviance literature. Social learning theory includes all the mechanisms of learning. Other aspects of social bonding, anomie, and other theories could be further explicated by reference to discriminative stimuli, schedules of reinforcement, satiation, deprivation, matching function, behavior chains, learning deficits, conditioning, and shaping.
          