Anomie
refers to the lack or ineffectiveness of normative regulation in society.
The concept was first introduced in sociology by Émile Durkheim
(1893) in his study on the social dimensions of the division of labor.
Contrary to Marx, Durkheim argued that the division of labor is not problematic
as long as it is sufficiently regulated. However, under exceptional circumstances,
Durkheim maintained, the division of labor will take on an anomic form,
either because there is a lack of regulation or because the level of regulation
does not match the degree of development of the division of labor. Durkheim
saw such anomic forms present during periods of industrial crises, in the
conflict between labor and capital, and in the lack of unity and excessive
degree of specialization in the sciences.
In his famous study on suicide,
Durkheim (1897) extended the anomie perspective when, next to altruistic
and egoistic suicide, he identified the anomic type of suicide. Durkheim
argued that anomic suicide takes place when normative regulations are absent,
such as in the world of trade and industry (chronic anomie), or when abrupt
transitions in society lead to a loss in the effectiveness of norms to
regulate behavior (acute anomie). The latter type explains the high suicide
rate during fiscal crises and among divorced men.
Durkheim's anomie concept
was not widely influential in sociology until it was adopted and expanded
in Robert K. Merton's (1938, 1968) theory of deviant behavior and opportunity
structures. Differentiating between society's culturally accepted goals
and its institutionalized means to reach those goals, Merton argues that
a state of anomie occurs as a result of the unusually strong emphasis in
US society on the cultural goals (individual success) without a corresponding
emphasis on the legitimate norms (education, work). Anomie refers to the
resulting demoralization or deinstitutionalization of a society's legitimate
means, leading people in some social categories, depending on their socioeconomic
conditions, to be more likely to adopt illegitimate and often illegal means
to reach culturally approved goals.
Based on Merton's work, anomie
became among the most discussed and applied concepts in American sociology
during the 1950s and 1960s. Working broadly within the structural functionalist
framework, various theoretical extensions and reformulations were introduced
and applied in empirical research. Theoretically, anomie was perceived
among non-Marxists as a useful alternative to alienation. In matters of
empirical research, an important development was the introduction of the
concept of anomia. First introduced by Leo Srole (1956), anomia refers
to the social psychological mental states of individuals who are confronted
with social conditions of anomie. Throughout the 1960s, the concept of
anomia was widely adopted in empirical research, in part because it was
easily measurable on the basis of the anomia scale Srole had introduced.
At the same time, applications of Merton's anomie theory were also popular,
especially in the area of crime and deviance. Caught between the polarization
of micro and macro perspectives, the relation between anomia and anomie
at a theoretical level has never been adequately addressed.
During the 1970s and early
1980s there was a general decrease in the popularity of structural functionalism,
and the concept of anomie was much less applied and discussed. Since the
late 1980s, however, there has been a revival of the sociological use of
the anomie concept in at least two areas of inquiry. First, Merton's perspective
of anomie and social structure is now widely recognized as one of the most
influential contributions in criminological sociology (Adler & Laufer
1995; Passas & Agnew 1997). Along with Merton's various theoretical
reformulations since 1938 and its extensions by others, the theoretical
approach has now been broadened as comprising an anomie theory as well
as a strain theory (Featherstone & Deflem 2003). Whereas Merton initially
presented the two theoretical components as inextricably linked, that perspective
is generally no longer accepted. Anomie refers to a state of social organization,
whereas strain is a mechanism that induces deviant behavior. Strain can
only occur under conditions of anomie, but the social condition of anomie
can be accompanied by a variety of mechanisms that lead to deviance. In
contemporary criminological sociology, strain theory is much more influential
than anomie theory.
Second, less widespread but
no less significant is the recent adoption of the anomie concept in research
on societies undergoing rapid social and economic change. This perspective
particularly grew out of sociological efforts to account for the drastic
changes that have been taking place in many Eastern European countries
since the collapse of communism. This notion of anomie largely relies on
the work of Durkheim, who introduced the concept a century before to denote
similar events of transition and upheaval. It remains to be seen if and
how this renewed concept of anomie will integrate with the related literature
on globalization and inequality that is traditionally rather hostile toward
Durkheimian and functional structuralist theories. Perhaps a new integrated
perspective can emerge that will transcend the prior dichotomies between
anomie and rival concepts such as alienation.
SEE ALSO: Alienation;
Durkheim, Émile; Merton, Robert K.; Norms; Strain Theory; Structural
Functional Theory
REFERENCES AND SUGGESTED
READINGS
Adler, F. & Laufer, W.S.,
eds. (1995) The Legacy of Anomie Theory. Advances in Criminological Theory,
Volume X. Transaction, New Brunswick, NJ.
Durkheim, E. ([1893] 1933) The
Division of Labor in Society (Translated by Simpson G.). The Free Press,
Glencoe, IL.
Durkheim, E. ([1897] 1952) Suicide:
A Study in Sociology (Translated by Spaulding J. A. and Simpson G.). Routledge
& Kegan Paul, London.
Featherstone, R. & Deflem,
M. (2003). Anomie and strain: context and consequences of Merton’s two
theories. Sociological Inquiry 73, 471-489.
Merton, R.K. (1938) Social structure
and anomie. American Sociological Review 3, 672-682.
Merton, R.K. (1968) Social Theory
and Social Structure. Enlarged edition. The Free Press, New York.
Passas, N. & Agnew, R. eds.
(1997). The Future of Anomie Theory. Northeastern University Press, Boston.
Srole, L. (1956) Social integration
and certain corollaries: an exploratory study. American Sociological Review
21, 709-716.
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