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The British Journal of Criminology 42:729-742 (2002)
© 2002 Centre for Crime & Justice Studies (formerly ISTD)

Anomie, Social Change and Crime. A Theoretical Examination of Institutional-Anomie Theory

Jón Gunnar Bernburg*

*Bergthorugata 5, 101 Reykjavik, Iceland; JB7992{at}CSC.ALBANY.EDU.

The last decade has seen a revived interest in using anomie theory in crime and deviance research. The present paper contributes to this development by offering an examination of a particular extension of anomie theory, namely, Messner and Rosenfeld's Institutional-Anomie theory. Explicating Institutional-Anomie theory relative to the sociologies of Durkheim, Merton and Polanyi, I find that this theory goes beyond Merton by using a strain of thought that is critical of liberal society. By bringing in the notion of the disembedded market economy, a central notion in the institutionalism of Polanyi and Durkheim, this theory links crime, anomie, and contemporary social change. I also discuss some of the limitations of linking crime with societal level processes in a Durkheimian rather than Mertonian manner.


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