The film "Falling Down" released in 1993 depicts unemployed defense workers who are dissatisfied with society and dissatisfied with the Los Angeles community. The movie following William was the destruction and influence of his actions against other characters in the movie. Clearly, the events and personality in the film are ideal examples of criminal theory and social control. Anomie is characterized by eternal emotions. This is because social norms have collapsed without these norms in order to guide individuals and they can neither find a place in society nor adapt to the constant change of life.
One of the most common control structures is one of the most widely tested criminal logic theories in the literature, following a reckless strategy. Hirschi (1969) continues to integrate various theories: anomie, social collapse, differential association, labeling and containment, and elements of social ties. Kizuna is made up of four elements of attachment, dedication, participation, and faith. Hirschi believes that the stronger the relationship, the more opportunities for social contribution activities will be. Conversely, the weaker the bond, the more likely the crime will occur. Traditional behavior is penetrating through close relationships with schools, workplaces, families, communities, and friends. Alienation and discordance with these factors, that is, weak bonds are likely to lead to crime
In this article we discuss five general criminal logic theories applied to the principle of white-collar crime. Edwin Sutherland's theory, anomie and corporate prejudice, control theory, rational choice theory, and inclusive theory. Each suggests various causes of white-collar criminal behavior, such as society, personality, culture. Motivation for violating rules and committing such crimes is also presented from various viewpoints. The original idea was to raise crimes and conspiracy committed by members of wealthy classes that affected business and industry for personal benefit without taking responsibility for the law. Sutherland often observed that such a case was done under the civil court because such a case is itself a loss of property rather than an act. People who commit crimes only concern about lost property, not a formal lawsuit that punishes those who commit crimes.
In the 20th century, two other criminal theories were developed. These theories are social structural criminology and social process criminal study. Social structural criminal studies are studying how criminal behavior is affected by structural and / or social situations. The idea behind this theory is that crime is the product of social structural defects. Social process criminal study is the theory of how some people become criminals. The theory also considers criminal acts as learning behavior; for example, the younger brother learns how to shop from older brothers, or young gang members learn crime from experienced gang members