The contribution of label theory to our crime and understanding of transgender can be called a label, or it can be defined as a mark, name, or badge. Metamorphosis is ambiguous, as someone classifies well as society or culture also has different definitions, there are things you can not predict and deviate. What is called an exception is a response to a specific action. Label theory is quite complicated, asking why some people commit crimes called deviations, why others have not committed.
Crime and deviation constitute classical morbidity in society and cause various reactions at political and social levels. In this article we explore the causes of crime and crime through two theories of label theory and biological theory. As Melossi points out, "The fight between crime and deviation from definition is in the field of actions consisting of multiple, and even contradictory, control" (1994) p. 205. Each culture has its own norm.
How Marx and Durchem's views contribute to understanding crime and corruption. Because both Karl Marx's Marxist theory and Emil Durchem's functionalism theory are themselves important, we observe and understand how crime and prejudice arise and how they are handled in society did. Large contributions - Label theory to summarize label theories and to examine its effectiveness in considering juvenile crime and antisocial behavior in contemporary British society is different from the theory and label that individuals affect their own lifestyle Apply personal label to social correspondence. How to influence individuals ... "The social group creates rules for deviation by causing violation and marks these roles as outsiders by applying them to specific people. And departure is not the quality of action promised by people, it is the result of other rules and sanctions applied to "criminals".
Howard Becker (1963) argues that social groups generate bias by marking individuals as outsiders. Deviations are formed by applying violations. In addition, the bias method of label theory focuses mainly on the interaction process leading to labels and social responses to abnormal behaviors committed by individuals. This theory suggests that academics pay attention to criminals because criminology treats criminals as sort of people and not paying enough attention to collecting social control responses. Therefore, this means that police, law, media, and public organizations can help to shape crime. This is supported by conflict theory which shows how unbalance reflects inequality and power. This approach may also indicate that the cause of the crime may be related to race discrimination, rank difference, and gender disparity.