Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T23:21:26.207Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Selectivity of Legal Sanctions: An Empirical Investigation of Shoplifting

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

This study examines the factors that determine the probability that a very common form of deviant behavior, shoplifting, will be detected, reported, and sanctioned. Data obtained both from self-reported crime, and from experiments in which researchers actually shoplifted goods from supermarkets and department stores with the authorization of their executive officers but without the knowledge of store employees, indicate that enforcement of the norm is highly selective. Less than 10 percent of all shoplifting is detected, and customers appear unwilling to report even flagrant cases. Even with an announced policy of full reporting and prosecution, only 70 percent of the shoplifting detected is reported, and only 55 percent is sanctioned. Foreigners, adults, and blue-collar workers are disproportionately represented among those sanctioned.

These findings challenge the common assumption that norms backed by legal sanctions are highly effective. One reason may be that the division of labor between stores, which detect, and police and prosecutor, who sanction, completes the differentiation of moral and legal norms, subverting the effectiveness of both. The results also highlight the misleading nature of criminal statistics, which purport to measure crime but in fact describe the behavior of detecting and enforcing agencies.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1977 The Law and Society Association

Footnotes

*

An earlier more detailed version of this paper appeared in German (Blankenburg, 1969). Several of our points have subsequently been made by other researchers, whose publications we try to include in our citations.

References

ABELE, Andrea and Wolf, NOWACK (1976) “Ladendiebstahl fünfmal am Tag,” 8 Kriminologisches Journal 224.Google Scholar
ARZT, Gunther et al. (1974) “Alternativentwurf eines Gesetzes zum Ladendiebstahl,” 439 Recht und Staat in Geschichte und Gegenwart. Tübingen: C.B. Mohr.Google Scholar
BICKMAN, Leonard (1976) “Attitude Toward an Authority and the Reporting of a Crime,” 39 Sociometry 76.Google Scholar
BLACK, Donald (1973) “The Mobilization of Law,” 2 Journal of Legal Studies 125.Google Scholar
BLACK, Donald (1970) “Production of Crime Rates,” 35 American Sociological Review 733.Google Scholar
BLANKENBURG, Erhard (1976) “Nicht-Kriminalisierung als Structur und Routine,” Kriminologische Gegenwartsfragen. Stuttgart: Ferdinand Erke.Google Scholar
BLANKENBURG, Erhard (1969) “Die Selektivität rechtlicher Sanktionen,” 21 Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie 805.Google Scholar
BLANKENBURG, Erhard and Wiebke, STEFFEN (1975) “Die Schichtangehörigkeit von Tätern und Opfern im Strafverfahren,” in Blankenburg, E. (ed.) Empirische Rechtssoziologie. München: Piper.Google Scholar
BOHANNAN, Paul (1965) “The Differing Realms of the Law,” 67(6) (pt. 2) American Anthropologist 33 (Special Issue).Google Scholar
CAMERON, Mary (1964) “The Booster and the Snitch,” New York: Free Press.Google Scholar
COHEN, Lawrence and Rodney, STARK (1974) “Discriminatory Labeling and the Fivefinger Discount—An Empirical Analysis of Differential Shoplifting Disposition,” 11 Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 25.Google Scholar
DERTKE, Max C., PENNER, Louis A. and Kathleen, ULRICH (1974) “Observer's Reporting of Shoplifting as a Function of Thief's Race and Sex,” 94 Journal of Social Psychology 213.Google Scholar
FEEST, Johannes and Erhard, BLANKENBURG (1972) Die Definitionsmacht der Polizei. Düsseldorf: Westdeutscher Verlag.Google Scholar
GEGENFURTNER, M. (1961) “Diebstahl in Warenhäusern,” 15 Kriminalistik 350.Google Scholar
GELFAND, Donna, HARTMANN, Donald, WALDER, Patrice and Brent, PAGE (1973) “Who Reports Shoplifters? A Field-experimental Study,” 25 Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 276.Google Scholar
GERMAN CODE OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE, 1949 (1965) trans. Niebler, Horst. South Hackensack, N.J.: Fred Rothman. (American Series of Foreign Penal Codes, Number 10.).Google Scholar
GERMAN PENAL CODE OF 1871 (1961) trans. Mueller, Gerhard O.W. and Buergenthal, Thomas. South Hackensack, N.J.: Fred Rothman. (American Series of Foreign Penal Codes, Number 4.).Google Scholar
GILLIG, Kurt (1976) “Staatsanwaltliche Ermittlungstätigkeit und staatsanwaltliche Sanktionierungskriterien bei geringwertigen Ladendiebstahlverfahren,” 8 Kriminologisches Journal 205.Google Scholar
HINDELANG, Michael J. (1974) “Decisions of Shoplifting Victims to Invoke the Criminal Justice Process,” 21 Social Problems 580.Google Scholar
KURATORIUM ZUR BEKÄMPFUNG DER WOHLSTANDSKRIMINALITÄT (1974) Schwarzbuch zum Ladendiebstahl. Baden-Baden.Google Scholar
LANGBEIN, John (1974) “Origins of Public Prosecution at Common Law,” 17 American Journal of Legal History 313.Google Scholar
LATANÉ, Bibb and John M., DARLEY (1970) The Unresponsive Bystander: Why Doesn't He Help? Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
LEWIN, Kurt (1964) Die psychologische Situation bei Lohn und Strafe. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.Google Scholar
LOITZ, R. (1971) Ladendiebstahl unter der Lupe. Köln: Institut für Selbstbedienung.Google Scholar
LOITZ, R. (1965) “Ladendiebstähle,” 19 Kriminalistik 509.Google Scholar
MERTESDORF, F. (1973) “Was tun Zeugen von Ladendiebstählen?” 4 Gruppendynamik 315.Google Scholar
MEY, K. (1966) “Die Selbstjustiz bei Ladendiebstählen,” 20 Kriminalistik 570.Google Scholar
MINGER, Helmar (1974) Norbruch und Sanktion-Faktoren bei Kaufhausdiebstählen. Dissertation, Politics, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität zu Erlangen-Nürenberg.Google Scholar
NIGGEMEYER, Bernhard, GALLUS, H. and H.-J., HOEVELER (1967) Kriminologie. Leitfaden für Kriminalbeamte. Wiesbaden: Bundeskriminalamt.Google Scholar
PEIJSTER, C.N. (1958) De Onbekende Misdaad. 's-Gravenhage: M. Nijhoff.Google Scholar
POPITZ, Heinrich (1968) “Über die Praventivwirkung des Nichtwissens,” 350 Recht und Staat in Geschichte und Gegenwart. Tübingen: C. B. Mohr.Google Scholar
ROÖSSNER, Dieter (1976) Bagatelldiebstahl und Vertrauenskontrolle. Bern: Lang and Cie.Google Scholar
SEIDMAN, David and Michael, COUZENS (1974) “Getting the Crime Rate Down: Political Pressure and Crime Reporting,” 8 Law and Society Review 457.Google Scholar
STEFFENSMEIER, Darrell J. and Robert M., TERRY (1973) “Deviance and Respectability: An Observational Study of Reactions to Shoplifting,” 51 Social Forces 417.Google Scholar
STEPHANI, Rolf (1968) Die Wegnahme von Waten in Selbstbedienungsgeschäften durch Kunden. Bern: P. Haupt.Google Scholar
SUTTINGER, G. (1966) “Diebstahl,” in Sieverts, R. (ed.) Handwörterbuch der Kriminologie. Berlin: de Gruyter, Walter & Co.Google Scholar
TEGEL, Heinrich (1962) “Der Ladendiebstahl als internationales Problem,” 16 Kriminalistik 124.Google Scholar
WEHNER, Bernd (1957) Die Latenz der Straftaten. Wiesbaden: Bundeskriminalamt.Google Scholar