Marxist theory focused on class, feminist theory on sex; the names change but the essence of the theory remains the same. They teach that social forces create conflict, punishment, and reward, based on the values of the corrupt power structure. The fall of the Soviet Union, along with the high crime rate in communist countries contrasted with capitalist countries, led to a necessary evolution of the principal arguments that shifted the focus to race instead of class.
I know you criminology majors are saying, “Boy, Smith, you are sure simplifying a complex subject!” Yeppers! I have 800 words to explain my thoughts on one of today’s toughest issues, so forgive my generalities.
Ultimately, the social conflict school spread from criminology to law school and the deep problems I had with the theory became a problem in reality and not just in concept. The greatest flaw in the theory is that the idea of “individual accountability” is reduced to “individual in rebellion against an unjust system.” The victim of the crime is sidelined, and once a prosecutor is established with this philosophical foundation the offender becomes an almost romantic rebel struggling against an unjust system.
“Progressive” prosecutor Kim Foxx in Cook County (Chicago) dropped charges against 29.9% of felony defendants during her first three years in office, including cases involving murder, shootings, sex crimes, and serious drug offenses. Foxx has a 35% higher dismissal rate than any of her predecessors, all while the city of Chicago experiences unprecedented levels of violent crime day after day.
For the social conflict theorists, mythical social structures called “institutional racism” and “whiteness” become supreme villains, which the gallant revolutionary must combat at the level of the street, and those that prey upon the innocent become society’s heroes.