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Deviant Behavior is a peer-reviewed academic journal which focuses on social deviance, including criminal, sexual, and narcotic behaviors. It is published by Routledge and was established in 1979. According to the Journal Citation Reports , the journal has a 2016 impact factor of 1.052, ranking it 48 out of 62 journals in the category ...
Deviant behavior may refer to Abnormality (behavior), behaviors that are regarded as dysfunctional; Deviance (sociology), actions or behaviors that violate social norms; Deviant Behavior, an interdisciplinary journal which focuses on social deviance; Deviant Behavior, a textbook by American sociologist Erich Goode
Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation; Journal of Contemporary Ethnography; Journal of Family Issues; Journal of Health and Social Behavior; Journal of Homosexuality; Journal of Marriage and Family; Journal of Mundane Behavior; Journal of Politics & Society; Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency; Journal of Sociology
As of June 2015, the complete journal list contains 2,258 titles. [1] References Subcategories ... Deviant Behavior (journal) Disability and Rehabilitation;
Social behaviour – Behavior among two or more organisms within the same species Social order – Set or system of linked social structures, institutions, relations, customs, values and practices Troll (Internet) – Person who sows discord online Pages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
Organizational deviance encompasses production and property deviance. Workplace-deviant behavior may be expressed as tardiness or excessive absenteeism. [8] These behaviors have been cited by some researchers as "withdraw(al) behaviors…such behaviors allow employees to withdraw physically and emotionally from the organization". [8]
In cases of addiction, particular drugs may affect the brain’s rewards system, making it overly sensitive to the drug: thus making naturally occurring, healthy behaviors less rewarding and increasing deviant behaviors like attention-seeking, impulsivity, and aggression–often related to withdrawal behavioral traits–all of which can promote ...
By contrast, strong bonds make deviance costly. This theory asks why people refrain from deviant or criminal behavior, instead of why people commit deviant or criminal behavior, according to Travis Hirschi. The control theory developed when norms emerge to deter deviant behavior. Without this "control", deviant behavior would happen more often.