Right Realism provides comprehensive explanations for crime and deviance, emphasizing a zero tolerance approach to crime and deviance through social control and deterrence.
- Right Realism argues that crime stems from poor socialization and absence of social control, not poverty
- The theory emphasizes rational choice theory and crime prevention strategies through situational prevention and increased policing
- Wilson and Kelling's right realism and broken windows theory evaluation suggests that minor disorders lead to serious crime if left unchecked
- Critics argue it overlooks white-collar crimes and feminist perspectives on victimization
- The approach advocates for strict enforcement, environmental crime prevention, and visible social control measures