The theory was prompted by four observations: • Delinquents often express guilt over their illegal acts. • Delinquents often respect and admire honest, law-abiding individuals. • Delinquents often distinguish people they may victimize from people they must not. • Delinquents are not immune to the demands of conformity. These observations draw on positivist criminology, which conducted empirical research into delinquency. From these, Matza and Sykes created the following methods by which, they believed, delinquents justified their illegitimate actions: •
Denial of responsibility. The offender insists that they were victims of circumstance, forced into a situation beyond their control. •
Denial of injury. The offender insists that their actions did not cause any harm or damage. In 2017, Bryant et al. analysed statements made by 27 individuals accused of participation in the Rwanda genocide and found two neutralization techniques that had not been identified before: •
Appeal to good character. The offender will "assert their good deeds or admirable character attributes that they contend render them incapable of committing (genocidal) crimes". •
Victimisation. The offender will argue how they, or people close to them or their ethnic group, were under threat or have suffered loss by a third party (e.g., in the case of the
Rwandan genocide, the
Tutsi). Kaptein and van Helvoort propose an ‘amoralization alarm clock’ to explain all such amoralizations or neutralizations. ==Acceptance==