Social process theories analyze the social processes or interactions associated with crime, and tend to focus on how individuals become law violators. The social process category includes social learning, culture conflict, and social control. The learning perspective assumes that law-breaking values, norms, and motives are acquired through interaction with others. Culture conflict theory holds that crime and delinquency are learned as normal behavior in a subcultural setting. Miller postulated distinct focal concerns that predispose persons to violate legal codes. Control theories view crime as a reflection of failure of social constraints. Sykes and Matza`s neutralization version holds that because people fundamentally believe in the law, they must generate a rationale to excuse law violation. Hirschi`s social control or bond theory maintained that the weaker the social bonds of the law, the less an individual is constrained by the law. Gottfredson and Hirschi`s general theory of crime sees self-control at the heart of crime and delinquency and other analogous behaviors.