Sociology Chapters 5-6
Solomon
"card" experiment 33% chose to conform
Group
2+ people, frequent interaction, interdependence, belong
Functional Perspective on Deviance
Deviance is UNIVERSAL; serves three important functions Deviance clarifies rules- affirms/ clarifies meaning Deviance unites group- solidarity is reinforced Deviance promotes change- exposes "problems"
Social Groups
Aggregate, Category, Group
External
Sanctioned by others
Society
Who defines deviance?
Triad
a group composed of 3 members ○ Consists of 3 people, 2 have to participate and 1 doesn't and would still be a triad.
Dyad
a group composed of two members ○ Can build a bond, most crucial, and have both have to participate
Reference group
a group that strongly influences a person's behavior and social attitudes
Ingroup
a group to which a person belongs and with which the person feels a sense of identity ○ Circle of friends
Category
a number of people who may never have met on another but share a similar characteristic, such as education level, age, race, or gender. ○ All Males and Females, All black hair and all blond hair
Crime
a violation of criminal law, punished by CJ system
Iron Law of oligarchy
according to Robert Michels, the tendency of bureaucracies to be ruled by a few people
Conflict perspective
always competing (factories, bill gates, have class below them they use to gain power)
Bureaucracy
an organizational model characterized by a hierarchy of authority, a clear division of labor, explicit rules and procedures, and impersonality in personnel matters.
Deviance
any behavior, belief, or condition that violates significant social norms in the society or group in which it occurs
Coercive
associations people are forced to join (example: boot camps and prison)
types of deviance
behavior, belief, and condition
Qualification-based Employment
bureaucracies require competence and hire staff members and professionals employees based on specific qualifications.
Impersonality
bureaucracies require that everyone must play by the same rules and be treated the same. Personal feelings should not interfere with organizational decisions.
Division of labor
bureaucratic organizations are characterized by specialization and each member has highly specialized tasks to fulfill.
Anomie
cause deviance; sense of futility: norms- weak, conflicting, absent,
Primary
describes a small, less specialized group in which members engage in face-to-face, emotion-based interactions over an extended period of time. ○ Significant others, family, intimate, people you interact with on personal deep level
Ideal characteristics of bureaucracy
division of labor, hierarchy of authority, rules and regulations, qualification-based employment, impersonality
Intentional deviance
drinking too much or robbing a bank
Rules and Regulations
established authority within an organization. These rules are typically standardized and provided to members in a written format.
Symbolic
everything is a symbol (ex. Halloween)
Groupthink
group decision that many individual member disapprove
Outgroup
group to which a person doesn't belong and feels a sense of hostility towards. ○ Stigmatized!!!!
Formal Organization
highly structured secondary group formed for the purpose of achieving specific goals
Informal side of bureaucracy
hose aspects of participants' day-to-day activities and interactions that ignore, bypass, or do not correspond with the official rules and procedures of the bureaucracy
Hierarchy of Authority
in a bureaucracy, each lower office is under the control and supervision of a higher one.
William Sumner
in-group and out-group
Internal
internalized beliefs (via socialization)
Secondary
larger group, more specialized group in which the members engage in more-impersonal, goal-oriented relationships for a limited period of time. ○ Group project, Fraternity
inadvertent deviance
losing money in a casino or laughing at a funeral
Crime is not
necessarily deviant (highway speeding)
Types of Formal Organizations
normative, cohesive, Utilitarian
Deviance is
not necessarily a crime (assisting a drowning)
Retreatism
occurs when people abandon both the approved goals and the approved means of achieving them. ex alcoholics and drug addicts
Innovation
occurs when people accept society's goals but adopt disapproved means for achieving them. Acquiring material possessions or money cover a wide variety of illegal activities, including theft and drug dealing
Rebellion
occurs when people challenge both the approved goals and the approved means for achieving them and advocate and alternative set of goals and means. Rebels may use violence (such as rioting) or may register their displeasure with society though acts of vandalism or graffiti
Ritualism
occurs when people give up on societal goals but still adhere to the socially approved means for achieving them. Persons who cannot obtain expensive material possessions or wealth may nevertheless seek to maintain the respect of others by being a "hard worker" or "good citizen"
Utilitarian
organization we join voluntarily when they can proved us with a material reward.
Normative
organizations we join voluntarily to pursue a common interest or gain prestige
Formal
police, Courts, and Correction systems
Charles Cooley
primary and secondary groups
Types of groups
primary secondary, in-group out-group, reference group
Social control
systematic practices that social groups develop in orger to encourage conformity to norms, rules, and laws and to discourage deviance
Rationality
the process by which traditional methods of social organization, characterized by informality and spontaneity, are gradually replaced by efficiently administered formal rules and procedures.
Group Conformity
the process of maintaining or changing behavior to comply with the norms established by a society, subculture, or other groups
Strain Theory
the proposition that people feel strain when they are exposed to cultural goals that they are unable to obtain because they do not have access to culturally approved means of achieving those goals
Social bond theory
the proposition the probability of deviant behavior increases when a person's ties to society are weakened or broken
Functionalist perspective
things happen for a reason (serves a function)
Aggregate
when a group of people are in the same place at the same time with nothing in common. ○ Bus stop, or big classroom with people you don't know
Robert Michels
Iron law of bureaucracy- people with power use it to increase their power
Stanley Milgram
Obedience to authority Ethics of research "deception"
Informal
Family, friends, general public
