Sociology Set G

Lakukan tugas rumah & ujian kamu dengan baik sekarang menggunakan Quizwiz!

Social Imagination

"A quality of mind" that a) helps us see relationship between man/ biography/ self & society/ history/ world b) distinguishes between personal troubles & public issues c) is an awareness of the social structures that affect our lives

Double Consciousness

"It is a peculiar sensation, this double-consciousness, this sense of always looking at one's self through the eyes of others, of measuring one's soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity. One ever feels his two-ness, an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder

Harlambos

"The process by which individual learn the culture of their society"

Scapegoat

(n.) a person or thing carrying the blame for others

10 cultural universals

- names - sports - cooking - marriage ceremonies - death rituals - medicine - music - tools - education - dancing

Industrial revolution

- people are socializing more rather than chilling with family - A series of improvements in industrial technology that transformed the process of manufacturing goods.

Why is cooking food so important? (p.79)

-Kills any contaminating pathogens or parasites, preventing food poisoning from microbes or infection -Helps soften tough fibrous foods to release simpler compounds that are easier to digest -allows our bodies to extract more energy

3 basic assumptions

-We learn the meaning of a symbol from the way we see others reacting to it - once we learn the meaning of symbols we base our behavior on them - we use the meaning of symbols to imagine how others will respond to our behaviors

Why is wood so useful? (p.123)

-building materials: planks, poles, beams, etc. -fire

survey design

-population : people who are the focus of the social research -sample: small proportion of the entire population -sampling: studying a proportion of individuals or cases from a larger population as representative of that population as a whole -Random Sampling:sampling method in which the sample is chosen so that every member of the population has the same probability

power

-power is connected to our basic assumptions about whats normal and whats deviant -power determines whether and how authorities enforce norms and punish deviance -access to power enables some privileged groups to engage in distinct forms of deviant behavior -power allows some people to escape being branded or punished as deviant

*Three Types of Cities

1) Industrial Cities 2) Global Cities 3) Megacities

steps of research process

1) defining a research problem 2) reviewing evidence 3) Making a problem precise 4)working on design 5) carrying out the research 6)Interpreting the results 7) report of the experimental findings

False consciousness

A term used by Karl Marx to describe an attitude held by members of a class that does not accurately reflect their objective position.

Sociological Imagination

A tool or device used by sociologists to remove any biased/ judgment and to look at an issue through a different lens.

Social control

A way of crontolling cultures and beliefs in society

Bureaucracy: main features

A way to manage human action, establishment of a stable, lasting form of organization

Parsons AGIL Scheme

Adaptation Goal Attainment Integration Latency

Networks

A &B ;dependence/patronage, or A& B, C = less balanced

Anomie

A SOCIAL CONDITION MARKED BY A BREAKDOWN OF SOCIAL NORMS

positivism

A belief that the world can best be understood through scientific inquiry

Institutional review board

A committee at each institution where research is conducted to review every experiment for ethics and methodology.

Society

A community of people who share a common culture

Culture shock

A condition of disorientation affecting someone who is suddenly exposed to an unfamiliar culture or way of life or set of attitudes

Counterculture

A culture with lifestyles and values opposed to those of the established culture.

Finding

A description of a result of research

Social conflict approach

A frame work for building theory that sees society

Postmodernism

A general term used to refer to changes, developments and tendencies which have taken place in literature, art, music, architecture, philosophy, etc. in the post WWII era.

Stereotype

A generalized belief about a group of people

Culture

A group of people that believe in perticular things.

Subculture

A group of people with shared value systems based on common life experiences and situations

Society

A large collectivity of persons who share a common territory

Reliability

A matter of whether a particular research technique applied repeatedly to the same object yields the same result each time Consistent

Assessment of the situation

A person's partly tacit knowledge of the situation in which she is interacting

Race conflict

A point of view that focuses on inequality and conflict between people of different racial and ethnic categories

Gender conflict approach

A point of view that focuses on inequality and conflict between women and men

Scientific method

A series of steps followed to solve problems including collecting data, formulating a hypothesis, testing the hypothesis, and stating conclusions.

Language

A set of symbols, words, gestures allowing for communication

Proposition

A skin-in thing made up of a set of integrated concepts

Term

A skin-out word or phrase that points to a skin-in concept.

Collectivity

A small (group) or large (organization, city, society) set of persons

social stratification

A system by which a society ranks categories of people in a hierarchy

Culture

A system for symbols for representing and communicating information, norms, values, beliefs and knowledge Socially transmitted information that shapes human action

A society is

A system of social interaction within a geographic territory, there can be multiple cultures, and are often classified as nation states

Herbert Spencer

Macro levels of societal change

Dominant culture

Mainstream culture of the majority group within a society

Robert Merton

Manifest functions

Stigma

Mark of disgrace, a figurative stain or mark on someone's reputation

Symbolic Boundaries

Markers of cultural membership such as race, ethnicity, religion and politics

Weberian theory

Max Weber - Power to impose ones will on others through wealth, power, and prestige. (social honor is granted to people).

Karl Marx

Means of production

Emile Durkheim

Mechanical solidarity

How are metals different from other natural materials? (p.130)

Metals are exceptionally strong and hard and can resist very high temps, natural materials exhibit plasticity

Symbolic interactionism

Micro level of social life

Brockerage

Middle man has the power to make or break the deal, they bridge the gap between two powerful entities (real estate/ lobbyists)

Goal attainment

Mobilize its resources and energy to attain system goals and priorities

Event

Most concrete of a social thing- something that is happening right here, right now

*Megacities - characteristics

Most densely populated cities Migration and urbanization Crime, congestion, pollution, major system demands

History of Formal Organizations

Most people worked for themselves, owners managed their own businesses, no large private corporations or professional managers

Latency

Motivated to play their parts

Multiculturalism

Multiculturalism describes the existence, acceptance, or promotion of multiple cultural traditions within a single jurisdiction, usually considered in terms of the culture associated with an ethnic group

What is likely to happen to our cities & urban spaces after "the termination of routine maintenance"? (Ch.1; "Recolonization by Nature")

Nature will seize its opportunity to reclaim our urban spaces

Adaptation

Need to secure sufficient resources from the environment

Re-socialisation

New things you learn in life

Why do you want to avoid being infected after a collapse? (p.147)

No antibiotics

How is Amish culture different?

No electricity, no phones, all live in one big house. Women clean and cook, men do labor.

Selection of Innovations: main ideas; "Cultural Variants"

Adopting new ideas and techniques impacts culture, society, and people

*Global Cities - characteristics

Command centers for knowledge, production, service operations People working with ideas: tech, engineering, artists Wealthy elite and working class

Types of "Social Cohesion":

Community- family, town, shared beliefs, shared culture, shared norms Society- division of labor, mutual dependence, city/nation, requires gov't laws

deterrence

Debates about punishment those who agree with this rationale believe that when potential criminals see the consequences of committing a crime, they will be less likely to pursue criminal activity

Benefits of Modern/Rational Systems & New Problems

Designed to fix the problems of chaos, uncertainty, and abuses of power, new problems --> bureaucracy

Global Risks: main issues & types

Destructive event itself and impact on social order Scope (how many are affected) Intensity (how badly) Probability (how likely to occur) Risks from nature Risks from unintended consequences Risks from hostile acts

Karl Marx

Dialectical model

Max Weber

Disenchantment

Efficiency

Do things to achieve things (why we eat oatmeal)

Institutional myth

Doctors held to high standards for society

Hegemony

Domination, authority; influence by one country over others socially, culturally, economically, etc.

Social & Physical Environments are tied together

Economic changes bring environmental changes (physical and social) to cities.

Agricultural

Economy: Farm-based Rise of property and the state Greater social inequalities

Industrial

Economy: manufactoring/ industrial Machines, electricity, mass production Rise of Large cities Inequalities: mixed

Post-Industrial

Economy: service based, information based New kinds of jobs, new skills needed less manufacturing

Max Weber

Efficiency is key to a successful society

"McDonaldization" (G. Ritzer):

Efficiency, Predictability, Calculability, Non-human technology

Modern Societies: "Rational" Social Systems

Efficiency, predictability, calculability, and non human technology

Egoistic

Ego has been hurt from separation, no self-worth Ex. A military officer who suddenly retires feels lost, like they don't belong

Laws

Enforceable rules of conduct in a society

Stereotypes

Exaggerated description applied to every person I. Some category

Communication & Knowledge: The "Cooperative Principle" (Grice)

Expected to be in force whenever communication takes place Informative, truthful, relevant, clear. Violating these maxims can cause deception

Symbolic Interaction

Explains social behavior in terms of how people interact with each other via symbols.

What are social facts?

Facts about social structure and social functions, the way a society is and what it does

Karl Marx

False consciousness

Six agents of socialisation

Family, peers, education, work, religion, media

Auguste Comte

Father of Sociology. He wanted to use scientific observation in the study of social behavior

Alienation

Feeling isolated and separated from everyone else

Wild peter

First feral child

Microsociology

Focuses on small groups and the individual

Durkheim

Free diverse

Robert King Merton

Functionalist Manifest Function Latent Function

Hidden Curriculum

Informal and subtle messages about norms and roles conveyed through classroom interaction and curriculum.

Empire evidence

Information we can verify with our senses

Max Weber

Iron cage

Rational/Legal Authority

Is derived from formal rules, could consist of laws

What problem would survivors likely face when trying to reboot agriculture? (Ch.3)

Is that human knowledge is collective, distributed across the population

ideological hegemony

Karl marx--people with power own ideas and set laws and standards by which others live by and come to accept.... creates false consciousness and make the poor think working hard is good for them...needs to be changed with class consciousness

Auguste Comte

Known for positivism; which is a scientific approach, doing research and theorizing

Herbert Spencer

Known for social Darwinism. Societies go through natural evolution

Macrosociology

Large groups and social structure.

Probability Sampling

Larger 2500+ More diverse/ accurate More randomized More generalizable

Robert Merton

Latent functions

Mores

Latin term for societal norms customs, virtues/ values ( most likely breaking law )

Conceptualization

Letting the reader know how the researcher is using a particular term in their research. Specific definition of a particular study

Science

Logical system based knowledge on direct systematic observation

Why does the author think people should leave the cities during the "Grace Period"? (Ch.2)

Look for a rural location with fertile ground and older buildings better suited for off grid habitation

Big History and Examples of Early Civilization

Looking as far back as we can to gain perspective Mesopotamia/Sumer Egypt Indus Valley/India China Central Andes Mesoamerica

Social Change -vs- Stability

Loss of knowledge would bring major negative social change The growth of knowledge changes the world as we know it Comes from a primary source: science

Impact of Population Growth on Industrialized Nations

Low Fertility Rates; Older populations

Purposive Sampling

On purpose, you select the units, place, population because you feel it's best

Worst case Bureaucracies? Main points from slide and video

One example: The Credit Report System

Actual Occasion

One of Whitehead's names for "event". emphasizes present rather than past or present

Concrescence

One of Whitehead's names for events. past events "grow together" into a present event

Cultural relativism

Principle that people's beliefs and activities should be interpreted in terms of their own culture

Code of ethics

Principles of conduct within an organization that guide decision making and behavior.

Primary socialisation

Process of learing as a child .eg. Reading and writing ect...

Secondary socialisation

Process of learing as an adult

Norbat Ellas

Provides and account of changing culture attitudes towards the body.

3 Non- Probability Sampling

Purposive Snowball Quota Sampling

Calculability

Quantification expressive w numbers(how many people u hire)

Max Weber

Rationalization

bureaucracy

Rationalized organization (division of labor-who works what, hierarchy- clear chain of command, written rules, impersonal)

Generation

Refers to a cohort or group of people born within a similar span of time and who have been impacted by a particular event.

*Demographic Transition Theory - ideas and predictions

Refers to the changes in birth and death rates that occur during the process of industrialization Predicts that societies go through stages of transition as they industrialize Stage 1: High Birthrate <> High Death Rate Stage 2: High Birthrate <> Low Death rate Stage 3: Low Birthrate <> Low Death rate

Integration

Regulate relationships among various people or units within the system

Social Institutions: main features

Relatively stable patterns of roles and behaviors Family, Economy, Government, Education, Religion Guide behavior, reduce uncertainty, source of organization and cohesion, potential source of conflict Inherited, not consciously designed, complex, benefit social groups, do no benefit them all equally, symbolically marked

Quantitative research

Research that provides data that can be expressed with numbers, such as ranks or scales.

Comparative Historical Research:

Researchers document whether social behavior varies across historical period and/or across countries and cultures

Iron law of oligarchy

Robert Michels describes what he saw as the eventual and inevitable consolidation of power at the top of bureaucratic organizations->argues that bureaucracies place too much power in the hands of those at the top (conflict perspective)

Constitutive Rules

Rules that allow and restrict behavior

Human Ecosystems: Rural & Urban - Environments & Cultures (& Politics)

Rural = small towns, small businesses, open land, forest, dunes, animals and natural habitiats Urban = large cities, corporate offices, factories, highways, parks

Sociology

Scientific study of social things

Ethnocentrism

Seeing other cultures as inferior or less than one's own culture

Wilding

Self-interested behavior that harms others and damages the social fabric

Auguste Comte

Sense perceptions are only valid sense of knowledge

Liberals

Share

Culture

Shared products of human groups

Collective Representations

Shared understandings

Max Weber

Shift from traditional society to industrial

Weber

Simple iron cage

Non-Probability Sampling

Small samples 20-100 Lack diversity Low randomization Less generalizable

Horticultural/Pastoral

Small scale farming and animal cultivation

Herbert Spencer

Social Darwinism

Social reality

Social Facts are the basis of social reality

Talcott Parsons

Social cohesion

Karl Marx

Social inequality

Society Status(es)

Social positions, or rankings, within a society

Postmodernism

Social reality is diverse

markets

Social structure is based around exchange -- beer + niches

Collective Acceptance

Social/institutional facts recognized by people within a society

Functionalism

Society and social institutions are related. The society effects how you act

Functionalism (Durkeim)

Society based on mechanical solidarity ( the social integration of members of a society who have common values and beliefs) collective conscience and organic solidarity (everything works at same time towards the same goals.) Many people like it because it assumes that shared values and agreement are the basis for social order

Symbolic Interactionism

Society doesn't control you, you control you Psychological perspective

Interactionist theory

Society is created and maintained through social interaction z Sports are studied in terms of how they are created and given meaning by people z Research focuses on how people experience sports and how identities are related to sport participation and sport cultures z Those who use it often employ "interpretive research methods" to study Social processes associated with becoming involved, staying involved, and changing involvement in sports How people develop and maintain identities as athletes How people give meaning to sports The characteristics of sport subcultures

C Wright Mills

Sociological Imagination

C. Wright Mills

Sociological imagination(a quality of mind that allows us to understand relationship between individual and larger forces

Emile Durkheim

Sociologist who discussed social consensus through mechanical solidarity and organic solidarity

Peter Berger

Sociologists have interest in human affair and are curious for knowledge

Unsocialised

Someone who hasn't been socialised

Cities Today: What are the trends?

Spilling out into "Metropolitan Regions" - with industry, jobs, and housing moving out of the Central Business District to Edge Cities

Children sports and theories

Sports are studied in terms of their contributions to the system. Many people like it because it assumes that shared values and agreement are the basis for social order. Those with power and influence often prefer it because it emphasizes stability and equilibrium in societyUsing Functionalist Theory to take social action z Promote the development and growth of organized sports z Increase sport participation opportunities to foster individual development z Increase the supervision and control of athletes z Mandate coaching education programs z Highlight success in elite programs Weaknesses of Functionalist Theory z Overstates the positive consequences of sport in society z Assumes that all social groups benefit equally from sports z Does not recognize that sports are social constructions that privilege or disadvantage some people more than others Using Interactionist Theory to Take Social Action z Change sports to match the perspectives and identities of those who play them z Make sport organizations more democratic, less autocratic, and less hierarchically organized z Question identity formation processes that involve the normalization of pain, injury, & substance use in sports

•Sociology

Standpoint theory

Theory

Statement on how and why specific facts relate

Peter Berger

Stats don't equal sociological analysis

Status Functions

Status = police officer Function = enforce laws within society

Herbert Spencer

Structural functionalism

Talcott Parsons

Structural functionalism

Human Ecology: what does it study?

Studies the relationships between humans and their natural, social and made environments

Ethnomethodology

Study of folk methods, shared sense of reality

Sociology

Study of human society

social statics

Study of social stability How society is held together

Scientific sociology

Study of society based on systematic observation of social behavior

Interpretative sociology

Study of society that focuses on the meaning people attached their social world

Hunting and Gathering

Subsistence ( just enough to survive) Direct ties to an environment Nomadic - move around Simple technology, less food storage Greater Equality

Conflict Theory

Suggests that groups/populations with fight for power, valued social resources

3 theories in Soc

Symbolic Interactionism Functionalism Conflict theory

William Isaac Thomas

Symbolic Interactionist "Definition of a Situation " We use past social experiences to help us navigate the present ones How we cope with a social situation depends on the past

Ervin Goffman

Symbolic Interactionist "Life as a theater" We act differently around friends/family A persons appearance Previous experiences The social setting Verbal/ nonverbal actions

Charles Horton Cooley

Symbolic Interactionist "Looking Glass self" We imagine to ourself how we appear We imagine how we look in other people's mind Based on how we think we look we then develop some sort of feeling

George Robert Mead

Symbolic interactionism

Karl Marx

Synthesis

Randolf Darendorf

Talked about how authority lies not in the person in power but in the position

Latent functions

The I recognizable and unintended consequences of any social pattern

Feminism

The advocacy of social equality for woman and men

Measurement

The assignment of a case to a category according to a rule

Eugenics

The attempt to improve the mental and physical health of a population by controlling reproduction.

back stage behavior

The backstage region is a place where the actors can discuss, polish, or refine their performance without revealing themselves to their audience. It also allows them to express aspects of themselves that their audience would find unacceptable.

Ethnocentrism

The belief that one's group is of central importance, tendency to judge the practices of other groups by one's own cultural standards.

*Industrial Cities - characteristics

The center of industrial capitalist economy, more individualism, greater density and diversity

Social function

The consequence of any social pattern for the operation of society as a whole

Low/popular culture

The culture of the masses

Why is electricity so important in a reboot of society? (p.174)

The discovery of electricity provides a great historical example of stumbling upon a completely new field of science, offering a whole assortment of related phenomena and therefore exploitable possibilities

Society Roles

The duties and obligations of a social status

Attribution bias

The tendency to explain the behavior of others in terms of dispositions, combined with the tendency to explain ones own behavior in terms of situations

Values

The values of life as a socialised person. What's important to us.

Ideal type

description comprised of the essential characteristics of the feature of society

culture does not

determine rigidly deterimen our

sociology

a view that looks at behavior of groups not indivisuals

Sociological Perspective

a view that looks at behavior of groups, not individuals

sociological perscpective

a view that looks at the behavior of groups, NOT Individuals

Bureaucracy

a way to manage human action- through a script of rules

Subcultures

a world within the mainstream culture wit a distinctive expression pattern of traditions

Sociological imagination

ability to see the connection between the larger world & your personal life

working class growing pains

about the working class in the contemporary period , desire to move up but limited mobility and that limmites moblilty is the distribution of oppotrunites and risks

Non material Culture

abstract human creations ( beliefs , family patterns, ideas )

Values

abstract ideas

examples of cultural diversity isv

accupuncure, techilia , ta uan doe

crime

act that is prohibited by law and is punishable

manifest

actions that are intended

rites of passage

activities that mark and celebrate a change in a person's social status

dramaturgical analysis

adapt your behavior to each situation--"all the words a stage"

Hierarchies

Vertical; stratified

Conflict theory

Views society in terms of competing groups that act according to their own self-interests, rather than according to the need for societal equilibrium.

Positivism

Way of understanding based on science

Operationalization

What are your operations to measure that concept. The questions that are being asked

George Herbert Mead

What is the self? 1) The individual mind can only exist in relation to other minds with shared meanings 2) the self can only be actualized by assuming the role of another (who is MEad)

The Problem with Bureaucracy?

When Rules don't make sense, but run our lives anyway; no access to the rule makers, no way to change the rules; still must follow the rules

*What is the "Da Vinci effect", according to the author?

When scientists fully understand the basis underlying an application and have produced a design that would work in principle, it may still be impossible to build a working prototype

front stage behavior

When we perform a role in relation to an audience (society), that role is on frontstage and our performance (behavior) is open to judgment by those who observe it

Knowledge & Trust: main issues

Who to trust and how? who are the experts?

Feral child

Wild child / child that hasn't been socialised

Migration Controversy: winners & losers

Win: those who benefit from productivity of immigrant labor (businesses/employers) Lose: low-skilled native workers

Conservatives

Work, doesn't like change, free market, individual liberty

Impact of Population Growth on Less Developed Countries

Younger populations; Lack of Opportunity; Lack of Food & Poverty

Roles

Your role in society E.G teacher, doctor, student

Structural Functionalism

_____ says that political contributions keep public involved in democratic process

positivism

a belief that accurate knowledge must be based on the scientific method

Shared Knowledge- intersubjectivity

a common understand between people about knowledge, reality, or an experience

Generalized Other

a concept introduced by George Herbert Mean into the social sciences and used especially in the field of symbolic interactionism

Brute Fact

a nonsocial thing that would still exist even if there were no humans

perspective

a particular point of view

symbolic interactionism

a perspective that focuses on the actual interaction among people

Status

a position in a social system that can be occupied by an individual

socialization

a process in which a child becomes a self aware knowledgeable person skilled in the ways of the culture in which he or she was born

Status hierarchy

a ranking of social positions according to their perceived prestige or honor

Status

a recognizable social position that an individual occupies mother

social theory

a set of principles and propositions that explains the relationships among social phenomena

Total Institution

a setting in which people are isolated from the rest of society and manipulated by an administrative staff

Sentence

a skin-out grammatically organized set of words

conform

adjust to the norm

Socialogical theory

agents create a social reality which takes on a life of its own becomes structures within those who create structure exist.

symbolic interactionism

all social interaction involve exchange of symbols

Spurious Correlation

an apparent but false relationship between two or more variables that is caused by some other variable

dramatury

an approach that depicts human interactions example theatrical performances

Dramaturgy

an approach to the study of social interaction that uses the metaphor of social life as a theaterà associated with Erving Goffman

Interaction

an event where two or more people influence each other

symbols

an image that stands for something

Systems: a definition: Elements, Interconnections, Purpose; main ideas

an interconnected set of elements that is coherently organized in a way that achieves something Held together through a flow of information Financial, educational, computer, biological, sports, electronic

Heuristic structure

an interrelated set of clues to discover

Bureaucracy

an organizational model rationally designed to perform tasks effciently

Triad

a social group with three members (more stable)

Dyad

a social group with two members (most unstable)

Master status

a social position that is overwhelmingly significant, powerfully influences a person's social experience, and typically overshadows all the other social positions that a person may occupy

Social Network

a social structure made up of a set of social actors (such as individuals or organizations) and a set of the dyadic ties between these actors

Status Category

a status that people can hold in common

cultural diversity

a subculture whose values and norms are different form the majority

caste system

a system in which people are born into a social standing that they will retain their entire lives

Insight

an understanding of a relationship between two or more things

semiotics

analasis of verbal and non verbal cultural meanings

economics

analyzes the production, distribution, and allocation of the material goods and services of a society

crime

any type of behavior that breaks the law

Cultural transmission theory

anything learned can be unlearned /deviance is learned behavior

Symbol

anything that represents something else

symbol a

anything that stands for something else and has an agreed upon meaning attached to it

Category

apartment dwellers, people with blue eyes-> not a social group in the sociological sense

applied sociology

application of sociological knowledge in some specific setting, rather than an attempt to rebuild society

positivism

applying scientific approach to social world

conflict perspective

approach emphasizing conflict, competition, and constraint in society

dramaturgy

approach that depicts human interaction as a theatrical performance

Cultural Relativism

belief that each culture should be judge by their own standards

Emile durkheim

believed sociologists should focus on uncovering social fact

relativist

believes there are no absolute truths to guide what is right and wrong.

why do people commit deviant acts

biological and psychiatric models: focus on whitin certain cases

present - women and men roles

both may work

globalization

breakdown of national boundaries due to advances in communication trade and travel

What would happen to Medicine after a collapse of civilization? (p.145)

complete unraveling

Internalization

complex process though which we learn our society's culture and establish our view of the world->humans come to be influenced by their own creations: social products (friendship influences you- comply with specific expectations associated with relationship->helping friend)

total institutions

confining social settings in which an authority regulates all aspects of a person's life

different segments of a society compete to achieve their own self interest rather than cooperate to benefit others

conflict theory

many elements of a society exist to benefit the powerful

conflict theory

power is one of the most important elements in social life

conflict theory

social change is constantly occuring

conflict theory

strain theory

conformity- accept goals and norms innovation - accept goals and reject norms ritualism - reject goals and accept norms rebellion- quit

♣ Impression management

conscious or subconscious process in which people attempt to influence the perceptions of other people about a person, object or event. They do so by regulating and controlling information in social interaction.

Function

consequence that an element of society produces for the maintenance of its social system

biological determinism

contends that biology, specifically our genetic makeup, almost completely shapes human behavior

social determinism

contends that culture and the social environment almost completely shape human behavior

white-collar crime

crime committed by people of high social status in the course of their occupation

Counterculture

cultural values that strongly oppose those widely accepted within a society

ritual

culturally patterned way of expressing some central value of the collectivity

instinctual

culture in animals is ________

language

culture in coded form especially when written---lets us pass our culture

Geerts

culture is composed of meanings that are shared

universal

culture itself is _______. all societies develop shared, learned ways of perceiving and participating in the world around them

subculture

culture with separate set of beliefs than dominant culture.

author of beig sane in inasne places

david Roshen

moral holidays

days in which societies are allowed to break norms EX: Mardi Gras

capital punishment

death penalty

tatto sub culture

define themselves as neo- primitive , heavily tattooed and counter sub culture

genocide (n)

deliberate extermination of a racial or cultural group

Synthesis

democracy

integration

our level of social ______ decides who will commit suicide

Coercive Isomorphism

outside force forces people to adopt/ do something-- MADD & 21 drinking age, school rankings

availability bias

overstatement of the availability of certain info and thus over magnification of its importance --> shark attacks

Primary Socialization

parents and peers

Generalized Other

part of a person's background that consists of his or her knowledge of the expectations of significant others and the desire to conform to those expectations.

delphy and leanard

patriarchy, men have the power feminists

Folkways

patterns of conventional behavior in a society , norms that apply to everyday matters

peers

peer relations have significant effects on us from early life to old age

agents of socialization

people and groups who teach us about our culture

Externalization

people create society through an ongoing process of physical and mental activity->ensures a stable environment within which we can live (becoming friends with another person and creating a special relationship)

survey

people provide answers to structured questions

division of labor

people specialize in different tasks, each requiring specific skills

Society

people who interact in a defined territory and share a culture

identity

peoples understanding about who they are and what is meaningful to them

Conflict Perspective

perspective on the forces in society that promote competition & change

Social darwinism

perspective that holds that societies evolve toward stability and perfection

standpoint theory

questions taken for granted assumptions about society by looking at it from multiple viewpoints, esp from the perspective of people in subordinate positions

social facts

rates, trends, patterns, and other properties of a specific group

rational and nonrational

rational tactics appeal to logic and include bargaining and rational persuasion

sancations

reactions from others to individual or group behavior with the purpose of reinforcing a given norm

Deviance

recognized violation of cultural norms

Social Structure

regularity in everyday relationships which from these relationships emerge constraints to action/ or patterns of action

illegitimate power

relies on force or coercion to generate obedience

Margaret Mead

renowned anthropologist

2 ways to be deviant

repeated behavior or act that has serious consequences

recidivism

repeated criminal behavior

sociology

similar to the other sciences, but it is distinct in that it looks at all social institutions, focuses on industrialized societies, and looks at external factors which influence people

anthropology

sister discipline of sociology, attempts to understand culture by focusing primarily on tribal people

anomie

situation that arises when norms of society are unclear / no longer applicable

Organizational Structure

size can have major influence on structure and operation, very small organizations must still use a process for decision making->as they grow, structure needs to be more formal

The Front Stage and the Back Stage

social actors behave differently depending on where they are

Objectivation

social arrangements come to seem objectively real->society appears separate from human creation and instead seems "natural", inevitable, and our of people's control (new friendship becoming apart of your reality)

Mechanical Solidarity

social bonds based on common sentiments and shared moral values, typical of traditional, rural life

Homophily

social contact occurs at a higher rate between people who are similar than it does between people who are different-> influences what we know about a society since we are apt to share and reinforce our worldview with others who are like us

durkhiem

social facts ,organic solitary, social context, suicide.

Out-group

social group toward which a person has negative feelings, considering its members to be inferior, or "them"

In-group

social group with which a person identifies and toward which he or she has positive feelings (collective sense of "us")

Organic Solidarity

social interdependency based on a high degree of specialization in roles

Psychology

social science that deals with behavior & thinking of organisms

Sociology

social science that studies human society & social behavior

class system

social stratification based on both birth and individual achievement

social roles

socially defined expectations that a person in a given social position follows

Norms of behavior

socially defined ruled of behavior

"Reality Maintenance" (Berger & Luckmann): main ideas

societies develop ways to maintain social reality

functionalism

society has order and stability, interrelated parts, cooperations

functional analysis

society is a whole unit made up of interrelated parts that work together... we must look at both structure and function if talking about divorce, one would look as to how industrialization and urbanization contribute to the changing function of marriage

conflict theory

society is viewed as composed of groups competing for scarce resources

sociological perspective

society shapes lives

C. Wright Mills

sociological imagination

c wright mills

sociology enables people to translate their private matters into public issues

social location, external influences

sociology stresses the broader social context of behavior by looking at individuals' ________, which is employment, income, education, gender, race, and by looking at _______, people's experiences that become part of their thinking

Ways to balance power in a triad

someone can leave, B+C can form a coalition, or they can extend the network (twilight love triangle)

Taboo

something forbidden or prohibited

Diffusion of Innovations (Rogers & Shoemaker): main ideas

source ( inventors) message (innovation) channel ( mass media) receivers (members of society) effects (changes in knowledge, behavior)

power tactics

specific strategies people use to influence others in everyday life

Prescription

spoken or written message to a receiver of what he or she ought to do

network externalities

spread of info; how networks determine usefulness of something --trekkies, the bachelor, facebook, autism in brentwood

values

standards by which people define good and bad, beautiful and ugly

Thesis

status quo

achieved statuses

status that is earned

ascribed statuses

status that is give to you by society

Grannovier

strong vs weak ties; weak ties are better bc more opportunity arises from them

structure

structure is a broader social context that is systematically patterned or structures

anthropologist

studies GROUPS of people in preliterate societies

Stanley Milgram

studies of how punishment affects learning -> showed many of us are socialized to obey authority figures and to comply with social expectations even if we know it is wrong

politician

study of government

Social psychology

study of how social environment affects an individual's behavior & personality

History

study of past events

economist

study of production, distribution, consumption of goods and services

social dynamics

study of social change Changes in the existing structural elements of a society.

sociology

study of social structures

Economics

study of the choices people make in an effort to satisfy their needs and wants

Sociology

study of the evolution, development, and functioning of human society

Solomon Asch

study with confederates shows people choosing incorrect answer although obvious which one is clear because conforming

differential association theory

suggests that deviance is learned through interaction with other people involved in deviant behavior

control theory

suggests that our behavior is regulated by the strength of our connection to major social institutions, including family, school, and religion

techniques of neutralization

suspending moral beliefs to commit deviant acts

micro (small scale patterns of society)

symbolic interactionalists carry out what kind of level of analysis

social life should be understood from a viewpoint of the individuals involved

symbolic interactions

symbols are crucial to social life

symbolic interactions

young and wilmott

symmetrical family - families are becoming more equal especially in power and decisions making

language

system for encoding and decoding info for communication

criminal justice system

system of police,courts,juvenile justice system, and corrections

Laws

system of rules , enforced

definition of culture

system of shared meaning that affect social relationships in society

sociology

systematic study of the relationship between individuals and society

Behaviorism

the conceptual framework underlying the science of behavior

ann oakley

the conventional family is not most common but most people's ideals now women work but men still dominate people have the same ideas about sex roles people think conventional families will bring happiness women depend on men's wage

Status

the cumulative amount that entities are willing to defer to someone in power

medicalization of deviance

the designation of a deviant behavior as an illness that can be treated by medical professionals

Role Taking

the notion that one of the most important factors in facilitating social cognition in children is the growing ability to understand others' feelings and perspectives an ability that emerges as a result of general cognitive growth

life chances

the opportunities offered by a person's economic position

Mead's "I"

the part of the self that is spontaneous, impulsive, creative, and unpredictable

social structures

the pattern interaction of people and social relationships

What will likely happen if mechanization decays? (p.195)

the post-apocalyptic society will have to revive animal power

agency

the power of an individual to change their lives and society

first phase

the primary concern of sociologists was making the world a better place

Anticipatory socialization

the process by which individuals practice for a future social role by adopting the norms or behaviors associated with a position they have not yet achieved

resocialization

the process by which individuals replace old norms and behaviors with new ones as they move from one role or life stage to another

commercialization of deviance

the process by which nonconformist activities or styles turn into commercial products

Scientific management

the process of deskilling ordinary workers and increasing workplace efficiency through calculated study->Frederick Taylor-> Taylorism -> assembly lines

occupational socialization

the process of learning the informal norms associated with a type of employment

decriminalization

the process of making an illegal action legal

self identity / personal

the process of self development through which we formulate a unique sense of ourselves and our relationship to gender, sexual orientation , nationality, social class). shaped by sical and cultural enivroment

social reproduction

the process through which societies have structural continuity overtime

social closure

the process whereby a status group maximizes its own advantages by restricting access to rewards only to members of the group

Culture

the ways of thinking, the ways of acting and the material objects that together form a people's way of life

Developmental Theory

theories that divide child development into distinct stages which are characterized by qualitative differences in behavior.

functionalism

theory that all aspects of a society serve a function and are necessary for survival of that society

material culture

things such as jewelry, art, buildings, weapons, machines, clothing, hairstyles

Ascribed status

those that are assigned to us from birth or that we assume later in life regardless of our wishes or abilities

Achieved statuses

those that we voluntarily attain, to a considerable degree as the result of our own efforts

What will happen with the "evaporation of centralized governance", according to the author?

those with ill intentions will seize the opportunity to subjugate or exploit those more peaceful or vulnerable

terrorism

threat/actual use of violence to achieve political goal

explain why, make generalizations (by looking for patterns), predict

three goals of all sciences

Triad

three people->members' attention is divided, number of possible interactions increases->conflicts may arise

pre play stage

through age two children are unable to step fully outside of themselves to view themselves

systematic study

to achieve the 3 goals of science, scientists must move beyond common sense and rely on conclusions from ______

What is the easiest method of preserving food? (p.82)

to desiccate it. Dry fruit and grain

reward

to encourage people's compliance by offering a positive incentive

why do ppl conform

to fit in, to be accepted in society, to keep peace, ability to see the link between society and self to understand other points of view and where to fit in.

coerce

to force compliance by threatening, intimidating, pressuring, or harming someone

persuade

to get people's compliance by convincing them of the correctness of your position and goals

urbanization

to growth of cities

sociological perspective

to see and understand the connections between individuals and the broader social contexts in which they live

Emile Durkheim

developed 1st college course in sociology

Max weber

developed idea of studying effects of society on indiv.

Becker

deviance research from the POV of deviants--marijuana smokers; **the label matters**

secondary deviance

deviant behavior that is a response to the negative consequences of labeling

crime

deviant behavior that violates a law

*What is the key skill of a doctor? (p.150-)

diagnosis

sociological imagination

differences between personal troubles and public issues... encourage us to view our lives within a larger social contract...link personal biographies in historical context

multiculturalism

different cultures ethnic groups retain their cultural distinctiveness when they settle in a new culture ( tossed salad)

How do societies provide thermal energy? (p.105)

directly or indirectly from the combustion of fossil fuels

feminists

disagree with cereal packet family diversity women work at home with no pay

max weber

disagreed with Karl Marx, defined religion as a central force in social change, protestant ethic, spirit of capitalism, Verstehen

nature versus nurture debate

disagreement about the relative importance of biology (nature) and the social environment (nurture) in influencing human behavior

culture is a

tool kit which people select different identities and behaviors

discrimination

treating others unequally based on their background or other personal characteristics

Social sciences

disciplines that study human social behavior/institutions & functions of human society in a scientific manner

Homophobia

discomfort over close personal interaction with people thought to be gay, lesbian, or bisexual

Organizational Culture

distinct cultures of organizations influence how they are organized, the values they espouse, and the way they operate

organized crime

drug trafficking , illegal gambling

A division of labor

due to size, need specialization

functionalism

each social activity/ institution has a function , consensus , order

functionalist approach

emphasizes consensus in social life and sees deviance as a means of reinforcing social structure. (associated with strain theory)

Symbolic interactionism

emphasizes how we make sense of the world by focusing on these kinds of encounters

strain theory

emphasizes that strain or pressure on those who lack the means to achieve culturally defined goals leads them to pursue deviant routes to success

Sanctions

enforcing norms - can be positive (rewards for doing what needs to be done)

present - equality

equal

What fuel is a viable substitute for gasoline-powered vehicles? (p.189)

ethanol

♣ Total institutions (Goffman)

ex.) Jail cut off from social institutions must create new self image (approved by institution) Exiting may make it difficult to re-enter society.

Stereotypes

exaggerated, distorted, or untrue generalizations about categories of people that do not acknowledge individual variation->often negative and unfair

Political science

examination of the organization and operation of governments

historian

examine past events and people in society they show repeated behavior to make more accurate future predictions

hegemony

exists when those in power have successfully spread their ideas and marginalized alternative viewpoints-so that their perspectives and interests are accepted widely as being universal and true

Role Expectations

expectations associated with any role are socially defined, but individuals who occupy a particular status must actively "play" the role

Norms

expectations governing behavior, "normal behavior"

norms

expectations rules of behavior that develop out of a groups values

Breaching experiments

experiments in which social reality is violated in order to shed light on the methods by which people construct social reality

Control theory

explains deviance as a natural occurence

Theory

explanation of relationships among particula phenomena

Qualitative research

exploratory, in-depth research involving flexible, open-ended questions; includes: interviews, observation and focus groups

micro - sociology

face to face interaction

Society Groups

families, communities, interest groups, religious groups, political parties

agents of socialization

family school peers mass media

agents of socialization

family, school, peers

examples of changing cultural norms

family, smoking , women and tatoos ,

Marx

features of social life are determined by economic culture of the society; society evolves in stages

Ethnography

first hand study of peoples lives using participant observation or interviewing research socialize, live or work with the members of the group they are studying

functionalism

focuses on contributions of each part of society

Interactionist perspective

focuses on how individuals interact with one another in society

symbolic interaction

focuses on interactions based on mutually understood symbols

psychology

focuses on processes that occur within the individual

schools

formal socialization( through formal curriculum ) and more subtle socialization ( punctuality, self control )

karl marx

founder of conflict perspective, class conflict was the key to human history, conflict and struggle would end only with a revolution by the working class.... capitalism could change the system

Auguste Comte

founder of sociology as a distinct subject

white-collar crime

fraud,tax evasion, embezzlement

second phase

from 1920s to WWII sociologists sought to establish sociology as a respected field of knowledge, emphasizing pure sociology

conflict is harmful and disruptive to society

functionalism

religion helps hold a society together morally

functionalism

societies are in relative balance

functionalism

macro (large scale patterns of society)

functionalists and conflict theorists provide what kind of level analysis

political science

fuses politics and government with science

feminist theory

gender inequality and gender relations

Theoretical Perspective

general set of assumptions about nature of things

crime

generally deviant behavior under established and accepted norm

deviance

going against the norms of society , risk taking behavior

Crowd

group of people that happen to be in the same place at the same time-> not a group in the sociological sense since the people are gathered for a one-time event and do not think of themselves as a part of some collective entity

counter culture ( specific sub culture )

group that rejects the prevailing norms and values of society

Counter Culture

group that rejects values,norms, and practices of larger society and replaces them with new set of cultural patterns

Subculture

group with its own unique values, norms, behaviors that exists within larger culture

hard and soft

hard tactics are forceful, direct, or harsh soft tactics is friendly reminder that you need to do some task

early human culture went to

hunter and gathers , argian socitites , pastoral societies , and traditional socities

robin williams

identified ten core values: achievement and success individualism activity and work efficiency and practicality science and technology freedom democracy equality racism and group superiority

hidden curriculum

implicit lessons about how children should behave

corrections

imprisonment,parole,probation,and community service used to punish criminals

Irving Goffman

in life, the self is a character we assume, the people we interact with are the audience; frames help people orient their performance (impression management)

empowerment

increases people's capacity to bring about an intended

Culture Trait

indiv. tool,act,or belief that is related to a particular situation or need ( going to dinner)

social context

individual : labeling reinforcement control societal : structural functionalism

Herbert Spencer

influenced by Charles darwin

1970s roles

instrumental and expressive

Manifest functions

intended and recognized

Manifest function

intended and recognized consequence of some element of society

manifest function

intended, recognized consequences of an aspect of society

micro level

interactionist

criminologists

investigate causes of crime and methods of crime prevention

organization

involves bringing people together to identify common goals and work to achieve them

networking

involves reaching outside your immediate circle of contacts to find allies

class

is a group of people who share a roughly similar economic position and lifestyle

privilege

is a special advantage or benefit that not everyone enjoys

♣ "Concerted cultivation & "Natural growth"

is a style of parenting that is marked by a parent's attempts to foster their child's talents by incorporating organized activities in their children's lives.

reward power

is the control one party has over valued resources that can be used to provide positive incentives

social imagination

learning that many behaviors or feelings we view as private and individual actual relate to larger social issues

folkways

less important rules of behavior - violations are not taken seriously ( eating cerial for breakfast)

relationships and interactions

life is viewed as a series of ______ and _______

Sociological perspective:

looking beyond commonly held beliefs to the hidden meanings behind human actions

conflict theory

looks at conflict, competition, change, and constraint within a society

life-course perspective

looks at how age, time, and place shape social identities and experiences over a lifetime

psychologist

looks at the INDIVIDUAL human behaviors

Structures

macro

Primary Groups

made up of people who have regular contact, enduring relationships, and a significant emotional attachment to each other (family, close friends)->caring and obligationà especially influential agents of socialization

Secondary Groups

made up of people who interact in a relatively impersonal way, usually to carry out some specific task (coworkers or members of a neighborhood)-> shorter term or temporary with no significant emotional bond

value cluster

made up of related core values that come together to form a whole

symbols

main way that cultal meanings are expressed

Mimetic Isomorphism

mirroring/ copying as a form of legitimization -- memes, adoption of music, diffusion of early christianity, adoption of the left tackles; S curve

surveillance

monitoring by authorities who police the boundaries of what's normal

Organizations

more complex and formal than most groups, secondary groups that have a degree of formal structure and are formed to accomplish particular tasks

Urbanization & Cities

more people live in cities now than in rural areas

family

most important agent of socialization , nuclear family and extended families

Antithesis

movement/ anger --> rebellion

violent crime

murder,rape,robbery,assault

Dysfunctional

negative consequence an element has for the stability of social system

dysfunction

negative consequences

Organizational Environment

no matter what culture, all organizations operate in a larger environment with other organizations ->factors that exist outside of the organization but that potentially affect its operation

Joint Conjugal Roles

no rigid division of labour or household tasks and share many of them

animoe

nomie exists when there are no clear standards to guide behavior people feel disoriented and anxious, leading to crime and deviance

primary device

non conformity that goes undetected by those in authority

anomie

normlessness, without moral guidance

changing cultural norms not examples

norms and values that are changing overtime within same cultural

taboos

norms so strongly ingrained that even the thought of them is greeted with revulsion EX: cannibalism, incest

mores

norms that are believed to be essential to core values and we insist on conformity EX: stealing, raping, killing is breaking one

Folkway

norms that are not strictly enforced

folkways

norms that are not strictly enforced such as passing on the left side of the sidewalk NO moral values required

Mores

norms with moral significance

Social Phenomenon

observable facts/ events that involve human society

Grocery Story situation

occult of individualism, looking glass self, symbolic interactionism, agency and structures, negative/ positive sanction, mores folkway, impression management , gesture

white- collar crime

offenses commited by indiv. of high social status

naacp

one of the first attempts at applied sociology was the founding of the ____

false

true or false- every culture shares the same gestures and meanings for gestures

Beginners mind

try to see things, as if your seeing it for the first time. Observe without evaluating.

Impression Management

trying to control the image others have of us through our performance

The Strength of Network Ties

typically want to spend time with these people and vice versa->stronger relationship, the more support

before 1970 equality

unequal and patriarchy

unilateral and bilateral

unilateral tactics do not require cooperation to initiate

Latent Function

unintended and unrecognized consequence of an element of society

latent

unintended consequences

latent function

unintended, unrecognized consequences of an aspect of society

representativeness bias

unintentional prejudice; stereotyping

personal idenity

unique sense of ourselfs

Resocialization

unlearning old behaviors and learning new ones (example would be the millitary)

henslin

updated the list of ten core values by adding education religiosity and love

robert merton

used the term function to refer to the beneficial consequences of people's actions to keep society stable and dysfunction to refer to consequences that undermine stability

example of smoking

used to be accepted inside and embraced, now it is highly frowned upon

science

uses logic and the systematic collection of evidence to support knowledge claims

The identification of social problems depends on

value judgement

culture conisits of

values, norms, language/ symbols , and material goods

experimental

variables that can be analyzed in a controlled and systematic way either in artificial setting created by the researcher or in a naturally occurring setting

herbert spencer

viewed societies as evolutionary, "survival of the fittest", social darwinism, believed attempts at social reform were wrong

symbolic interactionism

views symbols as the basis of social life if studying divorce, they would focus on how the changing meanings of marriage family and divorce contribute to divorce

5 types of crime

violent crime, white-collar crime, crime against property , organized crime , victim less crime

legitimate power

voluntarily accepted by those who are affected

Folkway

walking forwards, space between urinals

What gives structure to our modern lives? (p.255)

wall clocks and daily planners

Emile durkheim

wanted to get sociology recognized as an academic discipline, interested in social factors and how the affect behavior (suicide rates among groups), wanted to make sure social research was practical and develop solutions to problems

Occult of individualism

we can all develop a realization that we all need to succeed

value free (no bias or subjectivity)

weber advocated that research should be _______

19

what century did sociology emerge

Knowledge in Society

what passes as knowledge within a society is not always as clear as true or false some of these things are testable through evidence others are not, some knowledge has useful applications other types do not

Symbolic Interaction

when interactionists focus on how people use symbols when interacting

Role strain

when the expectations associated with a single role complete with each other

Role conflict

when the expectations associated with different roles clash

value contradiction

when values conflict with one another

retribution

Debates about punishment Vengeance- the more severe the crime, the harsher the penalty

Values

shared beliefs about what is good/bad , right/wrong, and desirable/ undesirable

3 main events for Soc

Industrial Revolution American and French Revolution Colonialism

Ethnicity

shared culture, which may include heritage, language, religion, and more

Norms

shared roles of conduct that tell people how to act in specific situations

rehabilitation

Debates about punishment people who hold this view generally advocate educational and job-training programs in prisons

Language and Symbols identify what?

In-group and out-group membership

Imagined Communites

In-group/ out-groups (like me or not like me)

3 Stages of Value Conflict

1. Awareness 2. Policy Determination 3. Reform (values and interests often clash)

*Thomas Malthus - ideas and predictions

1. Human survival depends on available food, water and resources 2. Populations tend to grow faster than the earth can sustain, out pacing the food supply. 3. Populations grow exponentially; food supply does not Humans are incapable of limiting their populations voluntarily Population reduction will occur through disasters; famine, disease, war Food production advances Smaller family sizes Gov't polices (ex: china) Advances in medicine

"Rationalization"

: Reliability, Regularity, Precision, Competence; -within Organizations not individual wants or desires

collective conscience

shared values of a society

about what percent of the US population is African american?

13%

The Belmont Report

1979: the origin of current ethical guidelines for human research

symbolic interactionism, functional analysis, conflict theory

3 theories that sociologists use

Emile Durkheim

3 types of suicide Egoistic Anomic Altruistic

industrial revolution, political revolutions in America and France, imperialism, natural sciences

4 reasons sociology developed

approximate population of the world

7 billion

Innovation-Decision Process: main ideas

1. awareness 2. interest 3. evaluation 4. trial 5. adoption or rejection decision

Auguste Comte

Coined the term sociology

Emile Durkheim

Collective conscience

Emile Durkheim

Collective effervescence

Karl Marx

Alienation

Description

An account of something as it relates to the person doing the describing

cultural phenomenon

An example of a cultural phenomenon is the trend of sending flowers on Valentine's Day A cultural phenomenon also occurs when something or someone gains widespread popularity. This includes everything from films to musical artists to clothing styles. The thing that gains popularity is not a cultural phenomenon; rather, the cultural phenomenon is the process of something becoming popular.

peer groups

An individual's close friends, religious groups, clubs, and work groups

Science as a Social Institution: Scientific Knowledge: main points

An organized effort Based on Systematic Observations That work toward explaining nature or the evidence

Emile Durkheim

Anomie

Social structure

Any relative stable patten of social behaviors

Social dysfunction

Any social pattern that may disrupt the operation of society

Dramaturgy

Approach that depicts human interaction as theatrical performances

Youth

Are personals aged 12-14. The period between childhood and adult age.

Manifest Function

Are the consequences people observe or expect

Latent Function

Are the consequences that are neither recognized nor intended, not expected

Validity

Are the questions valid to what you are measuring

Karl Marx

Argued most important source of inequality in society relationship between economy and workers

on what continent are most of the world's people

Asia

Social Control

Attempts by society to regulate people's thoughts and behavior

"Useful Knowledge" (Mokyr): Basic & Applied Knowledge; main ideas

Basic Knowledge: theories, explanations, not- applied ( knowing what) Applied knowledge: making things work; technology (knowing how) together= new design, applications, medicine, etc.

Bernard McGrane

Beginners mind

Culture

Beliefs, customs, and traditions of a specific group of people.

Population is determined by what

Birthrate, death rate, migration

Theories

Broad explanations and predictions concerning phenomena of interest

Sociological Imagination (C. Wright Mills)

C. Wright Mill's term for the ability to see the relationship between individual experiences and the larger society

Concentric Zone Model for the typical Industrial City

Central business district in middle, factory zone, zone of transition, working class zone, residential zone, commuter zone

Subculture

Certain norms and values and meanings which are destinctive to a perticular group within society

Comparing Cities: Chicago & Detroit - differences with the core/central business district; both have segregated ethic neighborhoods

Chicago has a strong economy and wealth at core of the city, a strong central business district, high crime on south side and west side of city, undergoing expansion to edge cites Detroit - people from south moved north for jobs, population went from 348,000 to 2 million --> today is 677,000, busiesses and jobs and people moved out of detriots core, decay of urban core and infrastructure, social disorganization

most populous nation

China

Most populated countries

China and India

Edge Cities - what are they?

Cities on the fringe of urban areas

Karl Marx

Class consciousness

Basic Needs and Physical Environment Geography

Classified on how they meet basic needs Societies are a response to physical environment geography

Quantitative Research

Close ended questions, numbers

Max Weber

Conflict Theorist 3 basic forms of authority Charismatic Authority Traditional Authority Rational Legal Authority

Karl Marx

Conflict theory

Snowball Sampling

Consists of a person who is interview who suggests other people to interview (recommendation)

Looking-Glass Self

Cooley's term for a self-image based on how we think others see us

Karl marx

Critical theory

Assimilation

Cultural assimilation is the process by which a person or a group's language and/or culture come to resemble those of another group.

Early Human culture and adaptation to physical environment

Culture enabled humans to compensate for their physical limitations such as lack of claws, sharp teeth. It freed humans from dependence on the instinctual responses to the environment that are characteristic to other species

Ralph Linton

Culture happens in two ways; learning and sharing

High culture

Culture produced by a talanted few and enjoyed by sofisticated minority.

Counterculture

Cultures identified by their distinctive values and beliefs, sometimes created in reaction against the values of other groups

Symbolic Interaction (Weber & Dubois)

Generalized idea about us causes us to try to fit the perceived mold through our actions.

Generational change

Generations that follow can be impacted by events that have occurred in a previous generation.

verstehen

German for "grasp by insight"---empathetic understanding, the ability to understand the world as others do---- proposed by max weber

Max Weber

German sociologist who said that bureaucracies are rational but require rules; hierarchial

M.Weber: Modern Societies need "Rational Systems": Rules & Procedures

Goal based, studied the changing patterns of governmental organization and authority

Stigma

Goffman: stigma is a mark that negatively affects someones interactions with others; potheads, being black, succumbing to fads

Subculture

Groups whose values or norms may differ from the dominate culture, but may still co-exist with majority culture

Growth rate; Replacement rate

Growth rate = birthrate - deathrate Replacement Rate = average number of children needed to keep population from growing or declining

Mass media (agent of socialization)

Helps create and manage what is "important" may reinforce and transmit limiting role expectations and ideas. Difficult to measure effects.

Sociological factors

Historical, structural, critical and cultural.

Status

How high you are in society

Historical Analysis:

How historical context shapes individual lives • Oral history: direct interviews of survivors of historical events• Archival research: historical

Socialisation

How people learn throughout life

Comparative Research:

How social behavior varies across place

Nature Vs Nuture

How you were brought up Vs you natural genetics

Social Thing

Human persons, plus all the things humans have created.

"Scientific Management" & "Taylorism": main features

Increases productivity, brain work should be removed from the shop and centered in the planning department

What is a society?

Individual wants and desires vs. Society's demand for pro-social behavior and conformity to group needs/ interests

manifest function

INTENDED and RECOGNIZE consequences to LEARN

Irrationality of rationality

Idea that modern societys efficiency is moot/ destined to backfire

Thomas Theorem

If men define situations as real, they are real in their consequences" ->subjective interpretations of reality have objective effects

Anomie

Imbalance between socially created expectations and socially provided means

Video Lecture shown in class: Paul Taylor: The Next America: changing Demographics

Immigration = more diversity Young and Old = longer lives, fewer babies, different age structure Class structure = smaller middle class Changing culture and attitudes = decline of traditional marriage, generation gaps Polarized politics = partisan media "red truth, blue truth"

3 basic forms of Qualitative Research

In- Depth interviewing Focus Groups Content Analysis

Qualitative Research

Open ended questions, no right answers

Emile Durkheim

Organic solidarity

Pragmatism

Organisms provide practical adaptations to the environment

Control

Organization goal

New Knowledge: "The Social Construction of Reality" (Berger & Luckmann): main ideas

Our understanding of the world undergoes changes and revisions: New knowledge is: 1. Externalized as reality 2. Legitimated as true 3. Internalized as reality

Attempted Control

Overt action intended to increase the probability of a desired future state

Herbert Spencer

Paradigm based on the assumption that society is a unified whole that functions because of separate structures

Altruistic

People are part of a demanding group and there's no way out, feel very integrated Ex. Asian society stress on academics

Talcott Parsons

People should adapt to their society

Anomic

People suffer from a dislocation of their norms and values, sudden changes Ex. Sudden wealth or poverty could disrupt the usual patterns in a persons life

Sociology

People's behaviour and how they fit into society

Gender

Personal trait and social positions that members of a society attached to being female or male

Charismatic Authority

Personality/ Respect

Stanford prison experiment

Philip Zimbardo's study of the effect of roles on behavior. Participants were randomly assigned to play either prisoners or guards in a mock prison. The study was ended early because of the "guards'" role-induced cruelty.

Auguste Comte

Positivism theory

Emerson

Power is based on dependence (glue, you are dependent on glue to hold your shit together); balancing operations; status

Karl marx

Praxis

Globalization

Prediction world will turn into American mall

Global perspective

The study of larger world and society s place in it

Critical sociology

The study of society that focuses on the need of social change

Traditional Authority

The longer people have been thinking a certain way the harder it is to change it

Philisopical method

The method in which the primary criterion of judgment is the consistency of a sentence with the covert experience of the inquirer.

What is the Greatest Invention, according to the author? (p.275-)

The operating principle

Population Explosion: world population and projections

The rapid increase of humans in the world, more slow recently but 9 billion expected by 2050 (7 billion today)

Manifest malfunction

The recognizable and intended consequences of any social pattern

Deviance

The recognized violation of cultural norms

Sociological perspective

The special pop of sociology that sees generals pattern in society in the lives of particular people

collective behavior

The spontaneous behavior of a group of people responding to similar stimuli

*Demography

The study of human population

Sociology

The study of human relationships and society. A social science that explores the social world

How might survivors get electricity; according to the author? (Ch.2)

They would have to generate their own

Values

Things that are important to you.

Antisopatary socialisation

Things we learn as a child and use later on in life

Sign

To mark, seal

Jobs & life today: influence of Formal Organizations

Today 85% of workers are employed by someone else, often a large formal organization Deliberately planned groups, with some specific goal or purpose, designed to outlive particular individuals, based on a set of formal rules, based on a fixed structure of authority, roles, and responsibilities

Detroit's history as an industrial city; the Great Migration; Detroit Today - troubles and rebound

Toxic waste in wayne county is among the worst in the nation

latent function

UNINTENDED and UNRECOGNIZE consequences to make FRIENDS

Social Organizations: main features

Underlying patterns of behavior Actual groups of people, businesses, schools, hospitals

Conflict Theory

Unequal distribution of society valued goods is affected by race sex social clasd , caused by tension and hostility

pluralistic

United States has a ______ society

Quota Sampling

Units are selected into a sample on the basis of prespecified characteristics, demographics must be seen

Goals of Science

Universalism, Sharing of Information, Disinterestedness, Organized Skepticism

Peter Berger

Use sociological theory to analyze data

Auguste Comte

Used scientific method in sociology

Norms

Usual things that we expect from people that are socialised. Formal and informal

Social Interaction

Verbal and non-verbal interaction between individuals

Organizational Structures

a fight between formal rules and personal wants/desires importance of hierarchy

Groupthink

a form of uncritical thinking in which people reinforce a consensus rather than ask serious questions or thoroughly analyze the issue at hand

Symbolic-interaction Approach

a framework for building theory that sees society as the product of the everyday interactions of individuals

Dyad

a group consisting of just two people->very unstable->most intense type of social relationships (sexual relationships and marriage, best friends and business partners)

deviant subculture

a group in which membership is based on a shared commitment to specific nonconformist beliefs

peer group

a group of people, usually of comparable age, who share similar interests and social status

race

a group whose inherited physical characteristics distinguish it from other groups

nonmaterial culture

a groups way of thinking and common patterns of behavior

Bureaucracy

a hierarchical administrative system with formal rules and procedures used to manage organizations->commonly share four key features according to Weber

Paradigms

a model that provides a framework for interpreting observations

labeling theory

argues that deviance is the result of how others interpret behavior and that individuals who are labeled deviant often internalize this judgement as part of their self identity

Conflict Theory (Marx)

argues that individuals and groups (social classes) within society have differing amounts of material and non-material resources (such as the wealthy vs. the poor) and that the more powerful groups use their power in order to exploit groups with less power. Weaknesses: Weaknesses of Conflict Theory z Assumes that all social life is "economically determined" z Ignores the importance of gender, race & ethnicity, age, & other factors in social life z Ignores the possibility that sport participation can be a personally and socially empowering experience

expert power

arises from the perception that a person has superior knowledge in a particular area

How does modern asphalt compare to Roman roads? (p.187)

asphalt is more smooth but less durable than Roman roads

racial profile

assuming of african american commit crime more than white

natural sciences

attempt to comprehend, explain, and predict events in our natural environment

third phase

attempt to merge sociological knowledge and practical work w development of applied sociology

social sciences

attempt to objectively study the social world

Verstehen

attempt to understand the meanings individuals attach to their actions

Sociological Imagination

awareness of relationship between between personal experience and the wider society

Identity

based on social influence; virginity pledges

ethnocentric

based on the attitude that one's group is superior

Missouri/Pemiscot county demographics in indicators of child welfare, how does pemiscot county compare to the rest of Missouri

basically really poor , graduation rate is low, poverty is high

play stage

beginning at around age three, children begin to be able to take on the role of a single other in a meaningful way

Deviance

behavior that does not conform to basic cultural norms and expectations

research methods include

comparative historical research , comparative research , historical analysis

Anthropology

comparative study of past & present cultures

crime against property

burglary, larceny , grand theft auto , arson

game stage

by age six or seven, children learn not only how to play a role but also how to link this role to others' role

all social norms are accompanied

by sanctions that promote conformity punish nonconformity

marxism

by staying at home the women s roles supports men who work in a capitalist system

social identity

characteristics that other people attribute to us ( student, mother , teacher lawyer )

modernity

characterized by the growth of democracy and personal freedom, increased reliance on reason and science to explain the natural and social worlds, and a shift toward an urban industrial economy

life course

child hood and adolescence , young adult Hood

preferential Attachment

choosing who to collaborate with (rappers)

marx

class struggles and class conflict

Segregated roles

clear division of labour in the family with tasks divided into male and female

auguste comte

coined the term sociology and suggested positivism but did not apply it... believed his science should not only discover principles but apply them for social reform as well

Social groups

collections of people who interact regularly with one another and who are aware of their status as a group-> often share common interests, values, norms and expectations

Cultural universals

common features that are found in all human cultures

Garfinkle

common sense (ethnomethodology) is context dependent; breeching experiments--ppl get most mad about trivial things (Garfield--not common sense to have a talking cat)

rational-legal authority

has legitimacy bc it is based on established laws, rules, and procedures

traditional authority

has legitimacy because of compliance with well established cultural practices

Many of the basic functions of civilization rely on chemical or physical transformations driven by... what? (p.104-105)

heat

Karl Marx

heavily influenced by study of economy

sectionality theory

highlights the connections and interactions between various forms of inequality, esp race, class,and gender

the largest minority group in the United States is the?

hispanic

tattoos

historically were a way to challenge gender norms and limited roles of wife and mother - altenative way to find ones self

labeling theory

how individuals come to be identifies as devaint

Social Interaction

how people relate to one another and influence each other's behavior

dynamic

human interaction is _____

*In the section of Ch.1 titled: "A Reboot Manual", What does the author think is the most profound problem facing survivors of a cataclysm?

human knowledge is collective, distributed across a population

interactionalist

humans attatch meaning to their lives and are shared by social interaction: communication symbolic meaning

informational power

is based on a person's use of facts, data, or other evidence to argue rationally or persuade

referent power

is based on feelings of identifcation

legitimate power

is exercised by those who invoke a feeling of obligation

charismatic authority

is power whose legitimacy is derived from the extraordinary personal characteristics of an individual leader, which inspire loyalty and devotion

education

is probably the best known approach to empowerment

power

is the ability to bring about an intended outcome, even when opposed by others

symbolic culture

is the ability to learn and transmit behavioural traditions from one generation to the next by the invention of things that exist entirely in the symbolic realm.

coercive power

is the ability to punish

socialization

is the process through which people learn their culture's basic norms, values, beliefs, and appropriate behaviors

♣ Anticipatory socialization

is the process, facilitated by social interactions, in which non-group-members learn to take on the values and standards of groups that they aspire to join, so as to ease their entry into the group and help them interact competently once they have been accepted by it.

present

joint roles

ethnocentrism

judging other cultures in terms of their standards of ones own

Technology

knowledge and tools that people use for a practical purpose

Why is the printing press important when it comes to knowledge? (p.214-)

knowledge becomes democratized

no culture without

language

past and future

language allows for a social or shared ______ and ______

cumulative

language allows our experiences to be ______. Each generation builds on the body of significant experiences that is passed on to it by the previous one

Vickstein

language and meaning of culture is shared

linguistic relativity hypothesis

language influences our perception of the world

Sapir whorf

language relativity it determines our social reality it influences culture culture also influences language

culture

language, beliefs, values, norms, and material objects that are passed from one generation to the next, shared by a society

crime syndicate

large scale organization of professional criminals that controls some vice or business through violence or the threat of violence

macro sociology

large scale social systems

Agriculture

large-scale cultivation using plows harnessed to animals or more powerful energy sources

stigma

mark of social disgrace

crime rates

measure the incidence of crime in relation to population size

before 1970 men and women roles

men - breadwinner women - housewife

Pahl

men are more likely to make choices men dominante decisions men more money better life

instrumental roles

men are the breadwinners, they work and are supported by women

Pahls survey

men normally manage money, this means in families where women earned more, men still reaped the rewards.

men (white men)

men or women- more likely to commit suicide

heuristics

metal shortcuts

Agency

micro

Infrastructure

physical necessities of modern societies: roads, bridges, buildings, sewers, water systems

material goods

physical objects created by humans

Material Culture

physical objects that people create and use

Material Culture

physical objects with symbolic value

sanctions

positive or negative reactions to the way in which people follow norms

positive sanction

positive reinforcement for good behavior. pleasant things we can do to try to make people conform and behave in a routine, predictable, fashion

Impersonality

power must be located within an office, not a person-> bureaucratic structure remains no matter who's in and out

police discretion

power of who gets arrested

What is the basic operating principle of any technology? (p.289-)

practical application of scientific understanding? clocks?

Ageism

prejudice and discrimination against older people

7 steps of the research cycle

problem, literature, hypothesis, research design, carry out, interpret, report

assimilation

process by which the different cultures are absorbed into the main stream ( melting pot )

degradation ceremony

process of labeling an indiv. as deviant

plea bargaining

process of legal negotiation that allows an accused person to plead guilty to a lesser charge in return of lighter sentence

differential association

proportion of associates has with deviant vs.nondevaint indiv.

victim less crime

prostitution,drug use , vagrancy

weber

protestant ethic and bureaucracy

protestant ethic

protestants sought signs that they were in God's will, used money as measure---- proposed by max weber

Beliefs and Knowledge

provide a meaning system, shape's a group's culture

Negative Sanction

punishments for negative behavior (according to dominant culture).

Qualitative

put yourself in their shoes (Weber's verstehen)

A hierarchy of authority and accountability

pyramidal structure with power concentrated at the top

stigma

refers to the shame attached to a behavior or status that is considered socially unacceptable or discrediting

Tuskegee study

researchers , Initiated in 1932, recruited black men to study Syphilis, never told me they had it, did not treat disease, just observed. Violated them. Men in Study were harmed, not treated respectfully and the study targeted a disadvantaged social group.

Sanctions

restrictions intended to enforce international law

secondary device

results in the person being labeled deviant and accepting the label as truth

recidivism

return to criminal behavior

Norms

rules and expectations by which a society guides the behavior of its members

sociological imagination

same as sociological perspective as described by C. Wright Mills

Secondary Socialization

schools and teachers

before 1970s

segregated roles

Apostolic Succession

sequence of consecrations or appointments of bishops extending back to Jesus' appointment of the Apostles.

The Nature of Networks

serve as a link between you and contacts and opportunities in other parts of society->understanding the patterns of association in social networks helps us understand how people are integrated into society

Functionalist Perspective

set of interrelated parts that work together to produce a stable social system

"I & Me"

taking the role of the other

Written rules and records

tasks and duties to be carried out within are usually written out in formal rules and procedures->ensures consistency

tatoo sub culture views

tattoos as way to resist modern society , and reconnect with primitive experiences.

Ethnocentrism

tendency to view one's own culture & group as superior

♣ The "Looking Glass Self" (Cooley)

that a person's self grows out of society's interpersonal interactions and the perceptions of others.

public sociology

the ASA is now promoting _________ with the goal of influencing politicians, public officials, and policy makers

power

the ability to CONTROL the behaviors of others

subjugation (n)

the act of bringing under control (to dominate)

loner deviance

the activities of individuals who commit deviant acts without the social support of others

Material culture

the art, housing, clothing, sports, dances, foods, and other similar items constructed or created by a group of people

agents of social control

the authorities and social institutions that enforce norms and rules, attempt to prevent rule violations, and identify and punish rule violators

Status set

the collection of statuses that an individual holds

sense of self

the collection of thoughts and feelings you have when considering yourself as an object

Social Networks

the collections of social ties that connect people to each other

social solidarity

the collective bonds that connect individuals

conjugal roles

the domestic rolses of married and cohabiting couples

Pastoralism

the domestication of animals

What is part of the "glue that binds societies together", according to the author?

the expectation that the pursuit of short-term gains through deception or violence is far outweighed by the long term consequences

Reference Groups

the groups against which we choose to measure ourselves-> can influence the choices we make, take into account as we plan and asses actions, can influence even if we do not belong to them-> conform to group's expectations

Civilization requires not just thermal energy, but also... what? (p.166)

the harnessing of mechanical power, relieving it from the constraints of using muscle power alone

looking glass self

the idea that our sense of self develops as a reflection of the way we think others see us

Sapir-Whorf Thesis

the idea that people see and understand the world through the cultural lens of language.

Values

the ideal principles of a group, can be a source of cohesion or conflict

Symbolic culture

the ideas associated with a cultural group

social control

the incentives and punishments that promote conformity in social life

societies (or aggregate/collection of individuals)

the individual is not the unit of analysis, society looks at _______

bootsrapped used to explain

the late tranistion into adult hoood

rationalization of society

the long-term historical process by which rationality replaced tradition as the basis for organizing social and economic life

Charles Cody

the looking glass self- you assume the viewpoint of someone else who looks at you (Cody Simpson looks at himself a lot)

Bourgeoisie

the middle class, typically with reference to its perceived materialistic values or conventional attitudes.

spirit of capitalism

the protestants readiness to invest capital in order to make more money--- proposed by max weber

sociology

the scientifi study of human social life , groups and society

Mead's "me"

the sense of self that has been learned from interaction with others

Roles

the sets of expected behaviors that are associated with a particular status

collective conscience

the shared norms, beliefs, and values in a community

George Simmel

the size of a group has important effects on internal group dynamics

master status

the status of greatest importance in a particular person's life

Migration: What is the Global Trend?

the steady flow of people from overpopulated rural villages to urban slums

sociology

the study of human behavior as shaped by group life

*What are some of the ways people have told time in the past? (p.254-

the sun

Adolescence

the transition period from childhood to adulthood, extending from puberty to independence

inequality

the unequal distribution of resources among groups of people

Latent functions

the unrecognized and unintended consequences of any social pattern

Horticulture

the use of hand tools to raise crops

industrialization

the use of large-scale machinery for the mass manufacture of consumer goods

generalized other

the values and orientations of their overall community rather than those of specific individuals

norms

widely agreed upon rules or principles

Why is basic food security so important for a society? (Ch. 3; "One Feeding Ten")

with no food surplus there is no opportunity for your society to grow complex or to progress

Shared Language

without the common ground of shared meaning, social interaction becomes confusing, frustrating, inefficient, and even frightening

Role Relationship

wo related social positions that specify the reciprocal rights, duties and expectations for the persons who occupy those positions. (husband/wife)

parsons - functionalist

women = expressive role men = instrumental role

expressive roles

women support children they deal with emotions and do housework

present roles

women work more, spend less time at home men spend more time at home

Proletariat

workers or working-class people, regarded collectively (often used with reference to Marxism).

What are the traditional communication technologies? (p.209)

writing?

affect bias

your emotions get in the way

Socialization

♣ The process by which humans adopt or learn the culture of a group ♣ Socialization links biography and history Can be deliberate or unintended.

Non material Culture

♣ language, verbal symbols ♣ values ♣ beliefs ♣ norms

Subculture

♣ some segment of a society's population that has distinctive cultural patterns Ethnocentrism


Set pelajaran terkait

Chapter 10 Part 1: The Nervous system's Sensory System Study Question

View Set

Practice Exam - Fundamental Concepts

View Set

2.5 Translators And Facilities Of Languages

View Set

(Ch 1) Mastering Strategy: Art and Science

View Set