Chapter 1: Thinking About Social Problems
- Understanding Social Problems, 9th Edition
Social Problems:
Objective and subjective elements shape and comprise social problems. * Objective: awareness of social conditions by your own experiences and media. * Example: Ferguson (media/social media), LA Riots (own experience) * Subjective: The belief that a particular social condition is harmful to society, or to a
segment of society and that it should and can be changed. * Example: improved medical conditions for veterans, poverty levels in America, etc.
Elements of Social Structure
Society is organized into different parts: * Institutions * Social Groups * Statuses * Roles
Elements of Culture
Culture is comprised of the following shared experiences: * Beliefs * Values * Norms * Sanctions * Symbols
Sociological Imagination
Coined by C. Wright Mills (1959): the ability to draw connections between the social world we live in and our own individual personal lives.
Theoretical Perspetives in Sociology
Macro-sociology: Group
- Structural-Functionalist Perspective (S-F): interconnections of society by focusing on how each part influences and is influenced by the other.
- Terms: functional (contribution) and dysfunctional (disruption)
- Manifest (intended) and Latent (unintended) functions
- Theories of S-F Perspective
- Social Pathology: social problems are from social illnesses
- Social Disorganization: rapid social change disturbs norms resulting in anomie (normlessness).
- Conflict Perspective (C):: Competition among various groups for power and resources.
- Marxist Conflict Theories: social problems come from class inequality as a by-product of capitalism
- Alienation: powerlessness and meaninglessness in a person’s life
- Non-Marxist Perspective:
- Ralf Dahrendorf: conflict arises from opposing values and interests
Micro-Sociology: Individuals
- Symbolic Interactionist Perspective (SI):
- Influence social-psychological dynamics of interactions in small groups described by a group of theories.
- Key description: human behavior is shaped by definitions and meanings that are created and maintained through symbolic interaction with others.
- Early sociologists:
- Max Weber
- Georg Simmel
- Charles Horton Cooley (Looking-Glass Self)
- G.H. Meed
- W.L. Thomas
- Erving Goffman
- Howard Becker
- Key components: social problem must be identified and recognized to be a social problem
- Theories Social problems are born and we can use that to track pertinent information about the social problem of interest.
- Blumer’s Stages of a social problem
- Labeling Theory: a social condition or group is a problem if it is viewed as such.
- Social Constructionism: society is constructed instead of organically developing
Table of Social Theoretical Perspectives
Contributors:
Emile Durkheim |
Karl Marx |
George H. Mead |
Talcott Pearsons |
Ralf Dahrendorf |
Charles Cooley |
Robert Merton |
|
Erving Goffman |
Society:
Natural state: balance |
Natural State: inbalance |
Interactions |
Cultural consensus |
Power struggles |
Shared meaning |
Individuals:
socialized by institutions |
Good people corrupted by society |
Social beings molded by events |
Cause of Social Problems:
rapid social change |
Inequality |
Different interpretations |
Social Policy/Solutions:
repair weak institutions |
minimize competition |
reduce impact of labeling |
proper socialization |
equitable system |
reduce impact of stigmatization |
Criticisms:
sunshine sociology |
utopian model |
micro issues only |
Social Problem Research
Quantitative and Qualitative approaches: hybrid approach to obtain information
- Stages of Research:
- Step One: formulate a research question
- Step Two: literature review
- Step Three: formulate a hypothesis and null hypothesis or research question again
- Step Four: Obtain data
- Experiment
- Surveys
- Field research
- Secondary data research
- Step Five: Analyze data
- Step Six: Present data ** Always ensure that your projects are able to be reproduced. This is a critical component of research.
Review:
- What is a social problem?
- What is meant by the structure of society?
- What are the components of the structure of society?
- What is meant by the culture of society?
- What are the components of the culture of society?
- What is the sociological imagination and why is it important?
- What are the differences between the three sociological perspectives?
- Structural-Functional:
- Conflict:
- Symbolic Interactionism:
- What are the stages of the research study?
- How do the various research methods differ from one another?
- Quantitative:
- Qualitative:
- What is a social movement?
Key Terms: Glossary with page numbers
- Achieved Status, pg 5:
- A status that society assigns to an individual on the basis of factors over which the individual has no control.
- Alienation, pg. 10:
- A sense of powerlessness and meaninglessness in people’s lives.
- Anomie, pg. 9:
- A state of normlessness in which norms and values are weak or unclear.
- Ascribed Status, pg. 5:
- A status that society assigns to an individual on the basis of factors over which the individual has some control.
- Beliefs, pg. 5:
- Definitions and explanations about what is assumed to be true.
- Culture, pg. 9:
- The meanings and ways of life that characterize a society, including beliefs, values, norms, sanctions, and symbols.
- Dependent Variable, pg. 16:
- The variable that the researcher wants to explain: the variable of interest.
- Experiments, pg. 17:
- Research methods that involve manipulating the independent variable to determine how it affects the dependent variable.
- Field Research, pg. 18:
- Research that involves observing and studying social behavior in settings in which it occurs naturally.
- Hypothesis, pg. 17:
- A prediction or educated guess about how one variable is related to another variable.
- Independent Variable, pg. 16:
- The variable that is expected to explain change in the dependent variable.
- Institution, pg. 4:
- An established and enduring pattern of social relationships.
- Latent Functions, pg. 9:
- Consequences that are unintended and often hidden.
- Manifest Functions, pg. 9:
- Consequences that are intended and commonly recognized.
- Norms, pg. 6:
- Socially defined rules of behavior, including folkways, laws, and mores.
- Objective Element of a Social Problem, pg. 2:
- Awareness of social conditions through one’s own life experiences and through reports in the media.
- Primary Groups, pg. 4:
- Usually small numbers of individuals characterized by intimate and informal interactions.
- Roles, pg. 5:
- The set of rights, obligations, and expectations associated with a status.
- Sample, pg. 17:
- A portion of the population, selected to be representative so that the information from the sample can be generalized to a larger population.
- Sanctions, pg. 7:
- Social consequences for conforming to or violating norms.
- Secondary Groups, pg. 4:
- Involving small or large numbers of individuals, groups that are task -oriented and are characterized by impersonal and formal interactions.
- Social Group, pg. 4:
- Two or more people who have a common identity interact and form a social relationship.
- Social Movement, pg. 21:
- An organized group of individuals with a common purpose to either promote or resist social change through collective action.
- Social Problem, pg. 3:
- A social condition that a segment of society views as harmful to members of society and in need of remedy.
- Sociological Imagination, pg. 7:
- The ability to see the connections between our personal lives and social world in which we live.
- Status, pg. 5:
- A position that a person occupies within a social group.
- Structure, pg. 4:
- The way society is organized including institutions, social groups, statuses, and roles.
- Subjective Element of a Social Problem, Pg. 3:
- The belief that a particular social condition is harmful to society, or to a
segment of society and that it should and can be changed.
- Survey Research, pg. 17:
- A research method that involves eliciting information from respondents through questions.
- Symbol, pg. 7:
- Something that represents something else.
- Theory, pg. 8:
- A set of interrelated propositions or principles designed to answer a question or explain a particular phenomenon.
- Values, pg. 5:
- Social agreements about what is considered good and bad, right and wrong, desirable and undesirable.
- Variable, pg. 16:
- Any measurable event, characteristic, or property that varies or is subject to change.
Social Problems:
Objective and subjective elements shape and comprise social problems. * Objective: awareness of social conditions by your own experiences and media. * Example: Ferguson (media/social media), LA Riots (own experience) * Subjective: The belief that a particular social condition is harmful to society, or to a
segment of society and that it should and can be changed. * Example: improved medical conditions for veterans, poverty levels in America, etc.