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Social Cohesion

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Anomie according to Durkheim. Specific type of norm: on impulse control ... Anomie = absence of such norms ... Anomie suicide, inequality. Cohesion suicide ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Social Cohesion


1
Social Cohesion
  • Lecture 2
  • Sociology and Public Policy

2
What is social cohesion?
  • The level of integration in a group
  • Durkheim intermediary groups
  • E.g., Church, army, politics, country, school,
    neighborhood, family, the mafia, youth gangs,
    cartel
  • Objective indicator being a member
  • Subjective indicator group identity, feeling
  • The number of ties and the intensity of those
    ties of individuals with others

3
Intermediary groups
4
Two conceptions of norms
5
NOTE
  • Again, this is a reconstruction
  • Aim of reconstruction innovative, testable
    hypotheses
  • The original Parsons contains few testable
    hypotheses
  • The normative pattern cannot, as an object of
    cathexis, therefore be a source of direct and
    immediate gratification, it serves gratification
    interests only indirectly through organizing and
    stabilizing egos own personality system and
    through influencing the gratifications he
    receives in interaction with the situation,
    notably of course the alters in it.
  • Talcott Parsons (1951), The Social System, page
    263-264.

6
Significance of Parsons
  • Naive conception of child development
  • Value internalization new field of research
  • Norm conformity often observed in the absence of
    social control

7
Norms and values
  • Values are convictions about what is desirable in
    life e.g., fairness
  • Norms are specific guidelines on appropriate
    behavior, based on values
  • E.g., Golden Rule 10 commandments
  • Norms are laid down in laws
  • Etiquette informal, situation specific rules

8
Anomie according to Durkheim
  • Specific type of norm on impulse control
  • Strong desires, high expectations, but limited
    means
  • Norms temper desires and lower expectations
  • You cant always get what you want
  • Anomie absence of such norms
  • Modern terms impulse control (civilization
    theory), delay of gratification (psychology)

9
Anomie according to Merton
  • Research problem Why do the US have higher crime
    rates than other civilized countries?
  • Theory Lower classes have typical combination of
    strong norms on ambition (The American Dream),
    but weaker norms on conformity
  • Research few tests applications of typology on
    survival strategies of unemployed

10
Two conceptions of anomie
11
Progress in Structural Functionalism
12
From suicide to petty crime
13
Methodological lessons
  • The more informative the theory, the better
  • Specify conditions under which general laws apply
  • E.g. norm A causes behavior X among members of
    group P at time T
  • Deduce new hypotheses from general theories and
    test them

14
A new hypothesis
  • Among Dutch students, bike theft is legitimated
    after ones own bike is stolen
  • Fraternity members are a student group
  • Fraternity members commit more bike theft
  • Compare this to the example of legitimate suicide
    in the army
  • Same general law, different condition (norm),
    different prediction on behavior

15
Caveats
  • The exception makes the rule
  • You can explain anything by invoking norms
  • Make sure you have other evidence (not the
    behavior to be explained) that confirms the
    existence and content of the norm
  • Evidence Empirical evidence
  • Test, rather than explain in theory

16
More caveats
  • Phenomena are easily explained by their
    function
  • Example division of labor
  • Creates mutual dependence, reduces strife
  • But not everything that has functions exists
  • Behavior is often the result of unintended side
    effects (externalities)
  • Structural functionalism is a conservative
    theory assumes value consensus
  • Social change cannot be explained

17
From Durkheim to modern sociology
  • D. Division of labor creates mutual dependence
  • Theoretical, macro-sociological argument
  • Research on social networks mutual dependence
    ties among individual actors
  • Research problem how does social network
    structure affect cooperation among individuals
    and firms?
  • Dense networks create trust and promote
    cooperation through information and control

18
Trends in social cohesion
  • Layer 3 of the UAF book state of society
  • In 2000 1500 suicides occurred
  • Trends table 7.2
  • Trends in suicide rates reflect changes in social
    cohesion
  • Testing Durkheim Table 7.5 (marital status) and
    tabel 7.6
  • Comparing the Netherlands with other countries
    Table 7.7

19
Comparing suicide rates
  • The Netherlands has a below average suicide rate
  • How can we explain differences between countries
    in suicide rates?
  • Religion?
  • Catholic countries have lowest suicide rates
  • Economics? No relation
  • Geography the "long winter-hypothesis
  • rejected

20
Integration in intermediary groups
  • Family
  • More singles, decline in household size
  • Fewer marriages, more divorces
  • Divorce rate in 2000 30 (US 50)
  • Religion
  • Membership halved in past century (98 to 45)
  • Strong decline in attendance too
  • NL strongly secular country
  • US is more religious

21
Participation in civil society
  • Robert Putnam Bowling Alone
  • Declining voluntary participation in the US
  • Declining trust in fellow citizens
  • Speaks to eternal concern of The end of society
    as we know it
  • Individualization makes people more selfish,
    majority agrees

22
Changes in Dutch civil society
  • Decline of pillarized associations with some
    connection to religion
  • Emergence of new social movements environment,
    international aid, human rights
  • Increasing leisure time budgets cultural and
    sports organizations
  • Netherlands have high membership rates, like US,
    Canada, Scandinavia

23
Association memberships
24
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25
Volunteer work
26
Conclusion
  • Decline of social cohesion since 1900
  • Until end of 20th century
  • Suicide rate declines
  • Number of memberships increases
  • More volunteering
  • More charitable giving
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