Sociology: Its Purposes, Theories, and Research Approaches - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 65
About This Presentation
Title:

Sociology: Its Purposes, Theories, and Research Approaches

Description:

A variety of concepts, theories, and research methods have been developed to ... Modern societies are characterized by egotistic and anomic suicide ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:77
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 66
Provided by: ivan121
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Sociology: Its Purposes, Theories, and Research Approaches


1
Sociology Its Purposes, Theories, and Research
Approaches
  • Perspectives in sociology
  • Sociology and other social sciences

2
Sociology is
  • The systematic study of social behaviour in human
    societies
  • A variety of concepts, theories, and research
    methods have been developed to facilitate this
    study

3
Goals of Sociology
  • to accurately describe the social world
  • to explain how and why social processes happen
    the way they do
  • to critique existing social arrangements that
    have negative effects, and to work toward social
    change

4
Sociology and Common Sense
  • Common-sensical explanations of social
    relationships are usually untested and have a
    voluntaristic bias
  • Sociological knowledge is systematically tested
    in research and is aware that social
    circumstances cause people to experience unwanted
    conditions

5
Macrosociology
  • Studies large-scale social organizations and
    large social categories
  • Studies social processes and patterns in society
    as a whole
  • Perceives social change as slow and social
    patterns as persistent

6
Microsociology
  • Studies the processes and patterns of
    face-to-face interaction
  • Studies interpersonal interactions and
    negotiations that produce the persistent patterns
    studied by macrosociology
  • Perceives change as rapid, yet subtle

7
Social Imagination
  • Connects personal problems to large-scale social
    processes

8
Strength of Weak Ties
  • Why are you more likely to find a good job
    through acquaintances than through family
  • Weak ties provide the best combination of
    awareness, information quantity and quality, and
    evaluation
  • Strong ties (family) are more motivated to help
    but are unlikely to have access to new information

9
and other social sciences
  • Sociology and History/Journalism
  • All disciplines are descriptive
  • Sociology is explanatory and interpretive
  • Sociology and Philosophy
  • Both are analytical
  • Sociology is empirical

10
  • Sociology and Psychology
  • Psychology is interested in individual human
    behaviour and often studies it under experimental
    conditions
  • Sociology is interested in social relationships
    and group dynamics observed in society

11
Social Structure
  • The enduring and predictable pattern of social
    behaviours and social relations within a society
  • Social relations any relations in which a
    persons actions have consequences for another
  • Social institutions stable patterns of that
    endure over time and accomplish goals that are
    generally recognized as important
  • e.g., family, education, or religion, etc.

12
  • Roles patterns of interaction with others that
    are governed by role expectations
  • e.g., from a parent, patient, or student
  • Statuses socially defined positions of
    interaction with others
  • Status is relational, and carries rights, duties,
    and responsibilities

13
  • Interaction the process of relating to others,
    including communication
  • Negotiation conferring, bargaining,
    compromising, and reaching an agreement that
    allows interaction on the basis of common
    understanding

14
Societies
  • Are the largest social structures
  • Although many social relationships span
    international borders, sociologists often study
    societies within nation-states, because social
    relationships differ across international borders
    (e.g., Canada and the US)

15
Culture
  • A complex of ideas shared by members of a
    society, including
  • Meanings (that people learn from others)
  • Beliefs (descriptive and normative)
  • Values (criteria for judging behaviour)
  • Norms (rules of behaviour)

16
Culture and Social Structure
  • Culture comprises ideas that are developed in
    social relationships
  • Culture also helps determine social relationships
  • Geertz they are different abstractions from the
    same phenomena.

17
  • Constraining behaviour people with very
    different personalities act the same way in the
    same social situations
  • Transforming behaviour individual people act
    differently in different social situations

18
  • Socialization transformation of behaviour
    through internalization of cultural norms,
    values, and beliefs

19
  • The resulting social relationships are enduring
    and stable because
  • People learn to value stable relationships
  • People lack the knowledge or courage to change
    relationships
  • People in power urge others to maintain stable
    relationships

20
Emergence of Sociology
  • Emerged in the late 19th and the early 20th
    century as an attempt to understand the rapid
    social change accompanying industrialization

21
  • Founders of sociology
  • Karl Marx (181883)
  • Max Weber (18641920)
  • Emile Durkheim (18581917)
  • Durkheim and Weber developed their views partly
    in reaction to Marxs work

22
Marxist Theory of Structure
  • Based on materialist conception of history the
    ongoing need to produce necessities drives human
    affairs
  • Modes of production are organized by
  • Productive forces
  • Relations of production (primarily relations of
    ownership

23
  • Differences in ownership give rise to classes
  • The mode of production is the base of other
    institutions (superstructure)

24
  • Exploitation is the defining class relationship
  • Ideologies systems of beliefs that justify the
    supremacy of the ruling classes and rationalize
    the subordination of the labouring classes
  • False consciousness oppressed classes
    internalize ruling ideologies

25
  • Revolutions occur in conjunction with changes in
    the productive base and the class consciousness
  • Contributions of Marxism
  • Use of history to predict future social change
  • Attempt to discover objective laws of social
    structure and change

26
Webers Historical Sociology
  • Historical change is complex and must be
    explained in terms of multiple determination (not
    just in terms of technological advances and class
    conflict)

27
  • The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of
    Capitalism religious values affirmed economic
    activity
  • Work was seen as a form of religious devotion
  • Relation between Protestantism and capitalism is
    one of elective affinity

28
Weber Relations of Domination
  • Power is derived from multiple sources
  • Class inequalities are based n property and
    market opportunities for different skill levels
  • Status inequalities are based on ethnic, racial,
    and religious identities
  • Party inequalities result from access to
    political power

29
  • Bureaucracy is a hierarchical organization with
    specialized offices, based on written rules and
    depersonalized handling of cases
  • The iron cage forced regimentation of human
    experience

30
  • Webers contribution to sociology
  • Refusal of simple, universal explanations
  • Development of explanations of inequality

31
Durkheim
  • Social reality is a reality sui generis
  • It is an emergent, objective order that
    transcends the level of acting individuals
  • It is external and coercive to individuals
  • Individuals thinking is informed by collective
    consciousness

32
  • Suicide suicidal tendencies are influenced by
    the degree of solidarity and normative
    integration
  • Modern societies are characterized by egotistic
    and anomic suicide
  • Religion the experience of the sacred is the
    experience of societya power greater than the
    individual

33
  • Durkheims contribution to sociology
  • Link between seemingly individual problems and
    broader social processes
  • Development of rigorous research methods

34
Paradigms
  • A set of assumptions about society and behaviour
  • Directs sociological research
  • What kinds of questions are asked?
  • How are research results interpreted?

35
Four Sociological Paradigms
  • Structural functionalism
  • Conflict theory
  • Symbolic interactionism
  • Feminism

36
Structural Functionalism
  • Inspired partly by Durkheim
  • Society is defined as a social system, with
    structures organized in an orderly way to form an
    organic, stable whole
  • The system has certain basic needs that must be
    met in order for it to survive

37
  • Structures within the system exist to fulfill one
    or more of these needs
  • The normal state of the system is equilibrium
  • Changes in one structure provoke changes in other
    structures
  • Change is disruptive

38
Functions of Social Processes
  • Every activity in society has beneficialthough
    often hiddenconsequences for the system
  • These consequences are their functions, and they
    explain the activity

39
Manifest Functions
  • Manifest functions are the intended consequences
    of an activity
  • e.g., educational system conveys knowledge to the
    young

40
Latent Functions
  • Latent functions are unintended and often
    unrecognized, but are socially important
    consequences of an activity
  • e.g., educational system provides babysitting,
    teaches obedience, provides credentials

41
Conflict Theory
  • Conflict and change are basic features of social
    life
  • They are inevitable, because society is composed
    of groups differing in wealth, power, and prestige

42
  • Conflicts are caused by
  • Inequalities in wealth, power, and prestige
  • Differing values, and the struggle for the right
    to define values
  • Conflict is not destructiveit focuses attention
    on a social problem and mobilizes efforts to
    solve that problem

43
  • This paradigm is formulated
  • Partly in reaction to structural-functionalist
    emphasis on stability and absence of conflict
  • Often following Marxs work, but denying that all
    social conflicts are based on class conflict

44
Symbolic Interactionism
  • Society is seen as a product of continuous
    face-to-face interaction between individuals
  • A symbol is something that meaningfully
    represents something else
  • Most interaction is symbolic (dependent on
    language or symbolic gestures)

45
  • Herbert Blumer
  • Human beings act toward things on the basis of
    the meanings that the things have for them
  • Meanings arise out of social interaction (or,
    meanings are socially constructed)
  • Social action results from fitting together of
    individual lines of action.

46
  • People do not respond to each other or to a
    situation directly, but on their definition of
    the situation
  • In order to understand an action, one must
    understand the actors definition of the
    situation
  • Action (and social relationships) are possible
    because actors negotiate their definitions of the
    situation

47
Feminist Paradigm
  • Composed of many differing views, including
  • Radical feminism patriarchy is the main and
    universal cause of womens oppression and women
    must organize separately from men to protect
    their interests
  • Materialist feminism Gender inequalities are
    viewed in historical and economic contexts and
    women should organize with men of the same class
    to solve the problem of gender inequality

48
Characteristics of Feminism
  • Gender inequalities are not biologically
    determined, but socially constructed
  • Patriarchy is present in nearly all societies
  • The personal is political
  • Private areas of life (family, child rearing)
    are connected to gender inequality in other areas
    of social life

49
  • Recently, feminists increasingly acknowledge that
    women from different classes, ethno-racial, and
    cultural groups have different social experiences
  • Research must acknowledge these differences
  • Feminism is a new social movement.

50
Postmodern Critique
  • Sociology is a set of ideological statements that
    need to be deconstructed in order to reveal its
    biased assumptions about truth and society
  • Postmodernists deny that reality is knowable in
    an absolute sense
  • Freedom from values and bias is impossible,
    truth does not exist

51
  • Sociologists value this critique because it
    reminds them that
  • An objective, scientific sociology is a
    difficult goal to achieve
  • They should always be aware of the influence of
    ideology in research and interpretation of their
    findings

52
Experiments
  • Experiments are traditionally the standard of
    research
  • Controlled environment where factors can be
    manipulated to determine effects on the outcome
  • Experimenting is not often feasible in social
    sciences
  • Variables cannot be manipulated for practical or
    ethical reasons
  • External validity of findings is problematic

53
Surveys and Pseudo-surveys
  • Good for study of large populations
  • Goals
  • Description of a population
  • Theory testing
  • Generalization

54
  • Pseudo-surveys have a low generalizability
    because of
  • Poor sampling (based on convenience and luck, not
    at random)
  • Low response rate (people who do not answer the
    questionnaire may be systematically different
    from those who do)

55
Field Research Ethnographic or Participant
Observation
  • Goal collecting rich, nuanced qualitative data
    that may or may not be generalized
  • Techniques
  • Participant observation (ethnography)
  • In-depth interviewing
  • Documentary analysis

56
  • The researcher participates in daily activities
    of research subjects, usually for an extended
    period of time
  • Field notes (or recordings)
  • No rigid research design
  • Particularly appropriate for some theories (e.g.,
    Goffmans dramaturgical approach)

57
In-depth Interviews/Documentation
  • In-depth interviews varying degree of structure
  • Semi-structured interviews are usual the
    researcher sets basic questions, but allows
    participants to explore other topics
  • Documentation usual when studying formal
    organizations

58
  • Choosing a site and informants
  • Research topic
  • Practicality
  • Length of stay on site until the researcher is
    no longer gaining much new information
  • Flexibility of field research allows for
    correcting mistakes in research design and
    pursuit of unexpected leads

59
Secondary Data Analysis
  • Sources official statistics and existing surveys
  • Has grown because of increased availability of
    computers and statistical software
  • Advantages
  • Broad coverage of data
  • Use of data whose collection needs more expertise
    and resources than the researcher has

60
  • Disadvantages
  • Data are often not directly related to the
    researchers ideas
  • The researcher needs to learn new techniques of
    analysis

61
Historical Research and Content Analysis
  • Historical methods use of documents, records,
    interviews with participants
  • Problems
  • Bias in the documents
  • Loss or destruction of documents

62
  • Content analysis records are sampled and
    analyzed to reveal patterns
  • Manifest content analysis words, phrases, and
    images are counted
  • Latent content analysis focus is on implicit
    themes

63
Selecting a Research Method
  • Any method can be used to investigate social
    phenomena from any theoretical perspective
  • Some methods are seldom used in some perspectives
  • e.g., surveys in symbolic interactionism
  • The problem determines the method
  • However, some researchers prefer to use familiar
    techniques, and frame their research questions
    accordingly

64
Sources of Social Change
  • People assume different roles
  • Different types of people assume the same roles,
    and play them somewhat differently
  • Institutions grow and shrink (e.g., family)
  • Material innovations (e.g., technology)

65
  • Applied social research
  • Its influence has been limited because of
  • Complexity of social problems
  • Limited will and ability of those in power to
    address researched social problems
  • Sociology as moral enterprise
  • Value preferences
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com