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Chapter 5 Groups and Organizations

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Title: Chapter 5 Groups and Organizations


1
Chapter 5Groups and Organizations
  • Sets of people
  • Organizations
  • Bureaucracies

2
Small and Large Organizations
  • Groups and organizations are among the basic
    elements of social structure
  • Personal experiences with large organizations are
    often troubling, because of their
  • Impersonal cultures
  • Rules and regulations
  • Ways to maintain social control over large
    numbers of strangers

3
rationalization of society, walmartization,
McDonaldization scientific management or
Taylorism
4
  • Large organizations (such as bureaucracies)
    contain small networks, groups, and cliques
  • These informal organizations accomplish much of
    the larger organizations work
  • Organizational principles (leadership,
    commitment, control, exchange) are the same in
    different kinds and sizes of organizations

5
Sets of People
  • Categories
  • Networks
  • Communities
  • Groups
  • Organizations
  • Sets differ by
  • Organization
  • Effects they have on members

6
Categories
  • Aggregates with shared characteristics
  • e.g., age, gender
  • Have no social structure (no connections, members
    do not know each other)
  • For this reason categories are of limited
    interest to sociologists

7
  • Categorical differences may be socially
    constructed as significant
  • e.g., Male/female, young/old, white/black
  • In this case, boundaries are enforced, and
    categorical differences serve as base for social
    and cultural differentiation
  • i.e., To formation of communities or social
    movements

8
Networks
  • People connected directly (kinship, friendship,
    acquaintanceship) or indirectly
  • Granovetter weakly tied networks (based mostly
    on indirect links) may be more useful than
    strongly tied networks
  • They have large outreach and conduct valuable
    resources (information, social support, etc.)
  • Networks are made of dyadic relationships (pairs
    based on regular social exchange)

9
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10
  • Networks change as people enter and leave
    relationships
  • Networks lack
  • Collective identity (such as communities have)
  • Complete awareness of their membership and its
    characteristics (such as a group has)
  • Collective goals (such as an organization has)

11
Communities
  • Communities are sets of people with a common
    sense of identity
  • Based on common experiences or common values
  • Members are often prepared to make efforts for
    survival of communities
  • Essentializing claiming that a personal
    characteristic is intrinsic to a community
  • e.g., Canadians are modest

12
  • Debate is positive essentializing possible, or
    does essentializing inevitably lead to
    stereotyping and racism?

13
  • Toennies distinguishes between
  • Gemeinschaft (community-based social life) a
    stable, homogeneous group lead similar lives
    share values have dense/highly connected
    networks controlling elites
  • Gesellschaft a fluid, heterogeneous group lead
    different lives few shared values impersonal
    brief relationships interact around similar
    interests weakly-tied networks less cohesion
    and less control.

14
Groups
  • Groups
  • Awareness of membership
  • All members are connected (directly or
    indirectly)
  • Members have roles (e.g., parentchild
    teacherstudent leaderfollower)
  • Cooley
  • Primary groups small regular face-to-face
    interactions
  • Secondary groups larger members may not
    interact regularly

15
  • Importance of secondary groups
  • Facilitate stable patterns of social interaction
  • Responsible for much social learning
  • Formal organizations are a subtype of secondary
    groups

16
Organizations
  • Organizations are
  • Secondary groups that work together,
    with communication and
    leadership, to achieve common goals

17
  • Organizations differ by
  • Origin (spontaneous or deliberate)
  • Spontaneous organizations arise to meet a single
    goal. They disband when the goal is achieved or
    beyond reach, or are absorbed by formal
    organizations
  • Division of labour (crude or complex)
  • Formal/informal structure and leadership
  • Goals (one specific goal or a range of goals)

18
  • Cliques are informal organizations that
  • Satisfy peoples needs for interaction and
    support
  • e.g., cliques providing support for New York
    transsexuals
  • Produce roles, rules, and cultural values
  • e.g., distinct circles of membership within
    Bohemia
  • Have a purpose to raise status of members at the
    expense of outsiders
  • Accomplished by interaction and exchange of
    resources among members and exclusion of
    non-members

19
  • Have a hierarchy of influence and popularity
  • Leaderfavouritesother members
  • Form on the basis of both similarity and choice
  • Common in schools, because of the similarity of
    potential members
  • Screen potential members, and control current
    members to ensure that they remain similar

20
  • Cohesion is based on loyalty to the leader and to
    the group
  • Isolation from and ignorance of outsiders
    reinforces solidarity

21
Formal Organizations
  • Formal organizations are deliberately planned
    groups that coordinate people and resources
    through formalized roles, statuses, and
    relationships to achieve a division of labour
    intended to attain specific goals
  • Members normally pursue not only organizational
    (e.g., creation of corporate profit), but also
    personal goals (e.g., career goals)

22
  • Explanations of success of formal organizations
  • Organization fills a social need
  • Organization controls necessary resources
  • Organizational goals match personal goals
  • Organization adapts to its environment, or
    changes the environment

23
Bureaucracy
  • Potentially very efficient formal organizations
    because
  • Resources belong to the organization, not to
    persons
  • Resources are distributed on the basis of office,
    not of personal favour
  • Office holding is based on expertise
  • Written rules govern relationships in the
    organization

24
  • This makes bureaucracy superior to earlier
    organizational forms, such as clientelism
  • Historic origins of bureaucracy
  • European nation-building and international
    warfare
  • Capitalism
  • Industrialization
  • All three relied on rationalization view of the
    world based on accumulation of evidence
  • Favours impersonal authority based on universal
    application of codified rules

25
Characteristics of Bureaucracy
  • Division of labour each members duties are
    specified and differentiated
  • Based on technical competence and centralized
    provision of resources
  • Hierarchy determines range of authority
  • Each member is responsible to a specific superior
    and for a specific group of subordinates
  • Aim to increase efficiency. However, it may
    become cumbersome
  • Informal communication channels are used to
    compensate for it

26
  • Rules guarantee impersonal, predictable responses
    to specific situations
  • Separation of the person from the office
  • Duties, functions, and authority are properties
    of the office, not of an office-holder.
    Relationships are between roles, not between
    people
  • Hiring and promotion are based on technical
    merit, not on ascribed characteristics

27
  • Careers are protected
  • Bureaucratic personality bureaucracies press
    their members to conform, and train them to deal
    with routine situations. This results in
  • Trained incapacity to deal with new situations
  • View of clients as representatives of categories,
    instead of as individuals with unique needs
  • These needs are therefore not met the
    bureaucracy becomes efficient but not effective

28
Informal Organizations in Bureaucracies
  • Members develop complex personal and informal
    networks that
  • Support and protect workers at the lower levels
    of hierarchy
  • Conduct information, favours, and influence
  • Provide a sense of community
  • Hawthorne studies informal organization can
    either help a formal organization attain its
    goals or hinder it

29
  • This depends on the quality of the relationship
    between workers and the management
  • The study expected that good group relations
    would increase productivity (human-relations
    school of management)
  • In the absence of formal supervision, good group
    relations decreased productivity

30
  • Explanation the management consistently raised
    productivity standards
  • The workers deliberately limited the speed of work

31
Actual/informal Structure of a Bureaucracy
  • Actual/informal structure and ideal/formal
    structure do not coincide
  • Actual flow of information
  • Controlling the flow changes power relations
    between superiors and subordinates
  • Workers awareness of inequality and of the power
    of information control varies across societies
  • Actors below the top level cannot use routine
    channels to negotiate in the ideal manner
  • They therefore organize informally, on basis of
    trust and reciprocity

32
  • Organizations increasingly introduce horizontal
    reporting, which depends on swift trusttrust
    based on limited informationwhich works best
    when roles and expectations are clear

33
Organizational Theory and Research
  • Scientific management
  • Human relations and behavioural school
  • Systems theory
  • Labour process theory
  • Structural approach
  • Feminist perspectives

34
Scientific Management
  • Frederick Taylor, Principles of Scientific
    Management (1911)
  • Increase in productivity will end
    labour-management conflicts
  • Time and motion studies break every task into
    a series of essential motions and develop
    standard time
  • Extreme vertical division of labour
  • Management as thinkers workers as doers

35
Human Relations and Behavioural School
  • Human relations workers are seen as non-rational
  • Happy group relations produce high productivity.
    Management is to ensure happy group relations
  • Behavioural school (Maslow) a fusion of
    human-relations theory and psychology of needs
  • Management should adopt a participative
    leadership style that satisfies workers needs
    for esteem and self-fulfillment

36
Systems Theory
  • An organization is an open system, receiving
    input from its environment and producing output
  • Ripple effect changes in one part of the
    organization produce (often unforeseen) changes
    in other parts

37
Labour Process Theory
  • Based on Marxs concept of alienation
  • Alienation of workers from the products of labour
  • Alienation of workers from the labour process
  • Alienation of workers from themselves
  • Alienation of workers from others
  • Intensification of management control over the
    workplace
  • Person-to-person control, technological control,
    bureaucratic control

38
Structural Approach
  • Kanter behaviour of members depends on
  • Power
  • Accountable but powerless cannot be good
    leaders
  • opportunities for advancement
  • Upwardly mobile support organizational goals
  • proportional representation
  • Tokenism is a self-fulfilling prophecy

39
Feminist Perspectives
  • Gender as explanatory concept in organizational
    processes
  • Acker traditional organizational image or
    manager and worker is male
  • As a consequence, organizational procedures are
    incompatible with female characteristics
  • Womens sexuality is stigmatized
  • Womens gender roles (e.g., child rearing) are
    considered deviant

40
Organizational Cultures and Flexibility
  • Introduction of horizontal groupings may create
    conflicts or inconsistent demands
  • Because of this, greater flexibility must be
    sought both from workers and the organization
  • Flexibility requires continuous education and
    workers participation in planning

41
  • Some organizations (e.g., universities) solve the
    problem of motivation by giving workers autonomy
    and rewarding strong identification with the
    institution

42
  • Higher receptivity for collective culture (e.g.,
    in Japan, Korea, and China) results in higher
    worker commitment and employee retention
  • Organizational culture may apparently empower the
    workers, without changing relationships of
    differentiation and control
  • Result increased control and intensification of
    work

43
The Problem of Rationality
  • Impersonal decisions and rewarding merit are more
    rational than patronclient relations
  • The concern with the survival of the organization
    may undermine the quality of decisions (e.g.,
    red tape) and thus produce irrationality
  • Presumption of knowledge and reliance on official
    procedures create a paper reality

44
  • Formal rules and separation of person from the
    office undermine personal responsibility
  • So-called collective decisions are usually made
    by corporate elites
  • Deviant behaviour continues until challenged from
    the outside
  • Bauman Holocaust displays characteristics of
    rationality

45
Relations with the Outside World
  • One-way glass the outside world cannot see into
    the organization, but the organization can see
    the world
  • Decision-making authority is separated from
    front-line work
  • Groupthink the us vs them frame of mind
  • The organization does not take criticism
    seriously
  • It is unresponsive to change

46
Total Institutions
  • Goffman mental hospitals, prisons, and military
    camps have total control over inmates
  • Staff watch and control inmates behaviour 24
    hours a day
  • Founded on procedural rigidity
  • Contrary to public organizations democratic
    participation by employees and clients

47
  • Totalitarian societies
  • Bureaucratic
  • Resocialize uncooperative citizens Blau
  • Bureaucracy is a constant threat to democracy
  • Bureaucracy is formed to achieve set objectives
  • Organizing principle is efficiency and the
    structure is hierarchical

48
  • Democracy is formed to discover the objectives of
    the group
  • Organizing principle is freedom of dissent and
    the structure is egalitarian
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