Summary, Conclusions and Implications of Unit I - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Summary, Conclusions and Implications of Unit I

Description:

We have seen that 20th c. functionalism took the maintenance of homeostasis in a ... 20th c functionalism would develop the view of social structure as a self ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:28
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: Peter9
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Summary, Conclusions and Implications of Unit I


1
Summary, Conclusions and Implications of Unit I
  • Classical theory
  • Dynamic Feedbacks
  • An example Gunnar Myrdal

2
The contemporary importance of Classical Theory
  • Marx, Durkheim and Weber are generally recognized
    as the classical theorists.
  • There are about 10 times as many references to
    them in texts and article, as to any other
    theorists.
  • Each began a tradition that has important
    research in every topic-area, today,
  • because each of them examined structures,
    dynamics and social problems that are very
    pervasive and important.
  • Each raised theoretical and methodological
    problems that are still important.
  • We have approached them in terms of
  • 1 Coherence (structure)
  • 2 Dynamics (social change)
  • 3) Social Problems.

3
The Overview (p.122)
  Marx Conflict theory Durkheim Functionalism Weber Organization theory
Basic model          Game of Monopoly Differentiated Organism Clock

Coherence of Social structure Class                         Inequality, domination, unequal life chances Norms                     Social integration, normative integration Organization           Formal organization, bureaucracy
Dynamic of Social change Matthew Principle polarization, poverty, expropriation Organic solidarity civil law, pluralism, ending of forced division of labor Rationalization     bureaucracy, rational-legal organization, science.
Basis of       Social Problems Alienation             (lack of power) Anomie                 (lack of norms) The iron cage                       (lack of meaning)
4
Social Facts the Chicago School
  • Through the 1940s the main empirical sociology
    was that from Chicago.
  • Chicago theorists noticed that different
    neighborhoods had different stable rates of
    juvenile delinquency, homicide, divorce,
    addiction, suicide, etc.
  • The stable rates showed that it is not the people
    but the social structure

5
2 Main Explanations
Culture of poverty
poverty
  • Rents
  • Class
  • Alienation
  • One set of poor people was being replaced by
    another
  • Subculture
  • Norms
  • Anomie
  • A new generation was being socialized into
    families and gangs

Culture of poverty
poverty
6
Alienation
Culture of poverty
poverty
  • By the 1960s the view of class, income and
    resources as the driving force was consolidated
    into a development of (Marxian) conflict theory.
  • The basic rules of the game (made by the winners)
    leads to the accumulation of privilege on the one
    side, and of disadvantage on the other.
  • Similar conflict theories account for differences
    in gender, race, education, crime, health,
    addictions, etc.
  • We analyze this as the dynamic of a game of
    Monopoly, stemming from positive feedback.

7
Anomie
Culture of poverty
poverty
  • The other main approach, developed by Durkheim
    and consolidated by Parsons in the 1930s viewed
    the problem as the subculture that undermined the
    norms.
  • Different processes leading to weakened norms or
    anomie were suggested, such as Mertons
    development of the concept of strain.
  • And a generalized analysis of the social
    structure as normative and of social problems as
    resulting from anomie was applied to gender,
    race, education, crime, health, addictions, etc.
    by Parsons and his students.

8
Cant both be true?
Culture of poverty
Poverty
  • Yes indeed.
  • One causal influence is logically consistent with
    another.
  • But given the different accounts, there is still
    the question whether they are

1.essentially the same, in different words
2.useful in analyzing different structures
3.different, compatible accounts of different
aspects of any structure 4.different in their
stress of which aspects are dynamically important
5.contradictory in their claims about what
produced the structure and what would resolve the
problem.
9
Dynamic core of Classical Theory in terms of
feedbacks
  • Conflict theory
  • Marx
  • Positive feedbacks
  • Alienation
  • Rich get richer
  • Functional theory
  • Durkheim
  • Negative feedbacks
  • Anomie (Weak Normative controls)
  • Functional needs

-

10
Conflict theory as a game of monopoly

rents
properties

Or, more generally,

Access to further resources
resources
  • This dynamic insures, that no matter what the
    abilities or attitudes of the players, the rich
    will get richer and the structure will polarize

11
Real world Monopoly
  • In Marxian analysis, property income is one part
    of class polarization
  • But life-chances, power, status and ideology are
    also important.
  • E.g. income wealth education

Or buying power, influence or social position
12
Functional theory as thermostats
  • We have seen that 20th c. functionalism took the
    maintenance of homeostasis in a biological
    organism as its model.
  • Parsons argued that the normative system
    maintains social functions.


Violation of a norm (which maintains a functional
need)
Negative santions
-
13
Some examples in Durkheim
-
  • Crime punishment crime
  • Differentiation anomie
  • That anomie higher level normative
    principles and organic solidarity which
    anomie.
  • 20th c functionalism would develop the view of
    social structure as a self maintaining cybernetic
    control system.

-
14
Weber as synthetic
  • At the micro-level of individual action,
  • Human goal-directed activity, meanings and
    identities all involve self-regulation.
  • And they often involve self-reinforcing
    developments.
  • At the macro-level of social institutions,
  • The elements of rationalization are mutually
    reinforcing (elective affinities).
  • And each of those elements is a control system.

15
An example An American Dilemma (1944)
  • Gunnar Myrdal had developed various economic
    feedback models in the 1930s.
  • His massive and influential analysis of US race
    relations, An American Dilemma,
  • was based on the concept of cumulative
    causation i.e. positive feedbacks.
  • He developed the analysis in the 1950s and 60s
    to deal with Third World development,
  • And in 1978 he received the Nobel Prize.

16
1st Positive feedback the vicious cycle of
minority deprivation
  • He argued that disadvantage produces further
    disadvantage in a vicious, cycle.
  • The advantages of an advantaged group cumulate,
    and the disadvantages of a disadvantaged group
    cumulate.

low income
low wealth
poor health
high crime rate
low educational attainment
family disorganization
17
2nd Positive feedback racism and minority
deprivation
  • Myrdal also argued that the poverty,
    unemployment, crime or other disadvantages of a
    disadvantaged group tend to generate or reinforce
    stereotyping, prejudice, segregation and
    political marginalization.
  • And they are reinforced by them
  • Minority deprivation leads to racism.
  • Racism leads to minority deprivation

Racism
Minority deprivation
18
Consequences of Positive feedbacks
  • Myrdal argued that the cumulative consequences of
    these feedbacks was a cascade that appeared
    natural
  • but that was socially produced, highly unstable,
  • and amenable to social policy in the long run.
  • In the same way that in increase in racism or in
    minority deprivation produces a cascade of
    further increases,
  • A decrease in racism or in minority deprivation
    produces a cascade of further decreases

19
Negative feedback in An American Dilemma
  • Myrdal argued that the main control system was
    the value system he called the American Creed.
  • It calls for all persons and groups to have equal
    opportunity, equal treatment by the law, and
    equal life chances.
  • The operation of cumulative causation violates
    the American Creed, generating pressure for
    reforms.

Pressure for reforms to reduce racism and racial
inequality

Racism and racial inequality
-
20
Positive and negative
  • Warning the evaluation of the consequences of a
    feedback is different from the nature of the
    feedback.
  • The consequences of positive feedbacks are often
    negative.
  • The consequences of negative feedbacks are often
    positive.

21
Myrdals dilemma as an example of a Synthetic
model
Violation of the American Creed
Vicious cycle of deprivation and racism
Minority poverty

Pressure for reforms to reduce racism and racial
inequality


Majority racism



-

Minority family breakdown, crime, etc.
22
Practical implications of Myrdals Model
  • Racism and racial inequality are social created.
  • They can be changed.
  • But only by broad spectrum changes
  • that address all the various multiply reinforcing
    structures of sentiment, unequal resources and
    segregation.

23
Analogy to poverty, gender, etc.
  • Analogous analyses were developed about poverty,
    gender, education, and a host of other topics in
    sociology.

24
Qualitative and Quantitative behavior of the
system.
  • Myrdal maintained that all these implications
    flowed from a general, qualitative analysis of
    the sign of the effects, without knowing their
    exact size.
  • But by 1978, he noted that such qualitative
    nalyses cannot answer the main questions
  • E.g. whether a policy reverses an avalanche or
    not requires quantitative estimation

25
Implications of feedback approaches to theory
  • Theoretical standpoints in the discipline
    usually try to be dynamic, and to deal with
    reciprocal effects, even when the empirical
    research and methods assume static, one-way
    causality.
  • Theory is often concerned with the dynamics,
    implications and conditions of particular causal
    effects.
  • Systemic feedbacks are the main way to conceive
    dynamics, implications and conditions
  • Ie. the big picture.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com