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BASIC CONCEPTS
IN SOCIOLOGY
Concepts
• A science is mature if it has a solid foundation for the
construction of theories;
• Solid foundation-a set of commonly accepted and well
defined concepts
• Mental constructs
• Chair? Car? - almost same for everyone
I. Types of Human
Collectivities
• Society
• Community
• Institution
• Association
• Social groups
II. Social Order
• Social structure
• Social functions
• Status and role
• Values
• Norms
II. Social Order
• Customs
• Folkways
• Mores
• Law
• Etiquette
• Fashion
• Fads
II. Social order
• Socialisation
• Social control
• Public opinion
• Conformity
• Social deviance
• Sanctions
III. Social processes
Culture and civilisation
• Ethnocentrism
• Diffusion
• Acculturation
• Integration
III. Social processes
Types of social interactions
• Cooperation
• Competition
• conflict
I. Types of Human
Collectivities
I.1. Society
derived from socius-meaning companionship or friendship
• Man is a social animal-Aristotle
• Society is a large aggregate of human beings, social groups are
the constituent elements of society;both are complementary to
each other
• Definition- a society is a relatively independent, self perpetuating
human group which occupies a territory, shares a culture and has
most of its associations within group (Horton and Hunt)
Characteristics
• A large interacting group of individuals
• Sometimes definite territory (some without a definite
territory:nomadic tribes of Arab origin of the Jewish groups),
Social relationships occur within the boundaries of society
• Attempts to become self sufficient by establishing
procedures for satisfying the needs of members
• Ultimate decision making unit
• Cultural autonomy
• Different types of societies- agrarian, industrial, urban/rural,
simple/complex etc
I.2 Community
• Most elusive and vague term in sociology
• Community is a social group with some degree of ‘we
feeling’ and living in a given area (Bogardus)
• A subsystem of society
• Two necessary conditions-locality and community
sentiments
Characteristics
• Definite territory, smaller population size
• Evolve in a natural way, mutuality, organised interaction
• Close informal social relationships-binds people with a single
thread
• Cultural similarity
• Strong group feeling
• Common believes and values
• Neighbourhood is the unit of a community
• e.g.. Tribal community, rural community, urban community etc.
I.3 Association
• A social organisation purposefully created to attain specified goals
• Has organisational characteristics
• Definition- According to M. Ginsberg, an association is a group of
social beings related to one another by the fact that they possess
or have instituted in common an organisation with a view to
specific ends
• According to MacIver, an association is a group organised for the
pursuit of an interest or group of interest
• e.g..government departments, schools and colleges, hospitals etc
Characteristics
• Voluntarily created and membership is also formal-has a
legal status
• Officials who are elected for a definite time period
• Fixed and written rules to be followed
• Definite goals to achieve
• Satisfies the needs and interests of the individuals
I.4 Institution
• Complex norms regulating social activities
• A unit of social organisation
• machineries through which man satisfied all his economic,
political, education and religious needs
• Social interaction between the members is regulated by
customs, law etc
• e.g.. family, marriage, political parties, schools and
colleges
Relevance of institutions
• Training new members
• Providing channels of communication
• Assigning roles and tasks to members
• Establishing social norms and operational rules
• Making collective decisions etc
• In our day-to-day life it is difficult to separate institutions
from association
• eg. college is an association but modes of training,
education etc are institutions; church is an association but
its sacraments, modes of worship and rituals are institutions
• The individuals belong to associations but not to institutions
Relationship b/w Association
and Institution
I.5 Social Groups
• Which all social groups do you know?how big are they?how
do you decide who to include in those groups?
• According to Pascual Gisbert, a social group is a collection of
individuals interacting on each other under a recognisable
structure
• Social groups are collections of human beings existing within
a society whereas society is a system of social relationships
• Membership is usually voluntary (in society it is compulsory)
• A group is formed with a view to realise certain goals while
community is a natural entity; community has a locality but for
groups no such preconditions
Classification of Group
• How group size can affect group dynamics and relationships
• Dyads and Triads-Introduced by Leopald Von Wiese, a German Sociologist
• Dyad-the most fundamental type of social group consists of only two people
• e.g.. doctor and patient, lawyer and client
• Triad-if you add another person to a dyad, it becomes a triad-a social group
that consists of three people
• Simple addition significantly affects the group interactions and dynamics
• Relationships in triad will be fairly intense and stable than dyad
I.5.1 Primary group and
Secondary group
• Primary Group- Concept introduced by Charles Horton Cooley
in his book Social Organization : A Study of the Larger Mind
• Small group whose members share close, personal, enduring
relationships.
• Face to face group-the most effective agency of socialisation
and the nucleus of social organisation
• Informal group for mutual help and companionship
• Members work together for a common end and share common
experience. Eg: families and close friends
• Secondary Groups: usually large groups, whose
relationships are impersonal and goal oriented, temporary
• Secondary because develop later in life and are much less
likely to be influential on one’s identity than primary groups
• Weak emotional ties, little personal knowledge of one
another; don’t have any goal of maintaining and developing
the relationships themselves
• Exchanges explicit commodities such as labor for wages,
services for payments etc
• e.g.. university classes, athletic teams, and groups of o-
workers; doctor patient relationship
(I.5.2) In-Groups and Out-Groups
• William Graham Sumner, an American Sociologist, divided
groups into in-group and out-group; especially for
understanding group prejudice
• In-Groups: social groups to which an individual feels he or
she belongs-may be small as the family-also considered as
the ‘we group’
• Out-Group: the individual doesn’t identify with the out-group;
“they group”
• The members of the in-group regard the members of out-
group as strangers; often marked by hostility or conflict; they
evaluate each other in emotional rather than rational terms
(I.5.3) Reference Groups
• First introduced by Hayman, later elaborated by Merton and
Sherif
• The reference groups is the one with which an individual
identifies himself either consciously or unconsciously
• A perpetual group; may not have physical proximity
• Could be occupational, professional, religious, political etc.; e.g..
a doctor may be a member of a medical association which may
be located in a distant city and the doctor’s attitude is moulded
by the perspective of the reference group
• The symbolic character of human communication means that it
may respond to the symbols of one group while he is physically
present in another; to achieve higher status
• M.N Srinivas-Westernisation, Sanskritisation to describe the
social processes-individuals and groups imitate the values and
practices of another group which is higher in scale
• Sanskritisation- attempts made by low ranking castes to adopt
the beliefs and rituals of the higher castes such as Brahmins
and Rajputs
• Westernisation- the efforts made by the individuals to acquire
Western education, in order to join government offices etc and
improve their economic and social standing
• Social change in Indian society!
(I.5.4) Status Groups
• Max Weber distinguished b/w the classes and the status
groups
• Class-the groups of people, who, from the standpoint of
specific interest have the same economic position in
society (Ownership or non-ownership of material goods or
of definite skills constitutes the class-situation)
• Status- a quality of “social honour” or lack of it, and it is
mainly expressed through a specific style of life; they are
stratified according to the principles of their consumption
of goods as represented by their life style
II. Social Order
• Society has order that can be discovered, described and
understood
• It is the coordination and integration of social acts which
permits them to occur in such a way that chaos is avoided
• It rests on values, norms and social expectations that
govern the conduct of the individuals
II.1 Social Structure
• Arrangement or interrelationship (roles which individuals
enact) of the parts that make up a whole
• Always linked to the notion of “function”
• A.R Radcliff Brown defined- Social structure as an
arrangement of persons in relation to institutions and roles
II.2 Social Functions
• Total social system-independent parts performing
functions-essential to the system
• Herbert Spencer-organic analogy-society as super organic
• Emile Durkheim-normal and pathological functioning of
social institutions-religion functionally reinforced social
solidarity
II.3 Status and Roles
• Status-Rank or social position that one holds in a
group/society in relation to other members of the group
• Eg. female, childhood, son of an upper class man
According to Ralph Linton, two types of status:
1. Ascribed status- the social position a person receives at
birth; eg. sex, ethnicity, family background
2. Achieved status- individual achieves during his lifetime
as a result of the exercise of knowledge, ability, skill ad
perseverance; Eg. Lawyer
• He also regarded role as the dynamic or the behavioural
aspect of status
• Role-expected patterns of behaviour associated with a given social
status
• Statuses-occupied (who a person is) eg. student
• Roles-played (what a person is expected to do) eg. class prefect,
member of Ambedkar Chair, etc., many roles for a single person
• Role Set- Concept by Robert K Merton- a summation of social roles;
e.g.., mother, daughter, wife, teacher, research scholar, activist etc
• Role Conflict- tension while performing different roles (domestic role
vs employee role);
• Role Strain- tension among the roles connected to a single status; eg.
mother nurturing the child without punishing him at the same time she
needs to teach disciplinary lessons as well.
• Can you identify your status and role sets?
II.4 Values
• Certain courses of actions are approved and certain other
courses are disapproved
• Values provide standards by which choices can be made
from available alternatives, and by which certain actions
may be judged
• “What ought to be”- ideas or concepts which we think
are valuable-Deals with moral imperatives
• Eg., we value good manners
II.5 Norms
• Expected way of behaving
• Eg. saying “please” and “thank you”
• Both norms and values are culturally defined- every
culture has different ways of behaving
• Teaches these rules through socialisation
II.6 Customs
• Socially accredited ways of acting (McIver)
• Long established cultural practices that have been
followed for generations
• These are the basis of rights and duties as envisaged in Law
• The foundation of ethics in society
• Undergo changes
• Marriage as a custom
II.7 Folkways
• Ways of folk- the way people customarily think, feel and behave in
the society
• Introduced by W.G Sumner-in his work ‘folkways’
• According to him, “folkways represent man’s unique means of adapting
himself to the environment, the ways of eating, greeting. Walking etc”
• These are not normative, but social- does not involve punishment but
may result in inviting ridicule or gossip in social circles
• Differ from society to society, subject to change; unplanned origin
• Folkways are the basis of every culture and are transmitted from
generation to generation
• Eg. shaking hands or embracing while meeting
II.8 Mores
• Coined by Sumner to designate those norms which are of great
significance and are considered crucial for the well-being of
society
• Violations leads to strong disapproval, conformity to them brings
social approval-morally right and wrong
• Mores exists as ends in themselves- when expressed in negative
form, they are called taboos
• Universal mores upheld by major religious traditions across the
world
• Eg: stealing is considered unacceptable under any circumstance
II.9 Law
• Most significant and formal means of social control
• Laws are the rules of behaviour established by a political
authority and backed by state power
• Early small-scale societies-folkways and mores were sufficient
to regulate the conduct of members
• Complex societies- need for a formal apparatus to regulate the
conduct of people in accordance with the mores
• Laws which are not supported by folkways and mores do not
have much chance of enforcement generally. What do you say?
II.10 Etiquette
• Meaning good manners
• Serves as a symbol of one’s status in society
• It informs numerous ways in which an individual interacts
with others
• Etiquette of one era looks outdated in another era
• Saying please and thank you, telephone etiquette
II.11 Fashion
• Novelty of dress, appearance or acquisition of goods
(cars, etc)
• Unstable and undergoes rapid changes
II.12 Fads
• Styles of preferences cultivated by small groups of
teenagers or friends
• It may range from preference for music to eccentric food
styles
• May also express the protest of some groups of people,
especially youngsters, who dislike social conventions
(II.13) Socialisation
• The process whereby the individual internalises the values,
norms, traditions of society and shapes his own behaviour in
accordance with the social expectations of others
• Life long process
• Through formal and informal means, tends to be cumulative
• Family is the basic unit of primary socialisation
• In many Asian societies, boys are trained differently from
girls;
• Family contains both authoritarian (parent-child) and
equalitarian (siblings) types of socialisation
Four types of Socialisation
1. Primary socialisation- the most essential and basic one; takes
place in the early stages the child, by trial and error, observation,
imitation
2. Secondary Socialisation- also called developmental
socialisation/adult socialisation; occurs as the individual acquires skills
and knowledge as he takes up responsibilities and plays adult roles
3. Anticipatory socialisation- concept by Robert K Merton- when an
individual learns the culture of groups to which he does not belong to,
with the anticipation of joining them; eg. learning professional skills
4. Re socialisation- when a social role is radically changed; happens
due to rapid social mobility
Agents of Socialisation
Peer group- consists of an individual’s equals in terms of
age and status; most of the time serve as a substitute for
warm, personal relationships which are essential for a proper
development of the adolescents
Schools and Academic Institutions-enduring affection may
exist between teachers and students; rebellious children in a
family may be controlled and brought back to normal
behaviour by sympathetic teachers; however, schooling
deprive children of natural, spontaneous learning and have
stifling influence
Other agents- neighbours, religion, culture, mass media
(II.14) Social Control
• Refers to the arrangements by which the values and norms are
communicated and instilled
• Agencies of social control- both formal and informal; e.g.., customs,
folkways, mores, public opinion, education, law, religion etc
• Objective- maintenance of the social equilibrium which is vital for the
continuation of social structure
• Preliterate societies- customs, taboos etc control the divergence;
supernatural elements instil fear of reprisal in the minds of deviant
individuals
• Complex Societies- social control seeks to ensure conformity of
individuals by adopting explicit and objective methods; religions and
moral, notions of ‘guilt’ and ‘sin’ as instruments of conformity
(II.15)Public Opinion
• The opinion formed by those constituting the public and
concerned with their well-being
• Influences the actions of the individuals
• Mass media play decisive roles in influencing the public
opinion- focus attention on the problems of society and
suggest ways to overcome them
• Media control over public opinion is not always balanced
or impartial- cannot reach large sections of people such as
rural and tribal hinder-land
Difference between public opinion and propaganda
• Public opinion is a rational decision by the members of
public which they arrive at after discussion
• Propaganda is a device by which a private interest or a
state apparatus spreads certain ideas, usually to gain a
certain advantage over people
(II.16)Social Conformity
• Individuals are guided by the normative patterns set by
society
• Conformity is a type of social influence involving a
change in belief or behaviour in order to fit in with a
group
• This change is in response to real (involving the physical
presence of others) or imagined (involving the pressure of
social norms/expectations) group pressure
(II.17)Social Deviance
• Nonconformity to a set of norms that are accepted by a
significant number of people in a community or society
• Some individuals do not come up to the expected standards
of behaviour- deviant behaviour-varies from society to
society (dowry, child marriage)
• Lack of harmony arises from the differences in values,
perspectives and the time dimension
• Murder, mob violence; sometimes reform and revolution too
expressed through deviance from the existing social order
(II.18)Sanctions
• Sanctions are meted out to deviant individuals of the society
• eg. fines, confiscations, prison terms, exile, death sentence
and so on
• Milder social sanctions- not incorporated into legal
documents- eg. frowns, contempt, ridicule etc
• Olden days- ostracism-expulsion of the deviant individual
from the security of the group
• People are rewarded for their good conduct and punished for
bad conduct
(III) Social Processes
(III.1)Culture and Civilisation
• Generally taken as synonyms
• Alfred Weber- on the basis of cognitive elements;
civilisation primarily include scientific or technical
knowledge where as culture is the artistic, religious,
philosophical and similar products of a society
• Civilisation can be measured and culture not
(III.1.1) Ethnocentrism
• The view that one’s own culture is better than that of
others
• In human history, it played havoc on civilisation
• The superior attitude of colonials towards the “natives”, the
Nazi notion of Nordic racial superiority, ethnic conflicts etc
are examples
• Positive aspects as well- many achievements in sports,
arts, adventure etc are often inspired by this feeling
(III.1.2) Cultural Diffusion
• Spread of cultural beliefs and activities from one group of people to
another
• When two people come into contact with one another or live in physical
proximity, words, gestures, customs, beliefs, tools, techniques etc spread
from one to the other
• e.g.. food habits, English as the global language
(III.1.3) Acculturation
• The process by which an individual or group adopts the
values of one culture while still retaining their own culture
• Two way process; e.g..,spread of Western culture in colonies
(III.1.4) Assimilation
• The process whereby group differences gradually
disappear-becomes more and more alike
• Emergent process- According to Robert Park,
assimilation not necessarily limited to the incorporation of
one social group with all its ideals and cultures into
another group; interacting groups may give and take over
a period of time and a relatively new group may emerge as
a result of prolonged interaction
• Racial and ethnic prejudices-assimilation is delayed or
held up-aiming at separate identity
(II.1.5) Integration
• Cultural integration is a form of cultural exchange in which
one group assumes the beliefs, practices and rituals of
another group without sacrificing the characteristics of its
own culture
• Becoming whole-does not destroy diversity
• Several cultures come together to form a new multi-
cultural society and each culture keeps its character,
feature and values
(III.2) Social Interaction
• Social interaction is the social exchange between two or more
individuals
• Building block of society
• Cooperation, competition and conflict
(III.2.1) Cooperation
• Cooperation is the process in which people work together to
achieve shared goals
• A universal process of human behaviour; Socialist philosophy
is based on cooperative thinking; UNO, UNESCO;
international cooperation
(III.2.2) Competition
• Competition is a process by which two or more people
attempt to achieve a goal that only one can attain
• Both positive and negative effects
(III.2.3) Conflict
Everything is fair in war and love
• Conflict is the process by which people attempt to physically or
socially conquer each other.
• Extreme form of social behaviour
• Also have positive and negative functions- unity, social change
etc
Reference
• T.K Oommen and C.N Venugopal, Sociology for law
students
• Anderson (1996) An Introduction to Sociology
• Seema and Sangwan, Essential Sociology for Civil
Services
• Rekha Venugopal, Sociology for Beginners

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Basic concepts

  • 2. Concepts • A science is mature if it has a solid foundation for the construction of theories; • Solid foundation-a set of commonly accepted and well defined concepts • Mental constructs • Chair? Car? - almost same for everyone
  • 3. I. Types of Human Collectivities • Society • Community • Institution • Association • Social groups
  • 4. II. Social Order • Social structure • Social functions • Status and role • Values • Norms
  • 5. II. Social Order • Customs • Folkways • Mores • Law • Etiquette • Fashion • Fads
  • 6. II. Social order • Socialisation • Social control • Public opinion • Conformity • Social deviance • Sanctions
  • 7. III. Social processes Culture and civilisation • Ethnocentrism • Diffusion • Acculturation • Integration
  • 8. III. Social processes Types of social interactions • Cooperation • Competition • conflict
  • 9. I. Types of Human Collectivities I.1. Society derived from socius-meaning companionship or friendship • Man is a social animal-Aristotle • Society is a large aggregate of human beings, social groups are the constituent elements of society;both are complementary to each other • Definition- a society is a relatively independent, self perpetuating human group which occupies a territory, shares a culture and has most of its associations within group (Horton and Hunt)
  • 10. Characteristics • A large interacting group of individuals • Sometimes definite territory (some without a definite territory:nomadic tribes of Arab origin of the Jewish groups), Social relationships occur within the boundaries of society • Attempts to become self sufficient by establishing procedures for satisfying the needs of members • Ultimate decision making unit • Cultural autonomy • Different types of societies- agrarian, industrial, urban/rural, simple/complex etc
  • 11. I.2 Community • Most elusive and vague term in sociology • Community is a social group with some degree of ‘we feeling’ and living in a given area (Bogardus) • A subsystem of society • Two necessary conditions-locality and community sentiments
  • 12. Characteristics • Definite territory, smaller population size • Evolve in a natural way, mutuality, organised interaction • Close informal social relationships-binds people with a single thread • Cultural similarity • Strong group feeling • Common believes and values • Neighbourhood is the unit of a community • e.g.. Tribal community, rural community, urban community etc.
  • 13. I.3 Association • A social organisation purposefully created to attain specified goals • Has organisational characteristics • Definition- According to M. Ginsberg, an association is a group of social beings related to one another by the fact that they possess or have instituted in common an organisation with a view to specific ends • According to MacIver, an association is a group organised for the pursuit of an interest or group of interest • e.g..government departments, schools and colleges, hospitals etc
  • 14. Characteristics • Voluntarily created and membership is also formal-has a legal status • Officials who are elected for a definite time period • Fixed and written rules to be followed • Definite goals to achieve • Satisfies the needs and interests of the individuals
  • 15. I.4 Institution • Complex norms regulating social activities • A unit of social organisation • machineries through which man satisfied all his economic, political, education and religious needs • Social interaction between the members is regulated by customs, law etc • e.g.. family, marriage, political parties, schools and colleges
  • 16. Relevance of institutions • Training new members • Providing channels of communication • Assigning roles and tasks to members • Establishing social norms and operational rules • Making collective decisions etc
  • 17. • In our day-to-day life it is difficult to separate institutions from association • eg. college is an association but modes of training, education etc are institutions; church is an association but its sacraments, modes of worship and rituals are institutions • The individuals belong to associations but not to institutions
  • 18.
  • 20. I.5 Social Groups • Which all social groups do you know?how big are they?how do you decide who to include in those groups? • According to Pascual Gisbert, a social group is a collection of individuals interacting on each other under a recognisable structure • Social groups are collections of human beings existing within a society whereas society is a system of social relationships • Membership is usually voluntary (in society it is compulsory) • A group is formed with a view to realise certain goals while community is a natural entity; community has a locality but for groups no such preconditions
  • 21. Classification of Group • How group size can affect group dynamics and relationships • Dyads and Triads-Introduced by Leopald Von Wiese, a German Sociologist • Dyad-the most fundamental type of social group consists of only two people • e.g.. doctor and patient, lawyer and client • Triad-if you add another person to a dyad, it becomes a triad-a social group that consists of three people • Simple addition significantly affects the group interactions and dynamics • Relationships in triad will be fairly intense and stable than dyad
  • 22. I.5.1 Primary group and Secondary group • Primary Group- Concept introduced by Charles Horton Cooley in his book Social Organization : A Study of the Larger Mind • Small group whose members share close, personal, enduring relationships. • Face to face group-the most effective agency of socialisation and the nucleus of social organisation • Informal group for mutual help and companionship • Members work together for a common end and share common experience. Eg: families and close friends
  • 23. • Secondary Groups: usually large groups, whose relationships are impersonal and goal oriented, temporary • Secondary because develop later in life and are much less likely to be influential on one’s identity than primary groups • Weak emotional ties, little personal knowledge of one another; don’t have any goal of maintaining and developing the relationships themselves • Exchanges explicit commodities such as labor for wages, services for payments etc • e.g.. university classes, athletic teams, and groups of o- workers; doctor patient relationship
  • 24. (I.5.2) In-Groups and Out-Groups • William Graham Sumner, an American Sociologist, divided groups into in-group and out-group; especially for understanding group prejudice • In-Groups: social groups to which an individual feels he or she belongs-may be small as the family-also considered as the ‘we group’ • Out-Group: the individual doesn’t identify with the out-group; “they group” • The members of the in-group regard the members of out- group as strangers; often marked by hostility or conflict; they evaluate each other in emotional rather than rational terms
  • 25. (I.5.3) Reference Groups • First introduced by Hayman, later elaborated by Merton and Sherif • The reference groups is the one with which an individual identifies himself either consciously or unconsciously • A perpetual group; may not have physical proximity • Could be occupational, professional, religious, political etc.; e.g.. a doctor may be a member of a medical association which may be located in a distant city and the doctor’s attitude is moulded by the perspective of the reference group • The symbolic character of human communication means that it may respond to the symbols of one group while he is physically present in another; to achieve higher status
  • 26. • M.N Srinivas-Westernisation, Sanskritisation to describe the social processes-individuals and groups imitate the values and practices of another group which is higher in scale • Sanskritisation- attempts made by low ranking castes to adopt the beliefs and rituals of the higher castes such as Brahmins and Rajputs • Westernisation- the efforts made by the individuals to acquire Western education, in order to join government offices etc and improve their economic and social standing • Social change in Indian society!
  • 27. (I.5.4) Status Groups • Max Weber distinguished b/w the classes and the status groups • Class-the groups of people, who, from the standpoint of specific interest have the same economic position in society (Ownership or non-ownership of material goods or of definite skills constitutes the class-situation) • Status- a quality of “social honour” or lack of it, and it is mainly expressed through a specific style of life; they are stratified according to the principles of their consumption of goods as represented by their life style
  • 28. II. Social Order • Society has order that can be discovered, described and understood • It is the coordination and integration of social acts which permits them to occur in such a way that chaos is avoided • It rests on values, norms and social expectations that govern the conduct of the individuals
  • 29. II.1 Social Structure • Arrangement or interrelationship (roles which individuals enact) of the parts that make up a whole • Always linked to the notion of “function” • A.R Radcliff Brown defined- Social structure as an arrangement of persons in relation to institutions and roles
  • 30. II.2 Social Functions • Total social system-independent parts performing functions-essential to the system • Herbert Spencer-organic analogy-society as super organic • Emile Durkheim-normal and pathological functioning of social institutions-religion functionally reinforced social solidarity
  • 31. II.3 Status and Roles • Status-Rank or social position that one holds in a group/society in relation to other members of the group • Eg. female, childhood, son of an upper class man
  • 32. According to Ralph Linton, two types of status: 1. Ascribed status- the social position a person receives at birth; eg. sex, ethnicity, family background 2. Achieved status- individual achieves during his lifetime as a result of the exercise of knowledge, ability, skill ad perseverance; Eg. Lawyer • He also regarded role as the dynamic or the behavioural aspect of status
  • 33. • Role-expected patterns of behaviour associated with a given social status • Statuses-occupied (who a person is) eg. student • Roles-played (what a person is expected to do) eg. class prefect, member of Ambedkar Chair, etc., many roles for a single person • Role Set- Concept by Robert K Merton- a summation of social roles; e.g.., mother, daughter, wife, teacher, research scholar, activist etc • Role Conflict- tension while performing different roles (domestic role vs employee role); • Role Strain- tension among the roles connected to a single status; eg. mother nurturing the child without punishing him at the same time she needs to teach disciplinary lessons as well. • Can you identify your status and role sets?
  • 34. II.4 Values • Certain courses of actions are approved and certain other courses are disapproved • Values provide standards by which choices can be made from available alternatives, and by which certain actions may be judged • “What ought to be”- ideas or concepts which we think are valuable-Deals with moral imperatives • Eg., we value good manners
  • 35. II.5 Norms • Expected way of behaving • Eg. saying “please” and “thank you” • Both norms and values are culturally defined- every culture has different ways of behaving • Teaches these rules through socialisation
  • 36. II.6 Customs • Socially accredited ways of acting (McIver) • Long established cultural practices that have been followed for generations • These are the basis of rights and duties as envisaged in Law • The foundation of ethics in society • Undergo changes • Marriage as a custom
  • 37. II.7 Folkways • Ways of folk- the way people customarily think, feel and behave in the society • Introduced by W.G Sumner-in his work ‘folkways’ • According to him, “folkways represent man’s unique means of adapting himself to the environment, the ways of eating, greeting. Walking etc” • These are not normative, but social- does not involve punishment but may result in inviting ridicule or gossip in social circles • Differ from society to society, subject to change; unplanned origin • Folkways are the basis of every culture and are transmitted from generation to generation • Eg. shaking hands or embracing while meeting
  • 38. II.8 Mores • Coined by Sumner to designate those norms which are of great significance and are considered crucial for the well-being of society • Violations leads to strong disapproval, conformity to them brings social approval-morally right and wrong • Mores exists as ends in themselves- when expressed in negative form, they are called taboos • Universal mores upheld by major religious traditions across the world • Eg: stealing is considered unacceptable under any circumstance
  • 39. II.9 Law • Most significant and formal means of social control • Laws are the rules of behaviour established by a political authority and backed by state power • Early small-scale societies-folkways and mores were sufficient to regulate the conduct of members • Complex societies- need for a formal apparatus to regulate the conduct of people in accordance with the mores • Laws which are not supported by folkways and mores do not have much chance of enforcement generally. What do you say?
  • 40. II.10 Etiquette • Meaning good manners • Serves as a symbol of one’s status in society • It informs numerous ways in which an individual interacts with others • Etiquette of one era looks outdated in another era • Saying please and thank you, telephone etiquette
  • 41. II.11 Fashion • Novelty of dress, appearance or acquisition of goods (cars, etc) • Unstable and undergoes rapid changes
  • 42. II.12 Fads • Styles of preferences cultivated by small groups of teenagers or friends • It may range from preference for music to eccentric food styles • May also express the protest of some groups of people, especially youngsters, who dislike social conventions
  • 43. (II.13) Socialisation • The process whereby the individual internalises the values, norms, traditions of society and shapes his own behaviour in accordance with the social expectations of others • Life long process • Through formal and informal means, tends to be cumulative • Family is the basic unit of primary socialisation • In many Asian societies, boys are trained differently from girls; • Family contains both authoritarian (parent-child) and equalitarian (siblings) types of socialisation
  • 44. Four types of Socialisation 1. Primary socialisation- the most essential and basic one; takes place in the early stages the child, by trial and error, observation, imitation 2. Secondary Socialisation- also called developmental socialisation/adult socialisation; occurs as the individual acquires skills and knowledge as he takes up responsibilities and plays adult roles 3. Anticipatory socialisation- concept by Robert K Merton- when an individual learns the culture of groups to which he does not belong to, with the anticipation of joining them; eg. learning professional skills 4. Re socialisation- when a social role is radically changed; happens due to rapid social mobility
  • 45. Agents of Socialisation Peer group- consists of an individual’s equals in terms of age and status; most of the time serve as a substitute for warm, personal relationships which are essential for a proper development of the adolescents Schools and Academic Institutions-enduring affection may exist between teachers and students; rebellious children in a family may be controlled and brought back to normal behaviour by sympathetic teachers; however, schooling deprive children of natural, spontaneous learning and have stifling influence Other agents- neighbours, religion, culture, mass media
  • 46. (II.14) Social Control • Refers to the arrangements by which the values and norms are communicated and instilled • Agencies of social control- both formal and informal; e.g.., customs, folkways, mores, public opinion, education, law, religion etc • Objective- maintenance of the social equilibrium which is vital for the continuation of social structure • Preliterate societies- customs, taboos etc control the divergence; supernatural elements instil fear of reprisal in the minds of deviant individuals • Complex Societies- social control seeks to ensure conformity of individuals by adopting explicit and objective methods; religions and moral, notions of ‘guilt’ and ‘sin’ as instruments of conformity
  • 47. (II.15)Public Opinion • The opinion formed by those constituting the public and concerned with their well-being • Influences the actions of the individuals • Mass media play decisive roles in influencing the public opinion- focus attention on the problems of society and suggest ways to overcome them • Media control over public opinion is not always balanced or impartial- cannot reach large sections of people such as rural and tribal hinder-land
  • 48. Difference between public opinion and propaganda • Public opinion is a rational decision by the members of public which they arrive at after discussion • Propaganda is a device by which a private interest or a state apparatus spreads certain ideas, usually to gain a certain advantage over people
  • 49. (II.16)Social Conformity • Individuals are guided by the normative patterns set by society • Conformity is a type of social influence involving a change in belief or behaviour in order to fit in with a group • This change is in response to real (involving the physical presence of others) or imagined (involving the pressure of social norms/expectations) group pressure
  • 50. (II.17)Social Deviance • Nonconformity to a set of norms that are accepted by a significant number of people in a community or society • Some individuals do not come up to the expected standards of behaviour- deviant behaviour-varies from society to society (dowry, child marriage) • Lack of harmony arises from the differences in values, perspectives and the time dimension • Murder, mob violence; sometimes reform and revolution too expressed through deviance from the existing social order
  • 51. (II.18)Sanctions • Sanctions are meted out to deviant individuals of the society • eg. fines, confiscations, prison terms, exile, death sentence and so on • Milder social sanctions- not incorporated into legal documents- eg. frowns, contempt, ridicule etc • Olden days- ostracism-expulsion of the deviant individual from the security of the group • People are rewarded for their good conduct and punished for bad conduct
  • 52. (III) Social Processes (III.1)Culture and Civilisation • Generally taken as synonyms • Alfred Weber- on the basis of cognitive elements; civilisation primarily include scientific or technical knowledge where as culture is the artistic, religious, philosophical and similar products of a society • Civilisation can be measured and culture not
  • 53. (III.1.1) Ethnocentrism • The view that one’s own culture is better than that of others • In human history, it played havoc on civilisation • The superior attitude of colonials towards the “natives”, the Nazi notion of Nordic racial superiority, ethnic conflicts etc are examples • Positive aspects as well- many achievements in sports, arts, adventure etc are often inspired by this feeling
  • 54. (III.1.2) Cultural Diffusion • Spread of cultural beliefs and activities from one group of people to another • When two people come into contact with one another or live in physical proximity, words, gestures, customs, beliefs, tools, techniques etc spread from one to the other • e.g.. food habits, English as the global language
  • 55. (III.1.3) Acculturation • The process by which an individual or group adopts the values of one culture while still retaining their own culture • Two way process; e.g..,spread of Western culture in colonies
  • 56. (III.1.4) Assimilation • The process whereby group differences gradually disappear-becomes more and more alike • Emergent process- According to Robert Park, assimilation not necessarily limited to the incorporation of one social group with all its ideals and cultures into another group; interacting groups may give and take over a period of time and a relatively new group may emerge as a result of prolonged interaction • Racial and ethnic prejudices-assimilation is delayed or held up-aiming at separate identity
  • 57. (II.1.5) Integration • Cultural integration is a form of cultural exchange in which one group assumes the beliefs, practices and rituals of another group without sacrificing the characteristics of its own culture • Becoming whole-does not destroy diversity • Several cultures come together to form a new multi- cultural society and each culture keeps its character, feature and values
  • 58. (III.2) Social Interaction • Social interaction is the social exchange between two or more individuals • Building block of society • Cooperation, competition and conflict
  • 59. (III.2.1) Cooperation • Cooperation is the process in which people work together to achieve shared goals • A universal process of human behaviour; Socialist philosophy is based on cooperative thinking; UNO, UNESCO; international cooperation
  • 60. (III.2.2) Competition • Competition is a process by which two or more people attempt to achieve a goal that only one can attain • Both positive and negative effects
  • 61. (III.2.3) Conflict Everything is fair in war and love • Conflict is the process by which people attempt to physically or socially conquer each other. • Extreme form of social behaviour • Also have positive and negative functions- unity, social change etc
  • 62. Reference • T.K Oommen and C.N Venugopal, Sociology for law students • Anderson (1996) An Introduction to Sociology • Seema and Sangwan, Essential Sociology for Civil Services • Rekha Venugopal, Sociology for Beginners