GLOSSARY OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
By Frank W. Elwell
ABSOLUTE POVERTY. Poverty as defined in terms of the minimal requirements
necessary to afford minimal standards of food, clothing, health care and
shelter.
ACHIEVED STATUS. A position attained through personal ability and effort.
ACID
RAIN. The increased acidity of rainfall which is caused by emissions of sulfur
dioxide and nitrogen oxides from power plants and automobiles.
ACUTE DISEASE. A short-term disease
(such as influenza or pneumonia) from which a person either dies or recovers.
A.D.
The abbreviation is from Latin, Anno Domini, “Year of the Lord,” and is
used to date events since the estimated year of the birth of Christ. (see also
B.C. and B.P.)
ADAPTATION. Refers to the ability of a sociocultural system to change with the
demands of a changing physical or social environment. The process by which
cultural elements undergo change in form and/or function in response to change
in other parts of the system.
ADULT SOCIALIZATION. The process of learning new roles in maturity.
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION. Government programs intended to assure minorities and women
of equal hiring or admission opportunities.
AFFECTIVE ACTION. Part of Weber’s action typology that refers to individual
action motivated by emotions.
AGE
COHORT. A group of people born around the same time.
AGE
DISCRIMINATION. The differential treatment of people based solely on their age.
AGE
GRADES. System found in some traditional cultures which group the population by
sex and age. Age grades go through rites of passage, hold similar rights and
have similar obligations.
AGE-SEX STRUCTURE (AGE-SEX PYRAMID). The relative proportions of different age
sex categories in a population.
AGEISM. Prejudice against a person on the grounds of age in the belief that the
age category is inferior to other age categories and that unequal treatment is
therefore justified.
AGENCIES OF SOCIALIZATION. Groups or institutions within which processes of
socialization take place (see also SOCIAL REPRODUCTION).
AGRARIAN ERA. The term refers to the period of time when agrarian societies were
the most technologically sophisticated on earth. Nolan and Lenski put this era
from about 2000 B.C. to A.D. 1800.
AGRARIAN SOCIETIES. The term refers to societies whose mode of production is
based on agriculture (crop-growing) primarily through the use of human and
animal energy. Simple agrarian societies use the plow; advanced agrarian
societies are distinguished by the use of iron and other metals for tools and
weapons. Also referred to as agricultural societies (see also TRADITIONAL
STATES).
AGRIBUSINESS. The mass production of agricultural goods through mechanization,
and rationalization.
AGRICULTURE. The use of the plow in the cultivation of fields.
AIDS
(Acquired Immune Deficiency). A disease that attacks the immune system of the
body that is often passed on through sexual contact.
AIR
POLLUTION. Refers to the contamination of the atmosphere by noxious substances
(see also DEPLETION, ENVIRONMENT, and INTENSIFICATION).
ALIENATION. The sense that we have lost control over social institutions that we
have created. Often characterized as estrangement from the self and from the
society as a whole. Marx believed that general alienation was rooted in the loss
of control on the part of workers over the nature of the labor task, and over
the products of their labor.
ALTRUISTIC SUICIDE. Durkheim's concept for suicide that is performed for the
good of a group or for accomplishing a political or social cause.
AMERICANIZATION. The spread of American cultural elements—products, lifestyles,
customs, institutions, and ideologies—around the globe.
ANDROGYNY. The blending of traditional feminine and masculine traits.
ANOMIA. A condition of anxiety and confusion that exists in individuals who are
not given clear social guidance through social norms.
ANOMIC SUICIDE. Durkheim's concept for suicide that is performed because the
egoistic individual is not given clear guidance from the social order.
ANOMIE. A structural condition in which social norms are weak or conflicting.
ANOMIE THEORY. Robert K. Merton's
theory of deviance which holds that many forms of deviance are caused by a
disjunction between society's goals and the approved means to achieve these
goals; also called "structural strain theory."
ANIMISM. A type of religion that believes that events in the world are often
caused by the activities of spirits.
ANTICIPATORY SOCIALIZATION. Learning new roles and attitudes in preparation to
joining a group.
ANTI-SEMITISM. Prejudice or discrimination against Jews. It defines the Jewish
people as inferior and that targets them for stereotyping, mistreatment, and
acts of hatred.
APARTHEID. Until recently, the system of strict racial segregation established
in South Africa.
APPLIED SOCIOLOGY. The use of sociology--both theory and methods--in solving
social problems.
APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY. Technology
that is designed with the needs, values, and capabilities of the user in mind.
ARCHAEOLOGY. Study of sociocultural systems of the past—both prehistoric and
historic—through their physical remains
ARMS
RACE. A competition between nations in which each side attempt to achieve or
maintain military superiority.
ARMS
TRADE. The international selling of armaments for profit, carried on by
governments and by private contractors around the world.
ARRANGED MARRIAGE. Marriage based on the family ties rather than the couple's
personal preferences.
ARITHMETIC MEAN. See MEAN.
ARTISANS. A skilled manual worker or
craftsperson who uses hand tools to create goods.
ASCRIBED STATUS. A social position that is given at birth (such as race or sex).
ASSIMILATION. A minority group's internalization of the values and norms of the
dominant culture, they become socially, economically, and politically absorbed
into the wider culture.
AUTHORITARIAN PERSONALITY. A set of distinctive personality traits, including
conformity, intolerance, and an inability to accept ambiguity.
AUTHORITY. Power that is attached to a position that others perceive as
legitimate.
AUTROCRACY. A society ruled by a single individual.
AUTOCRATIC RULE. Rule by a specific leader, who concentrates power in his own
hands.
AUTOMATION. The replacement of many workers by machines, as well as the
monitoring and coordination of workers by machines with only minimal supervision
from human beings.
BAND. The simplest form of human society it consists of small kin groups of no
more than 50 individuals who subsist through hunting and gathering. Loosely
organized, they are often led by headmen building consensus within the group.
BALANCE OF POWER. The theory that
military conflict can be avoided if both sides have roughly equivalent military
power.
B.C.
The abbreviation is used to date events
before the estimated year of the birth of Christ. (see also A.D. and B.P.)
B.C.E. The abbreviation is used to date events “Before the Common Era.” This is
the same chronological system used in BC/AD and has been widely adopted by
scholars who wish to be sensitive to non-Christians (see also CE)
BELIEFS. Shared ideas held by a collective of people within a sociocultural
system.
BILATERAL KINSHIP. Tracing descent through both the mother and father (as in
present day America).
BIOETHICS. Ethical questions relating to life and the biological well-being of
the planet.
BIOLOGICAL DETERMINISM. The view that biology (nature, genetics) determines
complex social behavior.
BIOLOGICAL DRIVE. Predispositions to behaviors in order to satisfy physical or
psychological needs or desires.
BIOTERRORISM. The threat or the actual dispersal of biological or chemical
agents to cause widespread disease or death in order to further a group's
political, economic, or social agenda.
BLENDED FAMILY. A family consisting of two previously married people plus their
children.
BOURGEOISIE. Historically they were the merchant class in feudal societies.
Today the term is often used as a synonym for middle class.
B.P.
The abbreviation is for “Before the Present,”
and is used to date events in terms of years before the present (see also
B.C. and B.P.)
BUREAUCRACY. A formal organization marked by a clear hierarchy of authority, the
existence of written rules of procedure, staffed by full-time salaried
officials, and striving for the efficient attainment of organizational goals.
BUREAUCRATIZATION. Refers to the
tendency of bureaucracies to refine their procedures to ever more efficiently
attain their goals. More generally,
refers to the process of secondary organizations taking over functions performed
by primary groups (see also INTENSIFICATION, and RATIONALIZATION).
CAPITAL. The name of Karl Marx’s two volume set (often called Das Capital). It
is also used as a synonym for capitalism, as well as money to invest in
production activities.
CAPITAL GOODS. Goods that necessary in the production of other goods such as
land, plows, tractors, and factory machinery.
CAPITAL INTENSIVE INDUSTRY. An industry which requires a heavy investment in
capital goods for its production processes.
CAPITALISM. An economic system based on the private ownership of the means of
production and distribution in which the goal is to produce profit.
CAPITALIST CLASS. Those who own companies, or stocks and shares, using these to
generate economic returns or profits.
CARRYING CAPACITY. The number of a species that a particular ecosystem can
support without suffering irreversible deterioration (see also ECOLOGY).
CASH-CROP PRODUCTION. Production of crops for world markets rather than for
consumption by the local population.
CASH-NEXUS. Defining all human relationships in terms of money.
CASTE SYSTEM. A closed form of stratification in which an individual's status is
determined by birth and cannot be changed.
CATHEDRALS OF CONSUMPTION. A term coined by Ritzer to refer to commercial
displays meant to inspire awe, wonder, and enchantment in the consumer—shopping
centers, casinos and sports stadiums are examples.
CAUSATION. A 'cause and effect' relationship exists wherever a change in one
variable (the independent variable) induces change in another (the dependent
variable). Causal factors in sociology include individual motivation as well as
many external influences on human behavior that often go unrecognized.
C.E.
The abbreviation is used to date events in the “Common Era.” This is the same
chronological system used in BC/AD and has been widely adopted by scholars who
wish to be sensitive to non-Christians (see also BCE)
CENTRALIZATION. Power and authority
concentrated into a few offices.
CENSUS. A count of the population, often including a detailed profile of that
population.
CHARISMA. A personal quality attributed to leaders who arouse fervent popular
support and enthusiasm.
CHARISMATIC AUTHORITY. Weber’s term for authority which rests on the
extraordinary characteristics of the leader attributed to them by followers. See
also TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY and RATIONAL LEGAL AUTHORITY.
CHRONIC DISEASE. Disease of long duration, often not detected in its early
stages, and from which the patient will not recover (such as high blood pressure
or diabetes).
CHURCH. A body of people belonging to an established religious organization.
CITIZEN. A member of a state, having both rights and duties associated with that
membership.
CIVIL DISORDERS. Social conflict (such as riots) that the government becomes
involved in to restore public order.
CIVILIZATION. Refers to an advanced sociocultural system that has writing and
some urbanization.
CIVIL RELIGION. Secular forms of ritual and belief similar to those involved in
religion--such as political parades or ceremonies.
CIVIL RIGHTS. Legal rights held by all citizens in a given state.
CLAN. A broad extended kin group claiming descent from a common ancestor found
in many preindustrial societies.
CLASS. Most sociologists use the term to refer to socioeconomic differences
between groups of individuals which create differences in their life chances and
power. Marx differentiates class by their relationship to the mode of production
(owner/non-owner).
CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS. An objective awareness of the class system, including the
common interests of people within your class.
CLASS SYSTEM. Stratification is a "multi-dimensional phenomenon"; that is,
populations are ranked along various dimensions such as occupation, education,
property, racial-ethnic status, age, and gender. Each of these dimensions is a
"class system." Class systems are “a hierarchy of classes ranked in terms of a
single criterion.” Thus, “African-American” is a particular class within the
American racial-ethnic class system, while “working class” is a particular class
within the American occupational class system.
CLERICAL WORKERS. Refers to low-prestige and low-paid white collar workers who
perform clerical work of keeping files, checking forms, and other office tasks.
CLIMATE CHANGE. The accumulation of gasses in the atmosphere, especially carbon
dioxide and methane, that act like the glass roof of a greenhouse, letting
sunlight in but trapping the radiant heat. See also GREENHOUSE EFFECT.
COGNITION. Human thought processes including perception, reasoning, and
remembering.
COGNITIVE ABILITY. The ability to think in abstract terms.
COHABITATION. Living together in a sexual relationship of some permanence,
without being legally married.
COHORT. All individuals born within a particular time period.
COLLECTIVE ACTION. Social action undertaken in a relatively spontaneous way by a
large number of people.
COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR. Behavior in crowds and mobs that occur when the usual norms
are suspended.
COLLECTIVE CONSCIENCE (OR CONSCIOUS). Common beliefs and values that guide human
behavior. Durkheim posited that such a conscience was necessary for maintaining
the social order.
COLLECTIVE VIOLENCE. Large numbers of people engaging in violent social
behavior.
COLONIALISM. The process whereby nations establish their political and economic
rule over less powerful nations.
COMING OUT. The act of openly declaring one's self as gay.
COMMAND ECONOMY. An economy organized from the top in which production and
distribution are controlled by an elite.
COMMERCIALIZATION. To organize an activity around making a profit.
COMMODIFICATION. The exchange of goods and services that were once given through
primary group ties through the market economy.
COMMODITY CHAINS. The raw material, production, and labor network responsible
for the fashioning of products. Commodity chains often span the globe, with some
countries profiting greatly for their contribution to the chain, and others
clearly being exploited.
COMMODITY RIOTS. Riots in which the
focus of violence is the destruction of property.
COMMUNAL RIOTS. Riots in which the focus of violence is other groups (usually
other race or ethnic groups).
COMMUNICATION. The transmission of information from one individual or group to
another.
COMMUNISM. A set of egalitarian political and economic ideas associated with
Karl Marx in which the means of production and distribution system would be
owned by the community. "Communism" as developed by Lenin and institutionalized
throughout Eastern Europe (until 1990) and China bears little resemblance to
Marx's vision.
COMMUNITY. A group of people who
share a common sense of identity and interact with one another on a sustained
basis.
COMPARABLE WORTH. The evaluation of jobs dominated by women and those
traditionally dominated by men on the basis of training, skills, and experience
in attempts to equalize wages. The principle is that men and women should be
paid equally for similar jobs.
CONCEPT. Any abstract characteristic that can potentially be measured.
CONFLICT. A clash of interest (sometimes escalating to active struggle) between
individuals, groups or society.
CONFLICT THEORY. Sociological theory that emphasizes the role of power,
authority, and manipulation in sociocultural change and stability.
CONFORMITY. Human behavior which follows the established norms of a group or
society. The bulk of human behavior is of a conforming nature as people accept
and internalize the values of their culture or subculture.
CONTAGION THEORY. The idea that individuals in crowds are suggestible and take
on a single way of acting.
CONTROLLED EXPERIMENT. See EXPERIMENT.
CONGLOMERATES. Large corporations made up of separate companies producing or
trading in a variety of different products and services. Conglomerates are
usually the result of mergers between companies or a take-over of one firm by
another.
CONSENSUS. Agreement on basic social values by the members of a group or
society.
CONSPICUOUS CONSUMPTION. Concept popularized by Thorstein Veblin that many
people consume goods and services to publically display their wealth and taste.
CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT. A government that exists in accordance with a written
or unwritten document that specifies the functions, powers, and limits of that
govenment.
CONSUMERISM. The philosophy of seeking happiness through the consumption of
goods and services.
CONTENT ANALYSIS. The analysis of cultural meanings through artifacts such as
books, documents, songs, and other communications.
CONTINGENCY WORK. Temporary, part-time, or "contracted" employment for the
duration of the project. Contingency work is one of the fastest growing
employment sectors in America as it enables employers to expand and contract
their workforce with the vagaries of the market and allows them to avoid costly
fringe benefits and other commitments of long-term employment.
CONTRADICTION. Marx's term to refer to mutually antagonistic tendencies within
institutions or the broader society such as those between
profit and competition within capitalism.
CONTRADICTORY CLASS LOCATIONS. Positions in the class structure which share
characteristics of the class positions both above and below them--the classic
position would be that of a foreman in a factory or a department chair in
academe.
CORE
COUNTRIES. The advanced industrial societies of America, Western Europe and
Japan are often referred to as core countries because of their central position
on the world stage (see also PERIPHERY COUNTRIES and SEMI-PERIPHERY COUNTRIES).
CORPORATE CRIME. Criminal or deviant behavior committed by a corporation.
CORPORATIONS. A legally recognized organization set up for profit--the powers
and liabilities of the organization are legally separate from the owners or the
employees. In the U.S., corporations have legal status as a person.
CORRELATION. The relationship between two variables in which they vary
together--say a correlation between the income of parents and reading ability
among primary school children. Statistical correlation can vary from -1 to 1 (a
0 indicates no correlation between the variables). A positive correlation
between two variables exists where a high score on one is associated with a high
score on the other. A negative correlation is where a high score on one variable
is associated with a low score on the other.
COST-BENEFIT DECISION MAKING. A criterion used in deciding on what actions to
take. What are the benefits of the action? What are the costs? Pain versus gain.
COUNTER CULTURE. A sub-culture that is opposed to the ideas, beliefs, or
behaviors of the dominant culture.
COUP
D'ETAT. An armed takeover of government by a small group of conspirators--often
military officers ( See also
REBELLION and REVOLUTION).
CRAFTSMEN. A skilled worker who practices a trade.
CREATED ENVIRONMENT. Human constructions such as buildings, roads, factories,
and private homes.
CREDENTIALISM. The tendency for jobs to require more and more formal education,
even though the skill or knowledge requirements for the job have not changed.
CROSSTABULATION. A table illustrating the relationship between two variable,
such as Sex (Male and Female) and Years of Education.
CRIME. Any action that violates criminal laws established by political
authority.
CRIMINOLOGY. A social science discipline that focuses upon the study of crime
and the criminal justice system.
CRISIS MEDICINE. Medical treatment that focuses on curing illness (as opposed to
preventing the occurrence of disease).
CRUDE BIRTH-RATE. A statistical measure representing the number of births per
thousand population within a given year.
CRUDE DEATH-RATE. A statistical measure representing the number of deaths per
thousand population that occur annually in a given population.
CULT. A fragmentary religious group which lacks permanent structure.
CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY. A social science, closely linked to sociology, which
concentrates (though not exclusively) on the study of traditional
cultures--particularly hunting and gathering and horticultural societies--and
the evolution of the human species.
CULTURAL DIFFUSION. The transmission of cultural elements between sociocultural
systems.
CULTURAL LAG. A dysfunction in the sociocultural system caused by change
occurring in one part of the system and the failure of another part of that
system to adjust to the change. An example would be married women engaged in
outside employment and the continuance of the domestic division of labor.
CULTURAL MATERIALISM. A macro-social
theory that attempts to account for the similarities and differences between
sociocultural systems by focusing on the environmental constraints to which
human action is subject.
CULTURAL PLURALISM. The more or less peaceful coexistence of
multiple subcultures within a given society.
CULTURAL RELATIVISM. The idea that a culture item can be judged or understood
only in relationship to the entire culture in which it is embedded.
CULTURAL SUPERSTRUCTURE. Sociocultural materialism term used to refer to the
shared symbolic universe within sociocultural systems.
It includes such components as the art, music, dance, rituals, sports,
hobbies and the accumulated knowledge base of the system (see also MENTAL
SUPERSTRUCTURE, and SUPERSTRUCTURE ).
CULTURAL TRANSMISSION. The
socialization process whereby the norms and values of the group are internalized
by individuals.
CULTURAL UNIVERSALS. Values or practices shared by all human cultures.
CULTURE. The values, norms and material goods shared by a given group.
Your instructor prefers to restrict the term to refer to symbolic aspects
(values, norms, symbol systems and the meanings they convey).
CULTURE OF POVERTY. The view that the poor have a different value system that
contributes to their poverty.
CULTURE SHOCK. The disorientation that may occur when one experiences a new and
different culture or when one encounters rapid social change in one's own
culture.
CUMULATIVE CHANGE. a distinctive kind of change associated with systems composed
of multiple, interrelated parts. Within these systems, some parts change while
others remain unchanged. Thus, cumulative change is a process that combines
elements of continuity with elements of change; many parts of the system are
preserved for extended periods while new parts are added and other parts are
either replaced or transformed. Evolutionary change tends to be cumulative in
nature.
CURATIVE MEDICINE. Another term for Crisis Medicine--the focus on curing disease
rather than its prevention.
CUSTOMS. Informal rules that define acceptable behavior within a society or
subculture
CUSTODIAL CARE. Occurs when the focus of health care is on the needs of the
institution (convenience, efficiency) rather than on the needs of the patient.
CYBERTERRORISM. The threat or the actual hacking of computer networks in order
to cause widespread disruption to further a group's political, economic, or
social agenda.
DATA. Systematically measured information.
DATA
ANALYSIS. The organization of data to look for patterns and uniformities.
DEFENSIVE MEDICINE. The use of widespread medical tests on the part of
physicians in order to avoid possible malpractice suits.
DEFORESTATION. The removal of all trees from an area (see also DEPLETION,
ENVIRONMENT and DESERTIFICATION).
DEDUCTIVE REASONING. The process of going from general theory to specific
hypotheses.
DE
FACTO SEGREGATION. The separation of social groups in fact, though not by law.
Housing patterns in the U.S. often reflect de facto segregation.
DEFENSIVE MEDICINE. The practice of ordering unnecessary medical tests as a
precaution against overlooking a condition and thus opening the physician up to
a law suit.
DEHUMANIZATION. The act of depriving people of their human qualities—treating
people like animals or things as if they have no feelings or worth.
DEINDUSTRIALIZATION. The loss of manufacturing capacity.
DE
JURE SEGREGATION. The separation of social groups by law.
DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION. The movement of mental patients out of hospitals and
into the "community."
DEMOCRACY. A form of government that recognizes the citizen as having the right
to participate in political decision-making, or to elect representatives to
government bodies.
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION. A stabilization of population level in industrial
society once a certain level of economic prosperity has been reached. Population
is thought to stabilize because of economic incentives on families to limit the
number of children.
DEMOGRAPHY. The scientific study of human population--including size, growth,
movement, density, and composition.
DENSITY. A measure of human crowding usually expressed as the number of people
per square mile.
DEPENDENCY THEORY. The thesis that many Third World countries cannot control
major aspects of their economic life because of the dominance of industrialized
societies. Because of this dominance, core nations are often able to exploit
peripheral nations in economic relationships.
DEPENDENT VARIABLE. The variable that you believe will be affected by another.
In the posited relationship between education and income, education is the
independent variable, income is the dependent variable. See also independent
variable.
DEPLETION. One of the primary constraints of the environment on sociocultural
systems. Refers to the limited
supplies of natural resources (although the limits are unknowable, that there
are limits can be inferred). These
limits can often be stretched through the use of technology (see also POLLUTION,
and INTENSIFICATION).
DESERTIFICATION. A fertile region that has been made barren by the activities of
human societies (see also DEPLETION, and POLLUTION).
DETAILED DIVISION OF LABOR. Also called the manufacturing division of labor. It
breaks the manufacturing of a product down into simple discrete steps,
and then assigns each task to an individual workman.
DETERRENCE THEORY. The prevention of military conflict through the build up of
armaments. The basis of deterrence theory is in ensuring that a potential
aggressor would suffer too many losses to make the initiation of hostilities
worthwhile --M.A.D. or mutually assured destruction was based on this theory.
DEVIANCE. Behaviors which do not conform to significant norms held by most of
the members of a group or society. What is regarded as 'deviant' is highly
variable across societies.
DEVIANT BEHAVIOR. Actions or behaviors that violate cultural norms.
DEVIANT COMMUNITY. A group specifically organized around a form of social
deviance.
DEVIANT IDENTITY. A person’s self-identification as a deviant.
DEVIANT SUBCULTURE. A subculture which has values and norms which differ
substantially from those of the majority in a society.
DIALECTICAL. An interpretation of change emphasizing the clash of opposing
interests and the resulting struggle as the engine of social transformation.
DICTATORSHIP. A form of government in which one person exercises supreme power
and authority.
DIFFERENTIAL ASSOCIATION. Theory of crime and delinquency that holds that
deviance is learned as a result of long-term interaction with others.
DIFFERENTIATION. The development of increasing complexity and division of labor
within sociocultural systems.
DIFFUSION. The spread of cultural traits from one sociocultural system to
another.
DISCOVERY. Cultural innovation or ideas that originate from within the society
from member’s experience, investigation, or imagination.
DISCRIMINATION. The denial of equal access to social resources to people on the
basis of their group membership.
DISENCHANTMENT. The retreat of the mysticism, supernatural belief, and awe from
social life to be replaced by secular values, rationality, and scientific
understanding.
DISINTEGRATION. The weakening of the social bond allowing various groups to
fragment and break away from the whole.
DISORGANIZATION. The disturbance of a system from a state of order and
predictability to chaos and unpredictability.
DIVISION OF LABOR. The specialization of work tasks or occupations and their
interrelationship. All societies have some division of labor based on age and
sex. But with the development of industrialism the division of labor becomes far
more complex which affects many parts of the sociocultural system. The division
of labor is perhaps the most underrated concept in sociology. See also DETAILED
DIVISION OF LABOR.
DOMESTIC ECONOMY. The internal economy of a society, usually measured by the
Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
DOMESTIC LABOR. Unpaid labor carried out around the home.
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE. Violent behavior directed by one member of a household
against another.
DOMINANT CULTURE. The beliefs and values of the dominant group within a
sociocultural system.
DOUBLE STANDARD. A code of behavior
that is more restrictive on women than on men.
DOUBLING TIME. The time it takes for a particular level of population to double
in size. A fairly accurate doubling time estimate can be computed by taking the
annual growth rate and dividing it by 70. At 2% annual growth world population
(5.5 billion in 1996) will double in size (to 11 billion) in about 35 years
(2031) assuming the annual growth stays constant (see also EXPONENTIAL GROWTH).
DRAMATURGICAL MODEL. A sociological perspective that sees the social world as a
stage, with all the men and women playing to their roles in the social order.
DRIVE. Predispositions to behaviors in order to satisfy physical or
psychological needs or desires.
DUAL
CAREER FAMILY. Families in which both spouses are in the outside labor force.
DUAL
LABOR MARKET. The hypothesis that men and women have differential earnings
because the work in different parts of the labor market. For example, men
dominate the field of engineering (high pay, high prestige), women dominate the
field of social work (low pay, low prestige).
DUAL
WELFARE SYSTEM. Refers to disguised
forms of welfare that go to the middle class and the rich (also called
Wealthfare).
DYAD. A group consisting of two people.
DYNAMICS. (Social) Term used by Comte to refers to social change. (see also
Statics).
DYSFUNCTION. Refers to an institution's negative impact (or harmful effect) on
the sociocultural system.
ECLECTICISM. A theoretical approach of "whatever works." Rather than being
guided by a broad paradigm or a specific theory, the researcher is guided by
whatever theory seems to fit the data. This has proved to be a disaster for the
advancement of the social sciences.
ECOLOGICAL-EVOLUTIONARY THEORY. Social evolutionary theory centered on the
relationships of a sociocultural system to its physical and social environment.
ECOLOGY. The study of the system of
relationships between organisms and their environment.
ECONOMIC INTERDEPENDENCE. Comte and Durkheim both refer to the fact that in
societies with a high division of labor individuals depend more on others to
produce most of the goods they need to sustain their lives.
ECONOMIC SURPLUS. Goods and services produced by an economy that exceed what is
needed for the producer’s subsistence.
ECONOMY. The organization of production and distribution of goods and services
within a sociocultural system.
ECOSYSTEM. A self-sustaining community of plants and animals within a natural
environment.
EDUCATION. The transmission of knowledge to members of society. The knowledge
passed on is in the form of technical and cultural knowledge, technical and
social skills, as well as the norms and values of the society.
EDUCATION SYSTEM. The system of formalized transmission of knowledge and values
operating within a given society.
EDUCATIONAL DEFLATION. The devaluing of education as a result of the forces of
supply and demand.
EGALITARIAN FAMILY. Family
arrangement in which power is shared more-or-less equally by both the wife and
the husband.
EGO.
Freud's posited part of the self that represents reason and common sense.
EGOISTIC SUICIDE. Durkheim's concept for suicide performed by an individual who
has not sufficiently integrated into the social order.
ELDERLY ABUSE. Acts of violence (or neglect) directed at the elderly (often by
family members).
ELITE. The most privileged and powerful
members of a sociocultural system. See also POWER ELITE.
ELITE CRIME. Criminal behavior on the part of elites as part of their normal
activity--such as tax evasion, hiring illegal aliens as domestics, or engaging
in insider trading.
ELITIST. One who subscribes to the theory that there is a power elite in
American society.
EMIGRATION. The movement of people
out of their native land to other countries.
ENDOGAMY. A system in which an individual may only marry within the same social
category or group.
ENTREPRENEUR. A person who organizes and manages a business firm.
EPIDEMIOLOGY. The study of biological, social, and economic factors associated
with disease and health.
EMPIRE. A group of states under a single government.
EMPIRICAL. Social data or facts that are based on systematic observation or
measurement.
EMPIRICISM. The philosophy that knowledge comes from observation and experience.
ENLIGHTENMENT. Seventeenth and eighteenth century European thought that placed
great faith in science and human reason in dealing with social issues.
ENTROPY. The entropy law or the second law of thermodynamics--energy can only be
transformed in one direction, from ordered to disordered.
Entropy is also another name for pollution.
ENVIRONMENT. The physical, biological and chemical restraints to which action is
subject.
ENVIRONMENTALISM. Refers to a concern with preserving the physical environment
in the face of the impact of industrialism.
EPIDEMOLOGY. The study of social, biological, and psychological factors
associated with disease and health.
ESTATE SYSTEM. A form of stratification established by law in which the
ownership of land leads to the monopolization of power.
ETHNIC GROUP. A group of common cultural identity, separating them from other
groups around them.
ETHNICITY. One's ethnic group.
ETHNOCENTRISM. The tendency to judge other cultures by the standards one's own
culture; often with the feeling that one's own culture is superior.
ETHNOGRAPHY. A method widely used in cultural anthropology in which the social
scientist describes a sociocultural system or subculture based on their direct
observation.
ETHNOMETHODOLOGY. A research method that focuses on the activities and beliefs
of group members to determine what sense they make of their everyday lives.
EUGENICS. a social movement in the early twentieth century that sought to apply
genetic selection to “improve” the human race.
EUTHANASIA. The act of killing a person who is terminally ill (active
euthanasia) or allowing such a person to die by withholding treatment (passive
euthanasia). Usually the act is claimed to be an act of mercy.
EUTROPHICATION. Oxygen depletion of water due to over-fertilization.
EVALUATION RESEARCH. Social research whose aim is to assess the effectiveness of
a particular policy or social program.
EVOLUTION. The change of biological organisms by means of the adaptation to the
demands of the physical environment. Organisms that successfully adapt pass on
their genes to future generations thereby changing the species itself. See also
SOCIAL EVOLUTION.
EXCHANGE RECIPROCITY. Rough equality in the exchange of goods and services
between groups or between sociocultural systems.
EXOGAMY. A system in which an individual may only marry outside their social
category or group.
EXPERIMENT. A research method in which variables can be analyzed under carefully
controlled conditions--usually within an artificial situation constructed by the
researcher—that can potentially determine whether a given variable affects
another independently of other factors.
EXPONENTIAL GROWTH. A geometric rate of progression which has the potential of
producing a very fast rise (or an "explosion") in the numbers of a population
experiencing such growth (see also DOUBLING TIME).
EXPROPRIATION. The confiscation of property or labor from an individual.
EXTENDED FAMILY. A family group consisting of more than two generations of the
same kinship line living either within the same household or, more usually in
the West, very close to one another.
FAD.
Collective behavior that involves a novel, often frivolous, and usually short
lived activity.
FALSE CONSCIOUSNESS. Marxian concept that refers to the ideology of the
subordinate class which has been largely fashioned by the ideology and control
of the elites within a society.
FALSIFIABILITY. Popper argued that science can never prove things to be true,
but it can prove them to be false. Therefore, all truly scientific hypotheses
are generalizations which the scientist believes to be true but formulated in a
way that is open to empirical testing and thus falsification. For example, the
hypothesis that “All dogs go to heaven” is not falsifiable since it is not
possible to prove wrong.
FAMILY. A group of individuals related to one another by blood ties, marriage or
adoption. Members of families form an economic unit, the adult members of which
are responsible for the upbringing of children. All societies involve some form
of family, although the form the family takes is widely variable. In modern
industrial societies the main family form is the nuclear family, although a
variety of extended family relationships are also found.
FAMILY OF ORIENTATION. The family into which an individual is born.
FAMILY OF PROCREATION. The family we create through marriage.
FECUNDITY. The number of children which is biologically possible for a woman to
produce.
FEEDBACK. A term referring to autocatalytic relationship between two variables
in which a change in A causes a change in B which then causes further change in
A. For example, through the laws of supply and demand, a growth in the
production of food causes food prices to decline. As food prices decline, more
children survive (or are conceived) thus causing a rise in the level of
population, this rise in population, in turn, causes a rise in food prices and,
consequently, and intensification of food production, which causes…
FEEDBACK LOOP. Sociocultural materialism term referring to the dynamic
relationships between the different components of sociocultural systems. While
the theory begins with an examination of infrastructural determinism, it
recognizes that structure and superstructure can play an independent role in
determining the character of the system (see also INFRASTRUCTURAL DETERMINISM).
FEE-FOR-SERVICE MEDICINE. The
provision of medical services in return for a monetary fee.
FEMININITY. The characteristic behaviors expected of women in a given culture.
FEMINIZATION OF POVERTY. A process by which increasing proportions of the poor
are women and children.
FEMINISM. Advocacy of the social equality of the sexes.
FERTILITY. The average number of live born children produced by women of
childbearing age in a particular society.
FETISHISM. Obsessive attachment or sexual desire directed toward an object.
FEUDALISM. A social system based on fealty between a Lord and a Vassal. It is
characterized by grants of land (fiefs) in return for formal oaths of allegiance
and promises of loyal service.
FIELD RESEARCH. Research that involves the investigator directly with the people
or groups being studied.
FIRST WORLD. A term now rarely used that refers to the group of nation-states
that possess advanced industrial economies, usually market based (see also
SECOND WORLD and THIRD WORLD).
FISHING SOCIETY. A subsistence society akin to hunting and gathering societies
in which subsistence is obtained by fishing and gathering.
FLEXTIME. An arrangement that allows employees to set their own schedules
(starting and quitting time) whenever possible.
FOLKWAYS. Widespread standards of behavior.
FORCES OF PRODUCTION. Marx's term to refer to the technology used to produce
economic goods in a society.
FORDISM. The assembly line system of production pioneered by Henry Ford.
It should be pointed out that not all industrial processes are based on
the assembly line.
FORMAL ORGANIZATION. Another name for secondary organization, usually large and
consisting of people who interact on the basis of status and role and often
organized to accomplish a task.
FORMAL RATIONALITY. The use of zweckrational—goal oriented rational behavior—to
achieve a goal without thought to wider social values, traditions, or emotions.
A popular name for the phenomenon is technocratic thinking. See also SUBSTANTIVE
RATIONALITY.
FORMS. the traditional, legal, or accustomed ways of government, respect for
office, procedure, law, opposing parties, consultation and open communication
within executive agencies and between branches of government.
FRONTIER SOCIETY. A technologically advanced society that has colonized a new
territory that is inhabited by a less technologically sophisticated society
FUNCTIONS. The ways in which a
sociocultural trait contributes toward the maintenance or adaptation of the
entire sociocultural system; the effect of a sociocultural trait on other parts
of the sociocultural system.
FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS. The use of functionalism in analyzing a sociocultural
system or a part of that system.
FUNCTIONALISM. A theoretical perspective that focuses on the way various parts
of the social system contribute to the continuity of society as well as the
effect the various parts have on one another.
FUNDAMENTAL INNOVATION. A basic innovation, invention, or discovery that either
opens the way for many other innovations or so changes the sociocultural system
as to be revolutionary in scope. Examples would include the inventions of the
wheel, plow, steam engine, and printing press; the domestication of plants and
animals,
FUNDAMENTALISM. A commitment to, and a belief in, the literal meanings of
scriptural texts.
FUTURISTS. Those who attempt to forecast the broad parameters of social life
usually from the study of present day trends.
GANG. An informal group of individuals that engage in common activities, many of
these activities may be outside the law.
GAME
STAGE. Childhood stage in which children become capable of taking on the roles
of others.
GATHERING. The foraging for wild fruits, vegetable, tubers, and fungi. This mode
of subsistence is often combined with scavenging meat killed by other animals,
or the hunting of small and large game animals. Studies show that up to 80
percent of all calories in hunting and gathering societies were from foraging
activities.
GEMEINSCHAFT According to Toennies, social organization based on
close and personal ties and traditional norms and values.
GENDER. Socially defined behavior regarded as appropriate for the members of
each sex.
GENDER GAP. Political term referring to the gap between men and women on
political attitudes and behavior.
GENDER IDENTITY. One's self definition as a man or a woman.
GENE. The
basic unit
of heredity in a living organism. A species shares many genetic attributes
(constants), many other genetic attributes are variable within the species.
GENETIC ENGINEERING. The genetic manipulation of organisms in an effort to
produce desirable characteristics. Such engineering has long been undertaken
within a species (this is what domestication is all about); we now have the
tools for genetic manipulation across species.
GENOCIDE. The systematic, planned annihilation of an ethnic, racial or political
group.
GENERALIZATION. A claim that a specific observation will apply to a broader
population. See also inductive reasoning.
GENTRIFICATION. The renovation of poor and working class urban neighborhoods and
the displacement of the original residents.
GESELLSCHAFT. According to Toennies, social organization based on loose personal
ties, self interest, rationalization, and impersonality.
GHETTO A section of a city occupied predominantly by members of a single racial
or ethnic group, usually because of social or economic pressure.
GOVERNING CLASS. See ELITE and POWER ELITE
GOVERNMENT. Formal institutional structures of the nation-state that attempt to
regulate internal and external relations.
GLASS CEILING. The unspoken/unwritten limit that a woman (or a member of a
minority group) may attain within an organization.
GLOBALIZATION. The development of extensive worldwide patterns of economic,
social, or political relationships between nations.
GLOBAL STRATIFICATION. Systematic global inequalities between nation states
determined by a nation-state's position in the capitalist world-system.
GREENHOUSE EFFECT. The accumulation of gasses in the atmosphere that act like
the glass roof of a greenhouse, letting sunlight in but trapping the radiant
heat. Now more often called CLIMATE CHANGE.
GREEN REVOLUTION. The tremendous increase in farming productivity that occurred
beginning in the 1950s with the application of pesticides, herbicides, chemical
fertilizers and the development of plant varieties especially bred to respond to
these chemical inputs.
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP). The total value of all goods and services produced
within the boundaries of a particular country in any given year. In America, for
example, this measure includes the value of the production of Japanese firms
within the U.S. but not goods produced by U.S. firms on Japanese soil.
GDP is now the preferred measure of the wealth of nations.
GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT (GNP). The total value of all goods and services produced
by nationals of a particular country in any given year. In America, for example,
this measure did not include the value of the production of Japanese firms
within the U.S. but did include the value of goods and services produced by U.S.
firms on Japanese soil. GDP is now
the preferred measure of the wealth of nations, though GNP is often used in
historical comparison.
GROSS WORLD PRODUCT (GWP). The estimated total value of all goods and services
produced in all societies in any given year.
GROUP. A collection of individuals who
communicate and interact on a regular basis, sharing many attitudes and beliefs,
and share a sense of identity.
GROUP SIZE EFFECT. Differing group sizes have differing effects upon the people
within the group.
GROUPTHINK. The tendency for groups to reach consensus on most issues brought
before it.
GUERRILLA MOVEMENT. A non-government military organization that engages in
fighting or harassment.
GUILD. An association of craftsmen and artisans in the same trade. These groups
gave mutual aid, protected their trade from the encroachment of non-guild
members and established apprenticeships.
HAWTHORNE EFFECT. Subjects in an experiment or observation modify or change
their behavior in response to the fact of being studied. Originally coined in a
study of workers at the Hawthorne Works of Western Electric who improved their
productivity when lighting conditions were changed. As this productivity
increase occurred under several different lighting conditions, it was concluded
that the increases in productivity were the result of being singled out and
studied rather than the lighting itself.
HATE
CRIME. Assault or other violent acts aimed at individuals because they are a
member of a deviant or a minority group.
HEALTH MAINTENANCE ORGANIZATIONS (HMOs). An organization that provides health
care to patients in return for a fixed annual fee.
HMOs therefore have an interest in limiting the cost of treatment per
patient (see also MANAGED CARE).
HEADMAN. The leader of a hunting and gathering society. The headman typically is
the first among equals, headmen have little real authority, leading the group
through personal attributes and persuasion.
HEGEMON. The predominant political, economic, or social influence of a
nation-state over others.
HERDING SOCIETIES. Societies whose subsistence is based on domesticated animals,
also called PASTORAL SOCIETIES (see also TRADITIONAL STATES).
HETEROSEXUALITY. An orientation in sexual activity towards people of the
opposite sex.
HIDDEN CURRICULUM. Behavior or attitudes that are learned at school but which
are not a part of the formal curriculum. For example, aspects of classism can
often be "unintentionally" conveyed in learning materials.
HIGHER EDUCATION. Usually refers to education beyond high school level, often in
colleges or universities.
HIGH-TRUST SYSTEMS. Work settings in which individuals have a great deal of
autonomy and control.
HISTORICAL MATERIALISM. Marx's interpretation that processes of social change
are determined primarily (but not exclusively) by economic factors.
HOLISTIC. Perspectives that emphasize the whole system as well as the
interdependent nature of the parts of that system.
HOLISTIC MEDICINE. Medical treatment aimed at the whole person--physical,
mental, and the social environment.
HOMO
DUPLEX. Durkheim’s conception of human beings as beings of two natures, the
angel and the beast, the beast being the stronger of the two. The first and
“lower” part of that nature is that of “will,” an id-like nature that is focused
on the individual satisfaction of all wants and desire. The other part of human
nature is social in origin, the “collective conscience.” This conscience is a
collective moral system, a reality separate from the individual that is made up
of ideas and values.
HOMOGAMY. The tendency for individuals to select mates from similar social
backgrounds.
HOMOGENIZATION. To become more uniform, all parts becoming alike.
HOMOPHOBIA. Fear, hatred or loathing of homosexuals.
HOMO
SAPIENS. The human species. Homo sapiens sapiens is the subspecies of modern
humans.
HOMOSEXUALITY. Having sexual preference for persons of the same sex.
HORTICULTURAL ERA. The term refers to the period of time when horticultural
societies were the most technologically sophisticated on earth. Nolan and Lenski
estimate that this was about 8000 to 3000 B.C.
HORTICULTURAL SOCIETIES. Societies in which people plant crops in gardens for
subsistence rather than depending on wild foods. Horticultural societies evolve
as a consequence of the domestication of plants.
HOUSEHOLD. A census term that refers to all people occupying a housing unit.
HOUSEWORK (DOMESTIC LABOR). Unpaid work carried on in and around the home such
as cooking, cleaning and shopping. Studies show that the bulk of this labor is
carried out by women despite the predominance of dual-income families.
HOSPICE. Caring for the terminally ill within the home.
HUMAN ECOLOGY. The study of human and environmental relationships.
HUMANITARIANISM. A person devoted to human welfare and social reform.
HUMAN RELATIONS MANAGEMENT. The interdisciplinary study of worker relations in
the workplace. It attempts to maximize productivity through improving
worker-management relations through the promotion of social events and other
activities to improve worker morale. Many sociologists (Mills and Braverman
especially) consider it simply an exercise in manipulation.
HUNTING AND GATHERING ERA. The term refers to the period of time when hunting
and gathering societies were the most technologically sophisticated on earth.
According to Nolan and Lenski, this was till about 8000 B.C.).
HUNTING AND GATHERING SOCIETIES. Societies whose subsistence is based primarily
on hunting animals and gathering edible plants.
HYBRID SOCIETIES. Societies that rely heavily upon two or more modes of
subsistence. As societies rarely transition to a new mode of subsistence
overnight, many societies are hybrid. For example, the transition from hunting
and gathering to horticulture took place in many societies over generations, as
did the transition from horticulture to agrarian, and agrarian to industrial.
HYPOTHESIS. A tentative statement about a given state of affairs that predicts a
relationship between the variables, usually put forward as a basis for empirical
testing.
HYPERINDUSTRIALISM. The prefix "hyper" denotes "over and above," even to the
point of "abnormal excess." To describe contemporary America as "hyperindustrial"
is to stress both its continuity with the past and how it is rapidly
changing--even to abnormal excess. This is a term that many favor over the term
post industrial society.
HYPERCONSUMPTION. The consumption of goods and services to the point of
abnormal excess.
IATROGENIC. Disease caused by the physician in the course of treating the
patient.
ID.
Freud's posited part of the self that represents human drives such as sexuality
and hunger.
IDEALIST. One who subscribes to the hypothesis that ideas are prime movers
(important causal agents) in sociocultural systems.
IDEALISM. Pursuing your values and beliefs, often to the exclusion of practical
reality.
IDEAL TYPE. Weber's construct of a 'pure type', constructed by emphasizing
logical or consistent traits of a given social item.
The traits are defining ones, not necessarily desirable ones. Ideal types
do not exist anywhere in reality, rather they are "measures" that we can use in
comparing social phenomena. One example is Weber's ideal type of bureaucratic
organization (which are anything but desirable). More widely used (and
understood) examples would include "ideal democracy" and "ideal capitalism."
IDEOLOGY. Shared ideas or beliefs which serve to justify and support the
interests of a particular group or organizations.
IDIOGRAPHIC. Concerned with unique historical events. See NOMOTHETIC.
IMMIGRATION. The settlement of people into a country in which they were not
born.
IMPERIALISM. The establishing of colonial empires in which domination is both
political and economic.
IMPRESSION MANAGEMENT. Selective control of how other's perceive us.
INCOME. Payment of wages usually earned from work or investments. This is
usually measured by year.
INDEPENDENT VARIABLE. The variable
that you believe affects another. In the posited relationship between education
and income, education is the independent variable, income is the dependent
variable. See also dependent variable.
INDEX CRIME. Street crime such as
robbery, rape, and other serious offenses.
INDIGENOUS CULTURES. Native or the original culture of a particular region.
INDIVIDUALISM. A belief in the centrality and primary importance of the
individual and the importance of self-sufficiency and independence.
INDUCTIVE REASONING. The process of going from specific observations to general
statements.
INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY. Democratic participation in the workplace.
INDUSTRIAL ERA. The term refers to the period of time when industrial societies
were the most technologically sophisticated on earth. Nolan and Lenski estimate
that this was about 1800 A.D. to the present.
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION. Economic production carried on through the use of
machinery driven by inanimate sources of power.
INDUSTRIALIZATION The continual
expanding application of sophisticated technology designed to efficiently draw
energy and raw materials out of the environment and fashion them for human use.
INDUSTRIALIZATION OF WAR. The application of industrial production and
bureaucratic organization to warfare.
INDUSTRIAL RESERVE ARMY. A concept popularized by Marx that refers to the
legions of unemployed within a society dominated by capital. The existence of an
industrial reserve army keeps wages down.
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION. Involved the transformation of a technology based on
human and animal labor to a technology based on the use of inanimate energy
sources. The term is actually an arbitrary construct used by social scientists,
journalists, and lay people alike. There is no one event that marks its
beginning or ending except as defined by social consensus--it is not a thing but
one abstraction that we use to break the continuous world of reality into a
piece that we can manipulate.
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY. A society based on the industrial mode of production. Often
characterized by the use of fossil fuels, high population densities, and the
mass production of goods (including agricultural goods).
INDUSTRIALISM. A mode of production characterized by the large-scale
manufacturing of goods (including agriculture). As with any mode of production,
industrialism imposes severe constraints upon the rest of the sociocultural
system.
INFANTICIDE. The killing of infants; historically it was practiced as a measure
of population control.
INFANT MORTALITY RATE. The number of infants who die during the first year of
life, per thousand live births. Infant mortality rates have declined
dramatically in industrial societies.
INFORMAL RELATIONS. Relations in organizations developed on the basis of
personal connections. These ties are often used to pursue organizational goals
instead of the formally recognized procedures.
INFRASTRUCTURAL DETERMINISM. The
major principle of sociocultural materialism (borrowed and modified from Harris'
cultural materialism). "The mode of
production and reproduction (probabilistically) determines primary and secondary
group structure, which in turn determines the cultural and mental
superstructure" (see also MODE OF
PRODUCTION, MODE OF REPRODUCTION, PRIMARY GROUP, SECONDARY GROUP,
SUPERSTRUCTURE, and FEEDBACK LOOP, PRIMACY OF THE INFRASTRUCTURE).
INFRASTRUCTURE. The interface between a sociocultural system and its
environment. In sociocultural
materialism it contains the principle mechanism by which society regulates the
amount and type of energy from the environment (see also MODE OF PRODUCTION, and
MODE OF REPRODUCTION).
IN-GROUP. A social group an individual belongs to and identifies with.
INNER CITY. The areas composing the central neighborhoods of industrial cities
which are subject to dilapidation and decay, the more affluent residents having
moved to outlying areas.
INNOVATION. The introduction of new elements (inventions, discoveries) into the
sociocultural system. Also, one of Merton’s adaptations in Anomie Theory (or
Stress Theory). It is characterized by individuals who have accepted the
culturally approved goal, but have not fully internalized the culturally
approved means to attain this goal. The individual thereby adopts a different
(and often deviant) method for attaining the goal.
INSTINCT. A genetically fixed pattern of complex behavior (that is, beyond
reflex) which appears in all normal animals within a given species. The behavior
of humans is not instinctual.
INSTITUTION. An established pattern of human social behavior in a given
society--such as marriage, family, or government—often in response to a set of
basic biological or psychological needs.
INTERSOCIETAL SELECTION. The evolutionary process of “survival of the fittest”
by which societies with technologically advanced production tend to have larger
populations, larger territories, access to greater natural resources, and more
powerful military and thereby tend to conquer or economically absorb less
technologically advanced societies.
INSTITUTIONAL CAPITALISM. A condition that exists when large institutions such
as pension plans, banks, and insurance companies hold large shares of
capitalistic enterprises.
INSTITUTIONAL DISCRIMINATION.
Accepted social arrangements that place minority groups at a disadvantage.
INSTITUTIONAL RACISM. Accepted social arrangements that exclude on the basis of
race.
INSTITUTIONALIZATION. The embodiment of widespread norms, beliefs, and values
into social structures, laws, and formal codes of conduct. Also refers to the
act of committing a person to a total institution—a nursing home or asylum.
INSURRECTION An organized revolt against civil authority in an attempt to
replace that authority with another.
INTEGRATION. Incorporating disparate parts within the whole. The bringing of
people of different ethnic groups into equal association.
INTENSIFICATION. The application of ever greater amounts of technology and labor
techniques to increase productivity. Refers to the growth in the complexity of
the mode of production (greater energy expenditures as well as energy
produced/consumed), and population over the course of social evolution (see also
BUREAUCRATIZATION, and RATIONALIZATION).
INTELLIGENCE. Level of intellectual ability in an individual.
Also refers to the gathering of information (defensive, offensive, and
industrial capabilities) about one nation by another.
INTERMEDIATE ORGANIZATION. Robert Nisbet’s term for primary groups based on
religion, family, or community that historically stood between the individual
and the state.
INTERNAL COLONIALISM. The economic exploitation of a group within a society
whereby their labor is sold cheap and they are made to pay dear for products and
services.
INTERNALIZATION. A process by which members of a group make the ideas, values,
and norms of the group their own.
INTERNATIONAL DIVISION OF LABOR. The specialization of work tasks and
occupations among nation states. The interdependence of countries which trade on
global markets. Products are produced globally; profits go to only to a few.
INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE. The use of force between individuals to kill, injure, or
abuse.
INTEREST GROUPS. Groups organized to pursue specific interests in the political
arena. The interests of these groups are often economic, but many are organized
around moral concerns. The major activity of interest groups is lobbying the
members of legislative bodies (Congress as well as state legislators),
contributing vast sums to political campaigns, and increasingly running their
own propaganda campaigns to affect the legislative process.
INTERLOCKING DIRECTORATE. Linkages between boards of directors of different
companies due to the fact that the same people (often of the same class) sit on
several different boards.
INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY. Movement up or down the social hierarchy from one
generation to another.
INVENTION. Innovation from a new combination of information or technology
already in existence within a society.
IQ
(INTELLIGENCE QUOTIENT). A score attained on tests of symbolic or reasoning
abilities. Most social scientists (excluding psychologists) do not put much
stock in the validity of IQ tests.
IRON
LAW OF OLIGARCHY. Posited by Robert Michels: "He who says organization says
oligarchy." As bureaucracy enlarges and centralizes, more and more authority is
placed at the top of these huge organizations.
IRRATIONALITY FACTOR. The paradox of supremely rational organizations,
bureaucracies, acting in very irrational ways for the total society. Because
bureaucracies are designed for the efficient attainment of goals set by the top
of the organization; and because those at the top of these organizations often
have goals that are antithetical to the goals of society as a whole (say profit
vs. welfare), the irrationality factor is very much a part of modern life.
JEREMIAD. Writing that is characterized by a long list of complaints, lament, or
prophesies of doom.
JOB
DISPLACEMENT. The permanent loss of jobs due to shifts in employment patterns.
With the transition from agrarian to industrial societies, many agricultural
jobs were lost, while new manufacturing and service jobs were created. The
shifts continue.
KINESIC COMMUNICATION. The reading of body language.
KINSHIP. The network of social relationships which link individuals through
common ancestry, marriage, or adoption.
LABELING EFFECT. The impact of labeling on an individual. Tracking students in
different reading groups may produce poor reading not because of the ability of
the student, but because the student was placed in a poor reading group and
therefore internalized the label (I was a blackbird, somewhat below the
cardinals).
LABELING THEORY. A social theory that holds that society's reaction to certain
behaviors is a major factor in defining the self as deviant. People become
`deviant' because certain labels (thief, prostitute, homosexual) are attached to
their behavior by criminal justice authorities and others. The resulting
treatment of the individual pushes them into performing the deviant role. Also
called "societal reaction" theory.
LABOR (or LABOUR). Physical or mental work, the primary factor in the production
process.
LABOR INTENSIVE INDUSTRY. An
industry which requires a large numbers of employees for its production
processes. Education is a very labor intensive industry (see also CAPITAL
INTENSIVE INDUSTRY).
LABOR POWER. A concept much used by Karl Marx, it refers to abstract human labor
that is used in exchange for money.
LAISSEZ-FAIRE. One of the main doctrines of capitalism that asserts that
government should not interfere with commerce.
LANGUAGE. A system of symbols and grammatical rules that provide for the
communication of complex ideas.
LATENT FUNCTIONS. The unintended consequences of one part of a sociocultural
system on the whole or on other parts of that system. These consequences are
often indirect and not always obvious. For example, the reform of big city
political machines had a lot of unintended consequences on the governability of
American cities (see also MANIFEST FUNCTION).
LAWS. Written rules established by a political authority and enforced by
government.
LEARNING. The process by which one acquires—through experience or
language—information with the potential to change values, beliefs, or behavior.
LEGITIMACY. The generally held belief that a particular social institution is
just and valid.
LEGITIMATE. The ways in which an institution engenders acceptance, validity, or
commitment from individuals and other institutions.
LEGITIMATION CRISIS. The lack of sufficient commitment on the part of members to
a particular social institution for that organization to function effectively.
Governments that lack legitimacy often rely on repression to continue their rule
(which is very inefficient).
LESBIANISM. Sexual activities and emotional attachments between women.
LIBERAL DEMOCRACY. Refers to those societies based on some form of democracy
coupled with capitalism.
LIFE
CHANCES. The opportunities that are available to individuals as a result of
their position in the class system.
LIFESTYLE CHANGES. Often called for
when treating chronic disease.
Rather than curing the disease, the patient makes changes in lifestyle
(nutrition, exercise, smoking cessation, weight reduction, alleviating stress)
that help to control the disease process.
LIFE
EXPECTANCY. The number of years a newborn in a particular society can expect to
live. Also refers to the number of further years which people at any given age
can, on average, expect to live.
LIFE-SPAN. The maximum length of life that is biologically possible for a member
of a given species.
LIMITED WAR. Warfare fought principally by a relatively small number of soldiers
to reach specific and politically limited objectives (see also TOTAL WAR).
LITERACY. The ability of individuals to read and write.
LOCAL KNOWLEDGE. Knowledge of a local community possessed by individuals who
spend long periods of their lives in them.
LONGEVITY. A long duration of life. Or, a long tenure in an organization.
LOOKING GLASS SELF. The theory that an individual's self-concept is derived from
their interactions with others, that is, their perception of how others perceive
them.
LOW-TRUST SYSTEMS. Work settings in which individuals have little autonomy and
control.
LUDDITES. A term used to brand those who are against "all" modern technology.
The term originally referred to British workmen
(about 1811) who rioted and destroyed textile machinery in the belief
that these machines were contributing to unemployment.
MACROSOCIOLOGY. The study of large-scale organizations, sociocultural systems,
or the world system of societies.
MAGIC. Rituals which attempt to influence supernatural beings to help achieve
human ends.
MALE
INEXPRESSIVENESS. The difficulties men have in talking about their feelings to
others.
MALTHUSIANISM. The principle that population tends to grow faster than
subsistence. T. Robert Malthus's theory of population dynamics, according to
which population increase inevitably comes up against the 'natural limits' of
food supply. Population grows geometrically (1, 2, 4, 8, 16,. . .) while food
supply grows arithmetically (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, . . .).
MANAGED CARE. The reorganization of the health care delivery along corporate
lines (see also HEALTH MAINTENANCE ORGANIZATIONS).
MANAGEMENT. The coordination, supervision, or control of people and processes;
the group of people who make decisions regarding the operations of an
institution.
MANAGERIAL CAPITALISM. A change in the control of capitalist enterprises from
owners (which predominated in Marx's day) to control by (very well) salaried
managers.
MANAGERIAL DEMIURGE. C. Wright Mills’s concept that refers to the increased
proportion of managers at the top of government and business bureaucracies; an
interlocking of these bureaucracies, and more and more areas becoming the object
of management and manipulation.
MANIFEST FUNCTION. The intended and known consequences of one part of a
sociocultural system. For example, the reform of big city political machines had
the intended consequence of limiting (relatively) corruption by city officials
(see also LATENT FUNCTION).
MANIPULATION. Skillful or devious management.
MARKET ECONOMY. The ideal of capitalism in which the forces of supply and demand
determine the production and distribution of goods and services.
MARITIME SOCIETY. A society whose subsistence is primarily dependent upon
overseas trade and commercial activity.
MARKET RESEARCH. Social research aimed specifically at finding out the sales
potential of a product or service.
MARRIAGE. A socially approved sexual and economic relationship between two or
more individuals.
MARXISM. Contemporary social theory deriving its main elements from Marx's
ideas. Marxist theory strongly emphasizes class struggle and material causation.
MASCULINITY. The characteristic forms of behavior expected of men in any given
culture.
MASS
MEDIA. Forms of communication designed to reach a vast audience without any
personal contact between the senders and receivers. Examples would include
newspapers, magazines, video recordings, radio and television.
MASTER STATUS. A position that is so central to the identity of the individual
that it overshadows all other statuses.
MATERIAL CULTURE. The physical objects of a given sociocultural system. Usually
thought to consist of products, art, tools and other tangibles.
MATERIALISM. The view that 'material conditions' (usually economic and
technological factors) have the central role in determining social stability
change.
MATERIALIST. One who believes that material conditions are the foundation of
sociocultural systems. Materialism is the philosophical view that the only thing
that can truly be said to 'exist' is matter; that fundamentally, all things are
composed of 'material' and all phenomena are the result of material
interactions.
MATRIARCHY. Social organization in which females dominate males.
MATRILINEAL DESCENT. The tracing of kinship through only the female line (see
also PATRILINEAL DESCENT).
MATRILOCALITY. A family residential pattern in which the husband is expected to
live near to the wife's parents (see also NEOLOCALITY).
McDONALDIZATION. George Ritzer coined the term to describe rationalization—the
identical process extensively described by Weber—because modern audiences could
better identify with fast food restaurants and students could more easily relate
to them.
MEAN. A statistical measure of 'central tendency' or average based on dividing a
total by the number of individual cases involved. The mean is very sensitive to
extreme scores. For example, the average life expectancy for people in a society
with high infant mortality would be a misleading measure (see also MEDIAN).
MEANS OF CONSUMPTION. George Ritzer’s term referring to the means whereby the
consumption of goods and services is carried out in a society. Consists of such
institutions as malls, superstores, Internet stores (such as Amazon.com),
warehouse stores, theme parks, cruise lines, sport stadiums, mega-malls, and
casinos.
MEANS OF PRODUCTION. Marx's term
referring to the means whereby the production of material goods is carried on in
a society. Marx included in this concept both technology (which he called the
"forces of production) and the social relations among the producers (which he
called the "relations of production" and based on the ownership of that
technology).
MECHANICAL SOLIDARITY. Mechanical solidarity is "solidarity which comes from
likeness," Durkheim writes, and "is at its maximum when the collective
conscience completely envelops our whole conscience and coincides in all points
with it."
MECHANIZATION. The use of machinery to replace human labor.
MEDIAN. The number that falls halfway in a range of numbers--the score below
which are half the scores and above which are the other half.
The median is a way of calculating 'central tendency' which is sometimes
more useful than calculating a mean (particularly when many extreme scores are
in the distribution).
MEDICAID. Government program (federal and state) to provide medical care to the
poor.
MEDICAL MODEL. The application of the medical perspective in explaining and
treating troublesome human behavior.
MEDICALIZATION. The tendency in the West to define all forms of deviance and
social problems to be due to disease, genetic predisposition, or other personal
pathologies.
MEDICARE. Government health insurance for those over sixty-five.
MEGALOPOLIS. A vast unbroken urban region consisting of two or more central
cities connected by their surrounding suburbs.
MENTAL DISORDER. The inability to psychologically cope effectively with the
demands of day-to-day life. Psychiatrists recognize two general types of mental
disorder, neurosis (milder forms of illness, such as anxiety states) and
psychosis (more serious forms of disturbance, in which individuals lose touch
with reality). The organic and sociocultural basis of various mental disorders
are disputed matters.
MENTAL SUPERSTRUCTURE. Sociocultural
materialism term used to refer to conscious and unconscious motives for human
behavior. Borrowed from Max Weber,
there are four basic motivations for human behavior:
wert rational (or value oriented rationality), affective action (action
motivated by emotions), traditional action (action motivated by what Weber calls
the "eternal yesterday"), and zweckrational (goal oriented rational action).
(See also SUPERSTRUCTURE, and CULTURAL SUPERSTRUCTURE).
MICROSOCIOLOGY. The study of small scale patterns of human interaction and
behavior within specific settings.
MIDDLE CLASS. A social class broadly defined occupationally as those working in
white-collar and lower managerial occupations; is sometimes defined by reference
to income levels or subjective identification of the participants in the study.
MIGRATION. The movement of people from one country or region to another in order
to settle permanently.
MILITARISM. The influence of military goals and thinking on government.
MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX. A reciprocal relationship (such as the interchange
of personnel) between select business firms and the armed forces of a society,
based on common interests in weapons production.
MILITARY RULE. Government by military leaders.
MILLENARIANISM. Beliefs held by the members of some religious movements that
cataclysmic changes will occur in the near future (often centered around the
year 2000 and the second coming of Christ) heralding the arrival of a new epoch
in human affairs.
MINI-SYSTEMS. Immanuel Wallerstein’s term for societies small in size,
homogenous, relatively simple in structure. Such societies are self-contained
sociocultural systems such as hunting and gathering societies and perhaps simple
horticultural, herding, and fishing societies.
MINORITY GROUP (OR ETHNIC MINORITY). A group of people who are defined on the
basis of their ethnicity or race. Because of their distinct physical or cultural
characteristics, they are singled out for unequal treatment within a society.
MISCEGENATION. The mixing of the races through marriage.
MIXED ECONOMY. Economies which have
major elements of both capitalism and socialism (such as many of the economies
of Europe).
MOBILITY. Movement (up or down) between social statuses, class, or income
groups. Vertical mobility is movement up or down the status ladder; horizontal
mobility refers to movement within a class or to an occupation of similar
status.
MOBILIZATION. Activities aimed at arousing people and resources to press for
social change.
MODE. The value that appears most often in a given set of data. This can
sometimes be a helpful way of portraying central tendency (see also MEDIAN, and
MEAN).
MODE
OF PRODUCTION. The technology and
the practices employed for expanding or limiting basic subsistence production,
especially the production of food and other forms of energy.
Examples would include the technology of subsistence,
technological/environmental relationships, and work patterns (see also MODE OF
REPRODUCTION, and INFRASTRUCTURE).
MODE
OF REPRODUCTION. The technology and practices employed for expanding, limiting,
and maintaining population size.
Examples of variables included are demography, mating patterns, fertility,
natality, mortality, nurturance of infants, contraception, abortion and
infanticide (see also MODE OF PRODUCTION, and INFRASTRUCTURE).
MODERNITY. The state of being modern, usually associated with industrial and
hyperindustrial societies.
MODERNIZATION. The process of general social change brought about by the
transition from an agrarian to an industrial mode of production.
MONARCHY. A hereditary form of government in which a king or queen or some
similar “noble” rules.
MONOGAMY. A form of marriage that joins one male and one female at any given
time.
MONOPOLY. A situation in which a single producer dominates in a given industry
or market (see also OLIGOPOLY).
MONOPOLY CAPITALISM. Huge amounts of accumulated capital within corporations
that give these organizations enormous social, political, and economic power.
Operating control of these organizations is vested in specialized management.
MONOTHEISM. Belief in a single Devine power.
MORES. Norms that have strong moral significance, violation of which cause
strong social reaction (murder, sexual molestation of children).
MORTALITY RATE. The number of deaths
that occur in a particular population in a specified period of time (usually a
year).
MOTIVE. A personal drive, intentional reason, or impulse that causes a person to
act in a certain way.
MULTICULTURALISM. A sensitivity to the diverse cultural backgrounds and
experiences of the members within a society.
MULTILINEAR EVOLUTION. An interpretation of social evolution that not all
societies pass through predetermined stages of evolutionary development--there
are varying paths of evolutionary change followed by different societies.
MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS. A business corporation that operates in two or more
countries--also sometimes referred to as a "transnational."
NATIONALISM. An individual's internalization of the set of beliefs and values
expressing love, pride and identification with a given nation state. Ritual and
symbols are important tools in fostering nationalism among the citizenry.
NATION-STATE. The modern state in which a government has sovereign power within
a defined territorial area, and the mass of the population are citizens.
NEO-COLONIALISM. The informal dominance of some nations over others by means of
unequal conditions of economic exchange (as between industrial and Third World
countries).
NEO-LOCALITY. A family residential pattern in which the married couple lives
apart from the place of residence of both the bride's and the husband's parents
(see also MATRILOCALITY).
NEWLY INDUSTRIALIZED COUNTRIES. Nation-states (such as South Korea) that have
recently attained industrialization.
NOMAD. Communities of people who move from one place to another to obtain food
and other necessities. Nomads usually have well defined territories; many
hunting and gathering groups are nomadic, having no permanent settlements.
NOMOTHETIC. A tendency to generalize or search for universal laws or principles;
sociology is a nomothetic enterprise; history is idiographic.
NONMATERIAL CULTURE. Consists of the norms, customs, beliefs, and ideologies of
social groups.
NON-STATE ACTORS. International agencies, such as the U.N. or the World Health
Organization, which play a part in the world system.
NORMATIVE CONSENSUS. Shared agreement among the vast majority in a group or
society about what behaviors are appropriate and expected of its members.
NORMS. Rules and expectations of conduct which either prescribes a given type of
behavior, or forbid it. Norms can be formal or informal and their violation are
often sanctioned.
NORMATIVE STRUCTURE. Long-standing patterns of norms and expectations of
behavior within a society or an organization.
NUCLEAR FAMILY. A basic family group consisting of married female and male
parents and dependent children, living away from other relatives.
OBJECTIVITY. Objectivity means striving as far as possible to reduce or
eliminate bias in the conduct of research.
OCCUPATIONAL DISTRIBUTION. The number of workers in each occupational
classification.
OCCUPATIONAL PRESTIGE. Social respect accorded to an individual or group because
of the status of their occupation.
OLIGARCHY. Rule by a few within an organization or in the society as a whole.
OLIGOPOLY. A situation in which a small number of firms dominate a given
industry or market. When four or fewer firms supply fifty percent or more of a
given market the effects of oligopoly become apparent. These effects are reputed
to be a rise in price and a lowering of quality because of the decline of
competition (see also MONOPOLY).
OPEN
LINEAGE FAMILY. A family system found in preindustrial Europe in which family
relationships are closely intertwined with the local community.
OPERATIVES AND LABORERS. Unskilled and semi-skilled workers, usually working in
manufacturing or construction.
ORGANIC SOLIDARITY. Durkheim's concept referring to social cohesion based on the
interdependence of the division of labor rather than on likeness.
ORGANIZATION. A large group of individuals that is formally organized for the
purpose of attaining a goal.
ORGANIZED CRIME. Criminal activities carried out by organizations established as
businesses.
OUTSOURCING. Part of the globalization process in which corporations send
factories and jobs overseas in order to lower labor costs, avoid taxation or
regulation, thus making the corporation more profitable.
OWNERSHIP. The legal right to the possession of an object or thing. For Marx,
ownership of the means of production were key factors in understanding a
sociocultural system.
OZONE DEPLETION. Theory that societies production of chlorofluorocarbons and
other gasses is depleting the ozone layer that protects plant and animal life
from harmful ultra-violet radiation (see also POLLUTION, and ENVIRONMENT).
PARADIGM. A worldview or model that provides the researcher with a coherent set
of principles which serve as a beginning framework for understanding a given
subject area (for examples see CULTURAL MATERIALISM, ECOLOGICAL-EVOLUTIONARY
THEORY).
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION. A research method in which the social scientists
engages in systematic observation while a member of the group.
PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY. A system of democracy in which all members of a group
or community participate collectively in major decisions. Most nation states
today are too large and complex for participatory democracy to be a feasible
form of government.
PASTORAL SOCIETIES. Societies whose subsistence is based on domesticated animals
also called HERDING SOCIETIES (see also TRADITIONAL STATES).
PATIENT DUMPING. The practice of only treating patients that can pay leaving the
poor to government or charitable organizations.
PATRIARCHY. Social organization that structures the dominance of men over women.
PATRILINEAL DESCENT. The practice of tracing kinship only through the male line
(see also MATRILINEAL DESCENT).
PATRILOCALITY. A family residential pattern in which the wife is expected to
live near to the husband's parents (see also NEOLOCALITY).
PAUPERIZATION. To impoverish or make someone poor. Marx theorized that capital
must ultimately lead to the pauperization of the masses.
PEASANT. People in agrarian societies who produce food from the land, using
traditional farming methods of plow and animal power.
Farm workers in agrarian societies.
PEER
GROUP. A friendship group with common interests and position composed of
individuals of similar age.
PERIPHERAL COUNTRIES. The term refers to countries which have a marginal role in
the world economy and are dependent on core countries in their trading
relationships (see also CORE COUNTRIES and SEMI-PERIPHERY COUNTRIES).
PERSONAL CRIME. Crime directed against people.
PERSONALITY. The consistent pattern of attitudes and beliefs that an individual
projects to the social world.
PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT. An occupation
that handles many routine medical problems, thereby allowing the physician to
specialize in the more difficult cases.
PLAY
STAGE. The stage in which children take on the role of others around them.
PLEA
BARGAINING. A deal between the
prosecution and the accused offender where the accused will plead guilty in
return for a reduced charge.
PLURALIST. One who subscribes to pluralist theory.
PLURALIST THEORY. An analysis of politics emphasizing the role of diverse and
competing interest groups in preventing too much power being accumulated in the
hands of political and economic elites.
PLUTOCRACY. A government that is
structured to systematically benefit the wealthiest members of a society.
POLICY RESEARCH. Social research aimed at clarifying issues and problems that
can then be addressed by changes in social policy.
POLITICS. Attempts to influence governmental activities.
POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEES (PACS). Interest group organizations aimed at
contributing money to politicians who support the interests of the group.
POLITICAL ECONOMY. The interrelationships between political and economic
systems.
POLITICAL PARTY. An organization of people with similar interests and attitudes
established with the aim of achieving legitimate control of government and using
that power to pursue a specific program.
POLLUTION. One of the principal constraints of the environment.
Refers to the contamination of soil, water, or air by noxious substances
(see also DEPLETION, ENVIRONMENT, and INTENSIFICATION).
POLYANDRY. A form of marriage in which a woman may have more than one husband.
POLYGAMY. A form of marriage in which a person may have more than one spouse.
POLYGYNY. A form of marriage in which a man may have more than one wife.
POLYTHEISM. A form of belief in which a person has two or more gods.
POPULAR CULTURE. Cultural elements (beliefs, norms, material objects) that are
part of the everyday life of a people.
POPULATION. In social research this term refers to the total group of people
that the researcher is studying. For very large groups, sampling is usually
undertaken.
POPULATION DENSITY. The number of people who live in a given area. This is
usually measured by the number of people per square mile.
POPULATION REPLACEMENT LEVEL. A condition in which the birth rate and the death
rate are about equal, thus leading to zero population growth.
POSITIVISM. A philosophical position according to which there are close ties
between the social and natural sciences, which share a common logical framework.
Accurate observation, description, and measurement are considered critical in
this perspective.
POSTINDUSTRIAL SOCIETY. A society based on the production of services and
information rather than material goods. A notion advocated by those who believe
that the industrial order is passing. Your instructor is not one of them.
POSTMODERNISM. A theoretical perspective--widespread in cultural studies and
anthropology--that is based on the idea that there is no objective social
reality, but that different realities are constructed in the minds of
individuals from the words and images (or discourse) between people.
POWER. The ability to achieve aims or further the interests you hold even when
opposed by others.
POWER ELITE. According to C. Wright Mills the power elite are men in the highest
positions of government, corporations and the military who hold enormous power
in modern industrial societies.
POVERTY LINE. The amount of income that it takes to maintain a family at a basic
level. This amount is often determined by government.
PRE-INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY. A broad classification of all modes of production that
came before industrialism. The most common of which are Hunting and Gathering,
Horticultural, Pastoral, and Agrarian.
PREJUDICE. The holding of unfounded ideas about a group, ideas that are
resistant to change.
PRESTIGE. Social respect accorded to an individual or group because of the
status of their position.
PRIMACY OF THE INFRASTRUCTURE. When trying to understand or explain a widespread
social practice or belief, Marvin Harris urges, always begin with an examination
of infrastructural-environmental relations. He calls this the principle of
infrastructural determinism (a somewhat unfortunate choice of terminology since
Harris explicitly recognizes the probabilistic nature of the relationships).
Because of misunderstandings and misinterpretations, Harris later renames this
principle the primacy of the infrastructure.
PRIMARY DEVIANCE. The deviant act
itself, the violation of a norm.
PRIMARY GROUP. A typically small group of individuals standing in an enduring
personal relationship to one another--examples would include parents, spouse, or
close friends (see also SECONDARY GROUP).
PRIMARY GROUP STRUCTURE. A term used
in sociocultural materialism to refer to structural groups in which members tend
to interact on an intimate basis. They perform many functions such as regulating
production, reproduction, socialization, education, and enforcing social
discipline. Examples include family, community, voluntary organizations, and
friendship networks (see also STRUCTURE, and SECONDARY GROUP STRUCTURE).
PRIMARY INDUSTRIES. Industries that extract raw materials from the earth such as
mining, fishing, energy, farming and forestry.
PRIMARY LABOR MARKET. The term refers to the economic position of individuals
engaged in occupations that provide secure jobs, and good benefits and working
conditions (see also SECONDARY LABOR MARKET).
PRIMARY NEEDS. A term used by Karl Marx to refer to natural needs that we are
born with rather than learn; this would include such needs as food, water, and
shelter. See also SECONDARY NEEDS.
PRIMARY SECTOR. That part of a modern economy based on the extraction of natural
resources directly from the natural environment--includes such areas as mining
and agricultural production.
PRIVATE HEALTH CARE. Fee-for-service health care available only to those who pay
the full cost of them.
PROFANE. Elements which belong to the ordinary everyday world rather than the
supernatural (see also SACRED).
PROFESSIONS. Occupations requiring extensive educational qualifications, with
high social prestige, subject to codes of conduct laid down by central bodies
(or professional associations).
PROLETARIAT. Marxist term that refers to the class of industrial workers who
have nothing to sell on the free market except their labor.
PROPAGANDA. Information that is systematically spread by an organization to
further its agenda.
PROPERTY CRIME. Crimes such as theft of property without physically harming an
individual.
PROSTITUTION. Having sex for economic gain.
PROTESTANT ETHIC. Weber's thesis that protestant values and beliefs placed value
on hard work and thrift, thus promoting the transition to capitalism.
PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY. A psychological theory positing that the unconscious
shapes much of human behavior.
PSYCHOPATH. A personality type that denotes a lack of moral sense and concern
for others.
PSYCHOSIS. A serious mental disorder that involves a failure to distinguish
between internal and external reality, the affected person cannot function
effectively in social life.
PUBLIC HEALTH CARE. Government funded health-care services available to all
members of the population.
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH. Less structured research more open to indirect observation
and interpretation. There are many qualitative techniques such as participant
observation, content analysis, or focus groups.
QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH. Structured research focused upon the collection of
discreet data and systematic analyses.
RACE. A socially defined category of people who share genetically transmitted
physical characteristics.
RACIAL PROFILING. The use of race as the primary criteria to decide whether or
not to subject an individual to more intensive scrutiny on the part of agents of
social control (such as police, or airport security).
RACISM. Attributing inferiority to a particular racial category. Racism is a
specific form of prejudice focused on race.
RADICAL MOVEMENTS. Social movements that seek fundamental change in the
sociocultural system.
RANDOM SAMPLE. A technique of drawing a sample of a population in which each
individual has an equal chance of being selected.
RAPE. The use of force to compel one individual to engage in a sexual act with
another.
RATIONALISM. The reliance on logic, observation, and reason to guide one’s
behavior and beliefs.
RATIONALITY. Mental state characterized by coherent thought processes, that are
goal oriented, and based on cost-benefit evaluation.
RATIONAL CHOICE THEORY. The idea that humans make cost-benefit analyses before
significant social actions (such as having children or choosing to go to
college).
RATIONAL-LEGAL AUTHORITY. Weber's term for authority that is based on law,
rules, or regulations. See also CHARISMATIC AUTHORITY and TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY.
RATIONALIZATION PROCESS. Weber's concept to refer to the process by which modes
of precise calculation based on observation and reason increasingly dominate the
social world. Rationalization is a habit of thought that replaces tradition,
emotion, and values as motivators of human conduct. Bureaucracy is a particular
case of rationalization applied to human social organization (see also
BUREAUCRATIZATION).
REACTIONARY MOVEMENTS. Social movements bent on resisting change or advocating
the return to an earlier order.
REBELLION. Rebellions are aimed at removing particular rulers or regimes rather
than bringing about significant structural changes in a society (See also COUP
D'ETAT and REVOLUTION).
RECIDIVISM RATE. The percentage of ex-convicts who are convicted of new offenses
after being released from prison.
RECIPROCITY. A system of the exchange of goods based on social ties.
REFERENCE GROUP. The group one identifies with and looks to for standards of
behavior, values, beliefs, and attitudes.
REFORM MOVEMENT. A social movement concerned to implement a limited program of
social change, say changing the health care system to provide universal access
to care.
RELATIONS OF PRODUCTION. The social relations people enter into through their
participation in economic life. They are socially patterned, independent of the
wills and purposes of the individuals involved; the primary distinction is
whether they are owners of the forces of production or have only their labor to
sell.
RELATIVE DEPRIVATION. A perceived disadvantage in social or economic standing
based on a comparison to others in a society.
RELATIVE POVERTY. Poverty defined by reference to the living standards of the
majority in any given society.
RELIABILITY. The likelihood or probability that a given measure would be the
same if measured again. Not all measures are reliable.
RELIGION. A set of beliefs involving symbols regarded as sacred, together with
ritual practices in which members of the community engage.
RELIGIOSITY. A measure of the intensity and importance of religious faith to an
individual.
REPLICATION STUDY. Repeating a study on another sample of subjects at a
different time. Such studies are checks on the validity and reliability of
research.
REPRESENTATIVE DEMOCRACY. Based on the existence of two or more political
parties, in which voters democratically elect politicians to represent their
interests.
REPUBLIC. A form of government in which officials are elected to represent the
people.
RESEARCH DESIGN. The overall logic and strategy of the research methods of a
particular study.
RESEARCH METHODS. The diverse strategies used to gather empirical (factual)
material in a systematic way.
RESOCIALIZATION. The relearning of cultural norms and values by mature
individuals usually in the context of a total institution (see also TOTAL
INSTITUTION).
RETIREMENT CENTER. A city or town to which many people move when they retire.
RETREATISM. Robert K. Merton’s Anomie Theory category consists of society’s
dropouts: psychotics, tramps, and substance abusers. They have given up on both
the culturally prescribed means and the goals. Merton viewed it as a way of
escaping society’s demands.
REVOLUTION. The overthrow of a government by the governed; a process of change
involving the mobilization of a mass social movement in order to radically
transform society. It also refers to a drastic and far reaching political,
economic, social, or technological change (as in the Agricultural or Industrial
Revolutions). Finally, it refers to a category in Robert K. Merton’s Anomie
typology to indicate one who rejects both the goals and means and substitutes
new goals and means in their stead.
RIOTS. An outbreak of collective violence directed against persons, property or
both.
RITE
OF PASSAGE. Communal rituals that mark the transition from one status to another
(such as a confirmation or a wedding ceremony).
RITUAL. Formalized ceremonial behavior in which the members of a group or
community regularly engage. ROLE. The expected behavior associated with a given
status.
RITUALISM. When blocked from achieving success goals, such men and women will
stick to the legitimate means, essentially just going through the motions.
Merton contended that the heavy emphasis that the lower middle classes place on
socializing the young in obedience predisposes them to this mode of adaptation.
ROLE. Expected behavior and obligations from the occupant of a particular social
status.
ROLE
CONFLICT. When two or more roles conflict with one another.
ROLE
MODEL. An admired person who is held up as an example to imitate.
ROLE
SET. All of the roles a person occupies at a given time (doctor, daughter, wife,
mother, sister,...).
ROLE
STRAIN. Conflicting expectations within a given role.
RULING CLASS. The class of people who exercise overwhelming power and control
within a society.
SACRED. Something set apart from the everyday world which inspires attitudes of
awe or reverence among believers (see also PROFANE).
SAMPLING. Taking a small part of a population for purposes of drawing inferences
from the analysis of the sample characteristics to the population as a whole.
SANCTION. A reward for conformity or a punishment for nonconformity that
reinforces socially approved forms of behavior.
SAPIR-WHORF HYPOTHESIS. The theory
that people perceive their world through the framework of language. Thus
language determines other aspects of culture because it provides the categories
through which reality is defined.
SCIENCE. The application of systematic methods of observation and careful
logical analysis; the term also refers to the body of knowledge produced by the
use of the scientific method.
SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT. Also called Taylorism, it is a set of ideas developed by
Frederick Winslow Taylor involving simplifying, rationalizing, standardizing,
and coordinating the actions of workers to produce maximum efficiency.
SCIENTIFIC METHOD. Steps taken in the research process to assure the validity,
reliability, and generalization of the results. These steps include observation
(or gathering the data), hypothesis testing, and the analysis of data.
SCAPEGOATING. Blaming, punishing, or stigmatizing a relatively powerless
individual or group for wrongs that were not of their doing.
SCHIZOPHRENIA. A serious mental disturbance in which an individual typically has
delusions or hallucinations and a distorted sense of reality.
SCRIPT. A concept used in role theory, refers to the learned performance of a
social role.
SECOND WORLD COUNTRIES. Formerly communist industrial societies of Eastern
Europe and the Soviet Union (see also FIRST WORLD and THIRD WORLD).
SECONDARY DEVIANCE. The deviant role
behavior that a person adopts as a result of being labeled as deviant.
SECONDARY ORGANIZATION. A group of individuals who do not know each other on a
personal level interacting in pursuit of a goal (see also PRIMARY GROUP).
SECONDARY GROUP. A group that is relatively large in size, member interact on
the basis of narrow roles rather than on an intimate basis, and who are usually
organized around a specific task.
SECONDARY GROUP STRUCTURE. A term
used in sociocultural materialism to refer to structural groups in which members
tend to interact without any emotional commitment to one another.
These organizations are coordinated through bureaucracies.
They perform many functions such as regulating production, reproduction,
socialization, education, and enforcing social discipline.
Examples include governments, parties, military, corporations,
educational institutions, media, service and welfare organizations, and
professional and labor organizations
(see also STRUCTURE, and PRIMARY GROUP STRUCTURE).
SECONDARY INDUSTRIES. The industrial sector of the economy that manufactures
finished products from raw materials.
SECONDARY LABOR MARKET. Refers to the economic position of individuals engaged
in occupations that provide insecure jobs, poor benefits and conditions of work
(see also PRIMARY LABOR MARKET).
SECONDARY SOURCES. In the social sciences secondary literature refers to a
scholar’s work about another scientist’s theory or writings. Textbooks and
encyclopedias are secondary rather than primary literature.
SECONDARY NEEDS. Desires and wants that become important when primary needs are
satisfied. Many such needs are learned.
SECT. A group that has broken off from an established religion.
SECULAR. Beliefs that are temporal rather than spiritual in nature.
SECULARIZATION. A process of decline in the social influence of religion (see
also RATIONALIZATION).
SEGREGATION. The spatial and social separation of people based on ethnicity or
race.
SELF
(or SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS). The individual's awareness of being a distinct social
identity, a person separate from others. Human beings are not born with
self-consciousness, but acquire an awareness of self as a result of early
socialization.
SELF
FULLFILLING PROPHECY. The idea that the mere application of a label changes
behavior and thus provides justification for label.
SEMI-PERIPHERY COUNTRIES. Countries that are in the initial stages of
industrialism which provide labor and raw materials to the core countries (see
also CORE COUNTRIES, and PERIPHERY COUNTRIES).
SEMI-PROFESSIONS. Differ from professions in that their members are
overwhelmingly employed by bureaucracy (though increasing numbers of
professionals are employed in such organizations as well), it is not often a
terminal profession, and they lack specialized knowledge (such as law or
medicine). Semi-professions lack the power, latitude on the job, and prestige of
full professions, they also lack the compensation. Examples would include
teachers, social workers, nurses and other occupations dominated by females—and
many would say it is this latter characteristic that determines their status as
semi-professions.
SERF. A peasant farmer in agrarian
societies who is bound to the land through the economic system of feudalism.
SERIAL MONOGAMY. The process of contracting several marriages in succession--
marriage, divorce, and remarriage.
SERVICE WORKERS. Employees who work in the service sector of the economy—day
care, restaurants, tanning salons, casinos.
SEX.
The biological categories of females and males.
SEX
RATIO. The number of males per 100 females.
SEX
ROLE. The gender specific role behavior that a person learns as a member of a
particular society.
SEX
STRATIFICATION. The ranking and differential reward system of the sexes.
SEXISM. Beliefs which hold one sex superior to the other thereby justifying
sexual inequalities.
SEXUAL HARASSMENT. The making of persistent unwanted sexual advances (physical
or verbal) by one individual towards another that occurs within a relationship
where the individuals have unequal power (such as an employer/employee).
SEXUAL ORIENTATION. The manner in which one experiences sexual arousal.
SEXUAL REVOLUTION. The widespread change in sexual behavior and attitudes among
men and women in 20th century America.
SHAMAN. A medicine man or woman who is believed to possess spiritual and healing
powers.
SICK
ROLE. Patterns of behavior expected of one who is sick--this role often exempts
the person from their normal role obligations.
SIGNIFICANT OTHER. People to whom the individual has a close relationship.
SLAVERY. A system in which some people become the property of others. In most
slavery systems, masters may do what they wish with this property.
SOCIAL ACTION. Behavior that is meaningful to the actor and/or to the observer.
SOCIAL CHANGE. Alteration in social structures or culture over time.
SOCIAL CLASS. Most sociologists use the term to refer to socioeconomic
differences between groups of individuals which create differences in their life
chances and power.
SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION. a theoretical perspective that explains most social
behaviors as created and learned within a cultural, social, and historical
context.
SOCIAL CONTROLS. The set of positive and negative sanctions that are used by a
group to bring individual members into compliance with its norms and values.
SOCIAL CONTROL AGENTS. Those who regulate and enforce social control within an
organization or sociocultural system; in society at large, this would include
the criminal justice and mental health systems.
SOCIAL DARWINISM. An early and now largely discredited view of social evolution
emphasizing the importance of "survival of the fittest" or struggle between
individuals, groups, or societies as the motor of development. Social Darwinism
became widely popular in the latter half of the 19th century and was often used
to justify existing inequalities.
SOCIAL DIFFERENTIATION. The process through which different statuses develop
within a group or a society.
SOCIAL DISINTEGRATION. The process of a society going to pieces or losing
coherence.
SOCIAL DISORGANIZATION. A structural
condition of society caused by rapid change in social institutions, norms, and
values.
SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT. The societies with which a particular sociocultural systems
has contact through transportation or communications routes.
SOCIAL EVOLUTION. Theories of social change which generally hold that human
societies move from simple to complex forms of organization.
SOCIAL FACTS. Social forces or patterns external to the individual.
SOCIAL FORCES. The term refers to the fact that society and social organizations
exert an influence on individual human behavior.
SOCIAL GROUPS. Two or more individuals who interact in systematic ways with one
another and share a high degree of common identity. Groups may range in size
from dyads to large-scale societies.
SOCIAL JUSTICE. The fair administration of laws without regard to ethnicity,
sexual orientation, gender, religion, or class.
SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS. Major structural entities in sociocultural systems that
address a basic need of the system. Institutions involve fixed modes of behavior
backed by strong norms and sanctions that tend to be followed by most members of
a society.
SOCIAL INTERACTION. Meaningful behavior between two actors.
SOCIALISM. An economic system in which the means of production and distribution
of goods and services are publically owned.
SOCIALIZATION. The lifelong processes through which humans develop an awareness
of social norms and values, and achieve a distinct sense of self.
SOCIAL ISSUES. Problems that are the result of the institutional structure in a
society; these problems usually affect large numbers of people and are
experienced as individual problems. Examples in modern American society include
divorce, poverty, and immigration.
SOCIAL MOBILITY. Movement between different social positions within a
stratification system.
SOCIAL MOVEMENT. A large grouping of people who are organized to bring about, or
to block, a change in the sociocultural system.
SOCIAL NETWORK. The web of relationships between individuals or between groups.
SOCIAL ORGANIZATION. The pattern of relationships within a group or society.
SOCIAL REPRODUCTION. The processes which perpetuate characteristics of social
structure over periods of time (see also AGENCIES OF SOCIALIZATION).
SOCIAL ROLE. The expected patterned behavior of an individual occupying a
particular status position.
SOCIAL SANCTION. See SANCTION.
SOCIAL STRUCTURE. The pattern of human relationships formed by human groups and
institutions within a given society.
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION. Structured inequalities in life chances between groups in
society. These inequalities are relatively fixed; individuals within each broad
group have similar attitudes, beliefs, and backgrounds.
SOCIETY. A society is a group of people who live in a particular territory, are
subject to a common system of political authority, and share a common culture.
SOCIOBIOLOGY. An approach which attempts to explain the social behavior of
humans in terms of biological principles.
SOCIOCULTURAL MATERIALISM. Frank
Elwell's ecological-evolutionary world view; a variant of cultural materialism
(see also CULTURAL MATERIALISM).
SOCIOCULTURAL SYSTEM. Material, structural, and cultural elements that make up
the total system. A more encompassing way of referring to society (combining
both social and cultural elements).
SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS (SES). A frequently used measure of class determined by
some combination of income, occupational prestige, and years of education.
SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION. A term used by C. Wright Mills that refers to the
application of imaginative thought to the asking and answering of sociological
questions. The ability to see the effects of social patterns and history on
human behavior.
SOCIOLOGY. The study of human behavior and societies, giving particular emphasis
to the industrialized world.
SOLID WASTE. Refers to the accumulation of noxious substances (see also
DEPLETION, ENVIRONMENT, and INTENSIFICATION).
SPECIALIZATION. Occupation that concentrates upon a small part of the whole
enterprise. Sociologists often specialize in Medical Sociology, or
Stratification.
SPECIES. A group of organisms capable of interbreeding.
SPLIT LABOR MARKET. A situation in which one group of laborers (usually defined
by race, sex, or ethnicity) is routinely paid less than other groups.
STANDING ARMY. A full-time professional army.
STATE. Government institutions ruling over a given territory, whose authority is
backed by law and the ability to use force.
STATE SOCIETY. A society which possesses a formal apparatus of government.
STATELESS SOCIETY. A society which lacks formal institutions of government.
STATICS (SOCIAL). Social equilibrium or the absence of change.
STATUS. A social position within a society. The term can also refer to the
social honor or prestige which a particular individual or group is accorded by
other members of a society.
STATUS ATTAINMENT. The process through which people arrive at a given position
within a stratification system.
STATUS INCONSISTENCY. Gerhard Lenski’s concept which occurs when an individual
holds two status positions of very different prestige.
STATUS OFFENCES. Acts that are illegal for juveniles but not for adults (such as
running away from home or engaging in sexual activities).
STATUS QUO. The existing state, the way things currently exist.
STATUS SET. All of the statuses held by an individual at a given time.
STEP-FAMILIES (BLENDED FAMILIES). Families in which at least one partner has
children from a previous marriage living in the home.
STEREOTYPE. A rigid and inflexible image of the characteristics a group.
Stereotypes attribute these characteristics to all individuals belonging
to that group.
STIGMA. A symbol (or a negative social label) of disgrace that affects a
person's social identity.
STRATEGIC DEFENSE INITIATIVE (STAR WARS).
A program that aims to protect the U.S. from nuclear attack by developing
the capabilities to shoot down enemy missiles.
STRATIFICATION. The existence of structured inequalities in life chances between
groups in society.
STRIKE. A temporary work stoppage by a group of employees.
STRUCTURAL STRAIN THEORY. Robert K. Merton's theory of deviance which holds that
many forms of deviance are caused by a disjunction between society's goals and
the approved means to achieve these goals; also called "anomie theory."
STRUCTURAL UNEMPLOYMENT. Unemployed workers whose skills and training have
become "obsolete" and who have little chance of ever finding employment at
comparable paying jobs.
STRUCTURE. Sociological term to refer to all human institutions, groups and
organizations.
SUBSTANTIVE RATIONALITY. Weber’s term for rationality exercised within a context
of human values, traditions, and emotions. See also FORMAL RATIONALITY.
SUBCULTURE. A group within the broader society that has values, norms and
lifestyle distinct from those of the majority.
SUBSISTENCE TECHNOLOGY.
SUBURBANIZATION. The development of areas of housing outside the political
boundaries of cities.
SUI
GENERIS. (Soo-eye JEN-uhr-is) is an adjective meaning of its own kind.
SUPEREGO. Freudian concept that refers to the part of the self which reflects
moral social standards internalized by the individual.
SUPERSTRUCTURE. A general term used in sociocultural materialism to refer to the
symbolic universe--the shared meanings, ideas, beliefs, values, and ideologies
that people give to the physical and social world. The superstructure, of
course, can be divided into cultural and mental components (see also CULTURAL
SUPERSTRUCTURE, and MENTAL SUPERSTRUCTURE).
SURPLUS. Goods and services produced by an economy that exceed what is needed
for the producer’s subsistence.
SURPLUS VALUE. Marx's concept for the value of an individual's labor power
(calculated by the amount of value the labor contributes to the product minus
the amount of money paid to the worker by the capitalist). The conventional name
for this difference is profit--thus the whole capitalist system is based on
"expropriating" surplus value (or stealing labor) from workers.
SURVEILLANCE. Monitoring the activities of others in order to ensure compliant
behavior. Modern techniques of surveillance include not only video cameras and
microphones but also a whole range of computer surveillance as well.
SURVEY. A questionnaire or interview.
SWEATSHOPS. A workplace that violates one or more standards of workplace safety,
labor laws, or worker compensation. Such shops now thrive in many peripheral
countries.
SYMBOL. One item used to meaningfully represent another--as in the case of a
flag which symbolizes a nation.
SYMBOLIC INTERACTIONISM. A theoretical approach in sociology which focuses on
social reality as constructed through the daily interaction of individuals and
places strong emphasis on the role of symbols (gestures, signs, and language) as
core elements of this interaction.
SYNTHESIS. The combining of elements from separate sources to produce a coherent
whole. Much of macro social theory consists of synthesis of the ideas and
insights of many.
SYSTEM. An organized group of interacting and interdependent elements that form
a complex whole.
TABOOS. A sociocultural prohibition on some act, person, place, animal, or
plant; public knowledge of the violation of a taboo brings on severe sanctions.
TABULA RASA. The idea that human beings are born as “blank slates” upon which
the processes of socialization and experience write the life script.
TAYLORISM. Also referred to as 'scientific management,' a set of ideas developed
by Frederick Winslow Taylor involving simplifying and coordinating the actions
of workers to produce maximum efficiency.
TECHNICAL SPECIALISTS. Individuals who specialize in highly technical fields.
TECHNOLOGY. The application of logic, reason and knowledge to the problems of
exploiting raw materials from the environment.
Social technologies employ the same thought processes in addressing
problems of human organization. Technology involves the creation of material
instruments (such as machines) used in human interaction with nature as well as
social instruments (such as bureaucracy) used in
human organization (see also RATIONALIZATION).
TERRORISM. The use of violence or the threat of violence to achieve political,
social, or economic ends. Many would
restrict the definition to include only those acts committed by non-government
groups, but state terrorism is also a major factor in the social world.
TERTIARY INDUSTRIES. That part of an economy that provides services (nursing
homes, psychological counseling, and so forth)--engaged in by both private and
government entities.
THEOCRACY. A religious state ruled by priests or a god-head.
THEORY. Summary statements of interconnected general principles which explain
regularly observed events and can be empirically tested.
THIRD WORLD COUNTRIES. Societies in which industrial production is only
developed to a limited degree. Many of these societies were former colonies of
industrial states. The majority of the world's populations (over 70 percent)
live in Third World countries (see also FIRST WORLD and SECOND WORLD).
TITLE IX. A federal law prohibiting sex discrimination in educational
institutions receiving federal funds.
TOTAL INSTITUTION. An organization in which individuals are isolated for long
periods of time as their lives are controlled and regulated by the
administration of the organization--such as a prison, mental hospital, or army
boot camps (see also RESOCIALIZATION).
TOTAL WAR. Warfare in which all the resources of the modern state are committed
including a large proportion of the population (both directly and indirectly),
all of the armed forces, and a large proportion of the industrial sector of the
society.
TOTALITARIANISM. Authoritarian government that attempts to regulate every aspect
of sociocultural life.
TOTEMISM. A system of religious belief studied by Durkheim which attributes
sacred qualities to a particular type of animal or plant.
TOTEM. Symbol associated with a group given sacred significance; often an
identifying insignia.
TRACKING. Grouping students in educational institutions based upon test scores
predicting their abilities.
TRADING NETWORKS. Patterns of economic exchange between companies or countries.
TRADITIONAL ACTION. One of Weber’s four action typologies (the others being
Wertrational, Zweckrational, and Affective) that refers to action motivated by
custom or tradition.
TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY. Weber's term for authority based on long-established
custom or tradition. See also CHARISMATIC AUTHORITY and RATIONAL LEGAL
AUTHORITY.
TRADITIONAL STATES. Societies in which the production base is agriculture or
pastoralism (see also AGRARIAN SOCIETIES and PASTORAL SOCIETIES).
TRANSFORMATIVE MOVEMENT. A social movement to produce major social change in a
society.
TRANSITIONAL CLASSES. Marx's term to refer to social classes based on previous
relations of production which linger on in the beginning stages a new one--such
as peasants or landowners of a feudal system which has become capitalist.
TRANSNATIONAL COMPANIES. See
MULTINATIONAL COMPANIES.
TRIAD. A group of three; there is a tendency for such groups to separate into a
dyad against one (triadic separation).
TRIBE. Social groups existing outside of states organized largely on the basis
of clan and kinship. Tribal peoples have common language and culture, and
identify strongly with their group.
TRIBUTE. A regular payment of money or goods from a subjugated nation-state to
the conqueror nation; at times this payment is for protection or in lieu of
being subjugated.
TROUBLES. C. Wright Mills term that refers to the an individual’s privately felt
experience of problems in social life, such as unemployment or divorce. Many
people do not realize that these privately felt troubles are actually rooted in
social forces of change or conflict.
UNCONSCIOUS. Freudian concept referring to motives and ideas unavailable to the
conscious mind of the individual.
UNDERCLASS. A class of individuals in mature industrial societies situated at
the bottom of the class system who have been systematically excluded from
participation in economic life. The
underclass is normally composed of people from ethnic or minority groups.
UNDEREMPLOYMENT. Employment at a job below your skill or educational level.
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE. Government measure of those not working but who are actively
seeking work.
UNILINEAR EVOLUTION. A largely discredited view of social evolution according to
which all societies pass through the same stages of development.
UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES. Many social actions have significant effects on the
total sociocultural system (or other parts of that system) that were neither
intended nor foreseen by the participants. Robert K. Merton developed the
concepts of latent and manifest functions, as well as the concept of
dysfunction, to better study these unintended consequences.
UNION. A social organization set up to represent the worker's interests in both
the workplace and in the broader society as well.
UPPER CLASS. A social class roughly composed of the more affluent members of
society, especially those who have great wealth, control over businesses or hold
large numbers of stocks and shares.
URBANISM. The extent to which a community has the characteristics of city life.
URBAN ECOLOGY. An analysis of urban life that examines the relationship between
the city and its physical surroundings--based on an analogy with the adjustment
of plants and organisms to the physical environment.
URBAN RENEWAL. Governmental programs of encouraging the renovation of
deteriorating city neighborhoods through the renovation or destruction of old
buildings and the construction of new ones.
URBANIZATION. The increasing concentration of the human population into cities.
This can only happen to the extent that rural life is so organized to produce
enough food, fiber, and other necessary raw materials.
UTILITARIAN ORGANIZATION. A group organized around a specific purpose such as to
make money or to give charity.
VALIDITY. The degree to which the measurement of a variable actually reflects
the intended concept. For example, how valid is IQ in measuring intelligence?
VALUES. Culturally defined standards held by human individuals or groups about
what is desirable, proper, beautiful, good or bad that serve as broad guidelines
for social life.
VARIABLE. A characteristic that varies in value or magnitude along which an
object, individual or group may be categorized, such as income or age.
VERTICAL MOBILITY. Movement up or down a social stratification system (see also
STRATIFICATION).
VESTED INTEREST. An expectation of private gain that often underlies the
expressed interest in a public issue.
VERSTEHEN. (German) to understand, perceive, know, and comprehend the nature and
significance of a phenomenon. To grasp or comprehend the meaning intended or
expressed by another. Weber used the term to refer to the social scientist's
attempt to understand both the intention and the context of human action.
VICTIMLESS CRIME. Violation of law in which there is no other person (aside from
the offender) victimized, such as drug-taking or illegal gambling.
VITAL STATISTICS. Statistical information about births, deaths, marriages,
immigration, and other population characteristics.
VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATION. Groups and organizations that are formed to achieve
personal or socially worthwhile goals (aside from monetary profit).
WELFARE. Government aid (in the form of services and money) to the poor.
WEALTH. Accumulated money and material possessions controlled by an individual,
group or organization.
WEALTHFARE. Government aid to the upper and middle classes.
Often times this aid is disguised in the form of tax breaks (a deduction
for interest on home mortgages) or subsidized services (higher education).
WELFARE STATE. A government system which provides a range of human services for
its citizens.
WERTRATIONAL. Rational action based on or consistent with human values.
WHITE COLLAR. The growth of bureaucracy has caused the proliferation of
white-collar occupations, which profoundly affects the values and perceptions of
the people who hold these jobs. C. Wright Mills writes extensively about this
class and the changes it has wrought for American society.
WHITE COLLAR CRIME. Criminal activities carried out by white-collar or
professional workers in the course of their jobs.
WILL. The first and “lower” part of Durkheim’s conception of human nature, an
id-like nature that is focused on the individual satisfaction of all wants and
desires. Centered on the body, these egoistic drives and desires recognize no
interests but that of the individual actor, pushing the individual to satisfy
all wants and desires even at the expense of the will of others. The will is a
“tyranny of passions imposed by nature”; it is the root of all human wickedness
and evil, the source of immorality. The will seeks satisfaction of all wants and
desires. It knows no boundaries. \
WORKING CLASS. A social class of industrial societies broadly composed of people
involved in manual occupation. The bulk of these jobs are unskilled, poorly paid
and provide few benefits or job security.
WORLD ECONOMY. A single division of labor that spans multiple cultures, however
unlike a world empire, a world economy does not have a unified political system.
Capitalism, according to Immanuel Wallerstein, is a world economy.
WORLD SYSTEM. All human societies and their economic, governmental, social,
cultural, and communications interrelationships.
WORLD-SYSTEMS THEORY. Immanuel Wallerstein's theoretical approach which analyzes
societies in terms of their position within global economic systems. According
to Wallerstein, the Capitalist World Economy now determines the relationships
among nation states.
WORKING CLASS. Usually refers to those in industrial societies dependent upon
physical labor for their living in lower tiered jobs. Many sociologists use
broader or narrower definitions and students should be aware of the definition
or the context in which the term is used. .
XENOPHOBIA. The fear and/or hatred of foreigners.
ZERO
POPULATION GROWTH (ZPG). Population stability achieved when each woman has no
more than two children.
ZWECKRATIONAL. Rational action in
relation to a goal. From Max Weber
(the greatest sociologist who ever lived) and used extensively in his theory of
social action (see also RATIONALIZATION, and MENTAL SUPERSTRUCTURE).