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Structural Functionalism

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Title: Structural Functionalism


1
Structural Functionalism
2
  • Structural functionalism is primarily concerned
    with large-scale social structures and
    institutions of society, their interrelationships,
    and their constraining effects on actors.

3
Structural Explanation in Sociology
  • Type of casual explanation that is specifically
    designed to account for patterns of human action
    and choices

4
Patterns Operate Within A Social System
  • Relationships, practices, and beliefs operate to
    structure the choices and actions of individuals

5
Consensus Theory
  • Consensus theories see shared norms and values as
    fundamental to society.
  • They focus on how the social order is based on
    tacit agreements.
  • They view social change as occurring in a slow
    and orderly fashion.
  • Structural Functionalist Theories are considered
    consensus theories.

6
In the History of Social Thought
  • For many years structural functionalism dominated
    social thought in the United States.
  • Kingsley Davis said structural functionalism was,
    for all intents and purposes synonymous with
    sociology.
  • Yet over the last thirty years, it has become an
    embarrassment in contemporary sociological
    theory. Wilbert Moore.

7
The Functional Theory of Stratification and its
Critics
  • Kingsley Davis and Wilbert Moore argue that no
    society is ever unstratified, or totally
    classless.
  • Stratification is a functional necessity.
  • Certain positions come to carry with them
    different degrees of prestige, this is the focus,
    and not on how individuals come to occupy certain
    positions.
  • Is this prestige earned?
  • Is it necessary?

8
Functional Theories of Stratification
  • Two key problems
  • 1) How does a society instill in the proper
    individuals the desire to fill certain positions?
  • 2) Once people are in the right positions, how
    does society then instill in them the desire to
    fulfill the requirements of those positions?

9
Proper social placement in society is a problem
for three basic reasons
  • 1) Some positions are more pleasant to occupy
    than others.
  • 2) Some positions are more important to
    survival than others.
  • 3) Different social positions require different
    abilities and talents.

10
Critique
  • The Functional Theory of stratification simply
    perpetuates the privileged position of those
    people who already have power, prestige, and
    money. It does this by arguing that people
    deserve their rewards.
  • The theory assumes that simply because a
    stratified social structure has existed in the
    past, it must continue to exist in the future.
  • The idea that functional positions vary in their
    importance is difficult to support. Who has what
    needs?

11
Talcott Parsons
12
The Social System
  • The Social System
  • mutually dependent parts
  • parts contribute to functioning of system
  • moving equilibrium disturbance induces
    counter-reaction to maintain equilibrium

13
Talcott Parsons Structural Functionalism
  • -AGIL- A function is a complex of activities
    directed towards meeting a need or needs of the
    system.
  • -There are Four Functional Imperatives that are
    necessary for (Characteristic of) all social
    systems-
  • A- Adaptation
  • G- Goal Attainment
  • I- Integration
  • - Latency (pattern maintenance)

14
Social Stratification Defined
  • "differential ranking of human individuals who
    compose a given social system and their treatment
    as superior or inferior relative to one another
    in certain socially important respects" (Parsons,
    Analytical Approach to Social Strat., 69)

15
Fundamental Axis of Stratification Ascription
vs. Achievement
  • Ascribed Status results from birth or biological
    herditary qualities (e.g. age, sex)
  • Achieved status results from personal actions
    (effort, hard work, talent)

16
TALCOTT PARSONS
  • When strong ties have been formed situational
    pressures force modification and impose strains
    on the individuals.

17
  • In order to communicate symbolically,
    individuals must have culturally organized common
    codes, such as those of language, which are also
    integrated into systems of their social
    interaction. In order to make information stored
    in the central nervous system utilizable for the
    personality, the behavioral organism must have
    mobilization and retrieval mechanisms which,
    through interpenetration, subserve motives
    organized at the personality level. pg 299

18
  • Structure of social systems analyzed in terms of
  • values
  • norms
  • collectives
  • roles.
  • To be institutionalized in a stable fashion,
    collectivities and roles must be governed by
    specific insofar as they are implemented by
    particular collectivities and roles.

19
Moral Evaluation
  • Ranking done on basis of moral evaluation,
    resulting in degrees of respect or disapproval
    (status)

20
6 Bases of Differential Moral Evaluation
  • Membership in kinship unit (by birth, marriage)
  • Personal qualities (sex, age, personal beauty,
    intelligence strength)
  • Achievements (result of individual's actions)
  • Possessions (material non-material things
    belonging to an individual and transferrable)
  • Authority ("institutionally recognized right to
    influence actions of others", p. 76 resides in
    position or office)
  • Power (ability to influence others and secure
    possessions which is not institutionally
    sanctioned)

21
2 Dominant Aspects of American Stratification
  • Occupation universalistic criteria achieved
    status not determined at birth equality of
    opportunity
  • Kinship ascribed status determined at birth

22
Kinship Groups as Units of Stratification
  • "the class status of an individual is that rank
    in the system of stratification which can be
    ascribed to him (sic) by virtue of those of his
    (sic) kinship ties which bind him to a unit in
    the class structure" (77-8)

23
TALCOTT PARSONS
  • Childs relations outside the family are only to
    a small extent. A play group is a large extent
    to find his own level in competition with
    others.

24
TALCOTT PARSONS- The Kinship Example
  • Effective kinship unit is normally small conjugal
    family. The childs emotional attachments to kin
    are confined to a few persons.

25
TALCOTT PARSONS
  • Youth culture is a pleasure seeker. A simple
    matter of apprenticeship in adult values and
    responsibilities.

26
TALCOTT PARSONS
  • Our society was characterized by striking
    assimilation of the roles of the sexes to each
    other.

27
TALCOTT PARSONS
  • American society manifests a high level of
    emancipation of women, which involves relative
    assimilation to masculine roles in accessibility
    to occupational opportunity.

28
TALCOTT PARSONS
  • Sex role assimilation in our society are
    conspicuously combined with elements of
    segregation which are even more striking in other
    societies.
  • Can you think of any examples?

29
Contradiction between Occupation and Kinship
  • Parsons In the American system of
    stratification, women cannot be allowed to
    compete on an equal footing for the jobs of men
    otherwise, this would threaten the stability of
    the family, and hence of society.

30
TALCOTT PARSONS
  • Historically, Western culture, has strong
    tendency to define the feminine role as one of
    dependency.

31
ASYMMETRICAL RELATION
  • Has both exceedingly important positive
    functional significance and is at the same time
    an important source of strain in relation to the
    patterning of sex roles

32
POSITIVE FUNCTIONAL SIDE
  • Separation of sex roles to prevent competition
  • "One mechanism which can serve to prevent the
    kind of 'invidious comparison' between husband
    and wife which might be disruptive of family
    solidarity is a clear separation of the sex roles
    such as to ensure that they do not come in
    competition with each" (Parsons, 79-80).
  • Exclusion of Women's Independent Status
  • "The separation of the sex roles in our society
    is such as, for the most part, to remove women
    from the kind of occupational status which is
    important for the determination of the status of
    a family" (Parson, 80)

33
PROCESS OF MUTUAL ACCOMODATION
  • Our kinship system is of a structural type which
    interferes least with the functional needs of the
    occupational system exerting little pressure
    for the ascription of an individuals social
    status the conjugal unit can be mobile in status
    independently of the other kinship ties of its
    members
  • By confining the number of status-giving
    occupational roles of the members of the
    effective conjugal unit to one, it eliminates any
    competition for status, especially as between
    husband and wife, which might be disruptive of
    the solidarity of marriage so long as the lines
    of achievement are segregated and not directly
    comparable, there is less opportunity for
    jealousy, a sense of inferiority to develop.

34
PROCESS OF MUTUAL ACCOMODATION
  • Its aids in clarity of definition of the
    situation by making the status of the family in
    the community relatively definite and
    unequivocal there is much evidence that this
    relative definiteness of status is an important
    factor in psychological security.
  • B) Small conjugal unit can also be strongly
    solidary unit prevalence of the pattern that
    normally only one of its members has an
    occupational role which is of determinate
    significance for the status of the family as a
    whole.

35
Instrumental vs Expressive Roles
  • Instrumental Roles men outside family
    occupational world adaptation of society
  • Expressive Roles women inside family tension
    management in family socialization of children

36
Dress and Gender/Sex Roles
  • Women's interests...run... far more in the
    direction of personal adornment and the related
    qualities of personal charm... . Men's dress is
    practically a uniform, admitting of very slight
    play for differentiating taste" (Parsons, 80)
  • "This serves to concentrate the judgment and
    valuation of men on their occupational
    achievements, while the valuation of women is
    diverted into realms outside the occupationally
    relevant sphere. " (Parsons, 80)
  • This difference appears particularly conspicuous
    in th urban middle classes where competition for
    class status is most severe. ... this phenomenon
    is functionally related to maintaining family
    solidarity in our class structure" (Parsons, 80)
  • "...the qualities and achievements of the
    feminine role have come to be significant as
    symbols of the status of the family, as parts of
    its 'standard of living' which reflect credit on
    it. The man's role ... is primarily to determine
    the status of his

37
STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
  • Two pressures tend to counteract this dependency
    and have played a part in the movement for
    feminine emancipation

38
STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
  • The multilineal symmetry of the kinship system,
    which gives no basis of sex discrimination, and
    which in kinship terms favors equal rights and
    responsibilities for both parties to a marriage.
  • Character of the marriage. Resting as is does
    primarily on affective attachment for the other
    person as a concrete human individual puts a
    premium on a certain kind of mutuality and
    equality. There is no clearly structured
    superordination-subordination pattern. Each is a
    fully responsible partner with a claim to a
    voice in decisions, to a certain human dignity,
    to be taken seriously.

39
STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
  • Conspicuous tendency for the feminine role to
    emphasize broadly humanistic rather than
    technically specialized achievement values. The
    more humanistic cultural traditions and amenities
    of life are carried out by women.

40
STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
  • Since these things are of high importance in the
    scale of values in our culture, and since by
    virtue of the system of occupational
    specialization even many highly superior men are
    greatly handicapped in respect to them.
  • Parsons Example
  • good taste in personal appearance, house
    furnishings, cultural things life literature and
    music

41
STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
  • Parsons Example
  • glamour girl pattern
  • Use of specifically feminine devices as an
    instrument of compulsive search for power and
    exclusive attention, which are conspicuous.

42
Concepts In the Readings
  • Social Capital
  • Cultural Capital
  • Status Characteristics
  • Typification
  • Power Dependency and Power Balancing Operation

43
Most Important Concept
  • Power/Dependency
  • Robert Emerson (1962) famous essay
  • - Power Dependence Relations
  • Emersons concept is relational one partys
    power in a relationship is equal to the other
    partys dependence on rewards or resources
    derived from the relationship
  • Relationships are power imbalanced, party with
    greater power seek a higher level of reward from
    the other

44
Cultural Capital
  • Quality and quantity of information that actors
    can deploy in social interaction

45
Status Characteristics
  • Attributes commonly associated with age,
    physical, attractiveness, class, race and gender

46
Social Capital
  • Pool of favors and obligations in ones social
    network

47
Typification
  • Degree of knowledge that people have different
    domains of experience

48
Manifest and Latent Functions
  • Robert K. Merton

49
What are Manifest and Latent Functions?
  • Manifest Function- objective consequences for a
    specified unit (person, subgroup, social system
    or cultural system) which contribute to its
    adjustment or were so intended.
  • Latent Function- unintended or unrecognized
    consequences.

50
Purpose of the Distinction
  • Clarifies the analysis of irrational social
    patterns.
  • Helps in interpreting social practices even
    though their manifest purpose is not achieved
  • When this occurs, the practices are called
    superstitions, irrationalities.
  • When group behavior does not achieve its apparent
    purpose, attribute its occurrence to ignorance,
    lack if intelligence.
  • With latent function, a behavior may have a
    function or purpose although it is different from
    its intended purpose.

51
Example of Hopi Ceremonial Rain Dance
  • Although in some cases the rain dance may not
    bring rain it has other purposes that are not so
    obvious or visible.
  • Its latent function is to reinforce group
    identity by assembling group members to engage in
    a common activity.
  • It is a source of group unity.

52
Other purpose of Latent Functions
  • The distinctive intellectual contribution of a
    sociologist usually occurs when studying
    unintended consequences (latent functions) of
    social practices as well as in the study of
    anticipated consequences (manifest functions)
  • Sociologists have made their individual and
    unique contributions when doing research when
    they have focused on studying latent functions.

53
Sociological Knowledge
  • The discovery of latent functions represents
    significant increase in sociological knowledge.
  • Latent functions of a practice or belief are not
    common knowledge because they are unintended or
    unrecognized social and psychological
    consequences.
  • Research about latent functions is a greater
    increase in knowledge than that about manifest
    functions because it is about things that we do
    not know.
  • Latent functions show that social life is not as
    simple as it seems.

54
The Importance of Dysfunction
  • Merton makes us aware that sometimes dysfunction
    or deviance plays an important role in a social
    system. Deviance is often a necessary component.
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