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Starks Chapter 4

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Title: Starks Chapter 4


1
Starks Chapter 4
  • Macro Sociology Studying larger Groups and
    Societies

2
Describing Populations
  • Formal Techniques
  • Survey Research-data collected from samples
  • Census Data- data collected from the total
    population
  • Simple fact-assumption about a concrete specific
    state of affairs
  • Proportional fact distribution of cases , relies
    on survey research or census data

3
Census Vs. Samples
  • Census collection of all cases
  • Census research is very costly
  • Sample set of cases/ units randomly selected
  • Random selection all cases have an equal
    opportunity of being selected in the sample
  • SLOPS (Self selected listener opinion polls)
    inaccurate as not random
  • Ex Literary Digest poll showed FDR would lose by
    40 VS Gallup Poll asks 1,000 randomly selected

4
Random selection
  • Automatic dialing machines randomly select from
    all possible s within an area code. The area
    code is selected at random from the list of all
    area codes
  • Sampling works because laws of probability can be
    applied to randomly selected samples

5
Sample
  • Samples are never exactly equal to the population
  • The larger the sample the more accurate
  • The absolute number is important not the ratio of
    the sample to the population
  • Researchers prefer 1,000 to 1,500 cases in good
    survey research. The larger the sample size the
    smaller the misrepresentation of the true sample.

6
Survey Research
  • Data collected is based on a sample of the
    population
  • Data are collected by personal interviews/question
    naire
  • More difficult to establish time order for
    questionnaire data than form data from
    experiments.

7
Spuriousness
  • A false correlation between a proposed cause and
    its effect.
  • For instance the cause and its effect may be the
    result of some third factor.
  • Pg.. 81 Diagram of a spurious correlation between
    hand size and shoplifting

8
Hirschi and Stark Hellfire and Delinquency
  • Table 4-1 pg.. 103 Church Attendance and
    delinquency
  • Control for sex reveal a spurious relationship
  • Table 4-4 pg.. 105 Studies of Religion and
    Delinquency Results, location, church membership
  • Religion sustains conformity to the moral order
    only as religion is a vital aspect of group
    solidarity.

9
Network Analysis Group Properties
  • Network analysis involves constructing measures
    of network variables and using networks as units
    of analysis. The test hypothesize about the
    properties of social relationships

10
Zablocki Networks of Love and Jealousy
  • U of C at Berkley 1980 study-data from 120
    communes, in-depth study of 60 through
    questionnaires and observation
  • Figure 4-1 Pg. 108 Networks of Loving
    relationships in four communes
  • Figure 4-2 Love intensity and stability of
    communes-
  • Communes founded on religious ideology are more
    successful than those founded on political or
    secular ideology

11
Sociology of Societies
  • Macro Sociologist Talcott Parsons
    1951Functionalist approach
  • Society is a system
  • A system a set of components/parts,
    interdependent, maintaining equilibrium
  • systems can be openopen to external forces or
    closedno eternal input
  • societies are never static

12
Society as a System of Institutions
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Religion
  • Education
  • Family
  • Social roles, groups and activities are clustered
    within these social institutions

13
Functionalism
  • Society is an open system
  • Structures and culture exist and develop on the
    basis of their consequences for other parts of
    they system-they work
  • Sociologists developed functionalism from
    Biology, Arthur Stinchcombe, 1968 Functionalist
    theory as 1)there is a part of the system to be
    explained
  • 2) it preserves some other part of the system
    from disruption or overload
  • 3) the theory must identify the source of this
    potential disruption or overload

14
Functional view of the family
  • Nuclear family one adult couple and their
    children, functional for modern/industrial
  • Extended family, several adult couples and their
    children, functional in societies where the
    family serves to support dependents

15
Functionalism Terms
  • Functional alternativeone part may fulfill other
    functions
  • Dysfunctionsarrangement that harm or distort the
    social system-racial and ethnic conflict
  • Involution Daniel Chirot, 1994, evolutionary
    change may be a retrograde or degenerative
    change. Not all evolution is positively
    progressive.

16
Social Evolution
  • Social evolutionists Chirot 1994, Lenski, 1976
  • Over the centuries societies tend to become
    larger, and more effective, especially
    technically, able to modify the environment, more
    efficient at food production, more urban
  • Competition for survival, bias in favor of
    aggressive cultures with superior numbers and
    firepower

17
Conflict Theory who benefits?
  • Karl Marx (1818-1883) Culture and social
    structure created by the ruling class to serve
    its own interest
  • Class conflict is the primary cause of evolution
  • Max Weber (1864-1920) other causes of group
    conflict status groups based on race,
    ethnicity, religion, occupation gender, sexual
    preferencea subculture having a specific rank
    within the stratification system

18
Conflict theory and social change
  • Conflicts among classes and or status groups
    supply the energy and the motivation for
    constructing and maintaining patterns of culture
    and particular social structures
  • Marx Religion is the sigh of the oppressed
    creature, the feeling of a heartless world, and
    the soul of soulless circumstances. It is the
    opiate of the people.

19
Comparative Research violence and Modernity
  • Comparative research, identifies comparisons of
    large social units, ..nations or societies
  • Anthropologists pioneered field research and have
    two centuries of ethnographic field studies
  • George Murdock, Yale, by 1971 data on 1,264
    cultures had been published 1969 Murdock and
    Douglas White published Standard Cross-Cultural
    Sample
  • 1981- 563 societies to make up the Atlas of World
    Cultures

20
Napoleon Changon Life Along the Amazon
  • Lived conducting field studies among the Yanomamo
    for 30 years, living thirteen long visits
  • nearly 70 of adultskilling by a tribesman
  • 30 of all male deaths were due to violence
  • Nearly 50 of the males 25 have participated in
    a killing

21
Are Primitive societies all peaceful?
  • Two basic types of primitive societies
  • Factional Societies ( solidarity is based on
    subgroups) such as the Yanomamo, conflict and
    competition are high and frequent violence
  • In communal societies (solidarity is based on the
    whole community), such as the Navaho of the
    Southwest, factional disputes and conflicts are
    regarded as improper, and violence is minimized

22
Jeffery Paige, 1974 conflict and Social
Structures
  • Theorized that 1) factions in primitive societies
    will form along divisions based on kinship
    2)factions in primitive societies will from along
    divisions based on residence 3) violence in
    primitive societies primarily occurs between male
    factions and 4) primitive societies will tend to
    lack factions and have little violence when
    kinsmen do not share common residence

23
Paige cont.
  • Patrilocal rule of residence- the bride leaves
    home and they reside close to the husbands
    family-maximizes interaction with male kin
  • Matrilocal rule of residence- the new family
    resides with or near the brides family, male kin
    are scattered and lack day-to-day interaction
  • Matrilocal societies tent to be communal and have
    low internal violence, Patrilocal societies will
    be factional with high levels of internal
    violence.
  • His theory proved accurate most simple societies
    are Patrilocal and are overwhelmingly factional
    and violent
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