Title: Welcome To Rural Sociology 1000 Introduction to Rural Sociology
1Welcome To Rural Sociology 1000 Introduction to
Rural Sociology
- Mary Grigsby
- Associate Professor of Rural Sociology
- Division of Applied Social Sciences
2- Topics of Discussion
- Class Business
- Formal Organizations
- McDonaldization
- Community Responses
3- Case Study Approach- Henness (2002) Garden City,
Kansas Lexington, Nebraska Storm Lake
and Perry, Iowa and Rogers, Arkansas. - Method Themes from Case studies inventoried and
organized into categories of local government,
housing, education, health care, social services,
law enforcement, and religious and civic life. - Within each category, impacts and responses are
arranged chronologically in order of occurrence. - Personal interviews with informants from
Missouri counties with high immigration and to
compare their perceptions with the inventory.
4- Impacts
- Housing
- Lack of affordable housing
- Homelessness
- Overcrowding
- Hazardous, unsafe conditions
- Homeownership
- Responses
- Housing
- Temporary subsidized housing
- New rental arrangements (by the head)
- Area housing studies
- Homeless shelter startups
- Credit and mortgage education
- Starter home packages
5- Impacts
- Education
- Overall enrollment
- School meal costs
- Low English proficient students
- ESOL (English for Speakers of Other Languages)
program costs - School dropout rates
- Responses
- Education
- Temporary classrooms
- ESOL program expansion
- Bilingual staff and paraprofessionals
- Multicultural teacher training
- Adult Learning Centers
- Bond issues to build/expand schools
6- Impacts
- Health Care
- Demand for health services
- Immunization (tuberculosis)
- Emergency room visits
- Uninsured and underinsured patients
- Impacts
- Health Care
- Health worker hires
- Caregiver translators
- New medical clinics for the under/uninsured
7- Impacts
- Social Services
- Clients served
- Welfare and Medicaid cases
- Emergency food services
- Responses
- Social Services
- Subsidized transportation
- Furniture and clothing donations
- Pro bono accounting/legal counsel
- Worksite day care
- Interagency service coalitions
8- Impacts
- Law enforcement
- Immigration and legal documentation
- Traffic violations
- Violent and property crimes
- Substance abuse, spousal and child abuse
- Methamphetamine trafficking
- Responses
- Law enforcement
- Bilingual officer assignments
- Document translations
- Officer language training
- Additional hires
- Public education to dispel myths
9- Impacts
- Religious and civic life
- Church attendance gt
- Charitable giving gt
- Racial strife and tension
- Food, arts, music, cultural events
- Responses
- Religious and civic life
- Summer literacy camps for children
- Financial literacy training
- Community multicultural forums
- Immigrant family sponsorships
- Anti-immigration activism
10Understanding Modern Social Organizations
Two Faces of Organizations Modern Organizations
Possess the Potential for Either Good or Harm
Positive Capable of efficiently managing people,
information, goods, and services on a worldwide
scale
Negative Capable of promoting inefficient,
irresponsible, and destructive actions that can
affect the well-being of communities and even the
entire planet
11Rationalization
- Weber defines
- rationalization as the
- collective development
- Of science, technology, and bureaucracy
12The Rationalization Thesis
Scientific and technical knowledge is used to
organize social and economic life according to
principles of bureaucratic efficiency,
calculability, predictability and control
Key Ideas of Rationalization Thesis
Means-ends formal rationality characterizes
decision making
Rational bureaucracy is the dominant
organizational form (specialization, hierarchy,
rule governed and impersonal)
13Traditional vs. Modern Societies