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Title: SOCIETAL PSYCHOLOGY SESSION 5: SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS


1
SOCIETAL PSYCHOLOGYSESSION 5 SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS
  • OVERVIEW
  • What are Social Institutions?
  • Theoretical Ideas on Social Institutions
  • Social Psychological
  • Functionalist
  • Social Institutions Power
  • Social Institutions as Bureaucracies
  • Professions Power
  • The Physical Setting of Organisations
  • Erving Goffman Total Institutions

2
SOCIETAL PSYCHOLOGYSESSION 5 SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS
  • 1. What are Social Institutions?
  • basic modes of social activity followed by the
    majority of the members of a given society.
    Institutions involve norms and values to which
    large numbers of individuals conform, and all
    institutionalised modes of behaviour are
    protected by strong sanctions. Institutions form
    the bedrock of a society, because they
    represent relatively fixed modes of behaviour
    that endure over time. (Giddens, 2001, p.11)

3
1. What are Social Institutions ?
  • an institution is a set of rules that structure
    social interactions in particular ways for a set
    of rules to be an institution, knowledge of these
    rules must be shared by members of the relevant
    community or society. (Knight, 2004, p.2)
  • We are all affected by many different social
    institutions. They determine our social behaviour
    and experiences, our hopes and aspirations and
    our roles in society.

4
1. What are Social Institutions?
  • Sociologists suggest that the following basic
    social institutions are found in
  • all societies
  • Economic through which goods/services are
    produced and distributed
  • Political deals with authoritative allocation
    of public social goals and values e.g.
    government, legal
  • Family/Kinship - which tend to deal with
    procreation, marriage, the family, the extended
    family and socialisation of the young
  • Education socialisation preparation for
    citizenship
  • Health deals with health healing
  • Religion which deals with the promotion of
    personal meaning and understanding of ultimate
    concerns e.g. church
  • In some societies we could also add social
    welfare institutions which deal with the
    provision of support to sustain or attain social
    functioning and a higher quality of life.

5
2. CHARACTERISTICS OF SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS
  • Their primary objective is the satisfaction of
    specific social needs they have multiple
    functions to perform
  • 2. They embody the values shared by their members
    e.g. U.K. government institutional values include
    democracy, open elections, equality before the
    law etc.
  • 3. They are relatively permanent behavioural
    patterns established within them become
    tradition, e.g. monogamy in marriage in western
    societies (exception Mormon)
  • 4. Their activities occupy a central place in
    society drastic change in one is likely to
    produce changes in others e.g. recession periods
    in economic institutions may affect jobs,
    stability of family life, quality of education,
    ability of government to provide necessary
    services

6
2. CHARACTERISTICS OF SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS
  • 5. They are interdependent within a society
    each institution is structured/organised around
    expected set of norms, values, statuses, rules,
    groups, organisations and behaviours, e.g.
    educational institutions contain school systems,
    teachers, administrators etc. and have become
    extremely bureaucratic. High value placed on
    learning, accumulation of knowledge, achieving
    high grades, good study skills and co-operating
    with teachers/fellow pupils.
  • 6. Their ideals are generally accepted by the
    majority of a society even if they dont
    participate in the institution e.g. a bachelor
    may agree with the function that marriage serves
    in society even though he chooses to stay apart
    from traditional structure.
  • 7. They usually involve authority/power over
    someone else hierarchy of power e.g. education
    authority - head teacher heads of year/subjects
    teachers teaching assistants - pupils

7
Social Institutions must deal with at least the
following universal issues
  • Procreation new generation
  • Sexual access and regulation of sexual norms
    through approved institutions e.g. marriage
  • Care of the young fed, clothed, protected
  • Socialisation way of life, in particular
    culture must be passed on
  • Education information passed on

8
  • Religion deal with questions about origins and
    meaning of life/death
  • Distribution of power agreement that designated
    persons will exercise accumulated authority in
    the name of those in the group
  • Production, distribution and consumption of goods
    material needs of members. Decisions made.
  • Social control provide legitimate forums for
    disagreements and specify punishments/ threats of
    punishments

9
3. Theoretical Ideas on Social Institutions
  • i. Deutsch (1985) - Social Psychological
  • Suggested 4 fundamental bipolar psychological
  • dimensions of interpersonal relationships in
    social
  • institutions
  • 1. Co-operation vs. Competition
  • 2. Power Distribution (equal vs unequal)
  • 3. Task-orientated vs. Social-emotional
  • 4. Formal vs. Informal

10
Deutsch psychological dimensions
  • 1. Co-operation vs. Competition
  • Co-operative systems - those in which individuals
    (or units) have
  • interdependent goals, shared values, positive
    interrelatedness,
  • sense of accountability to group, shared
    responsibility for one
  • another and for maintenance of system, e.g.
    kibbutzim, worker
  • owned co-operatives.
  • Competitive systems - individuals have negatively
    linked goals,
  • Common scale for measuring success (compared to
    others),
  • emphasis on struggling to determine
    winners/losers and
  • responsibility/accountability only for oneself
    e.g. education
  • system, employees in traditional firms

11
Deutsch psychological dimensions
  • 2. Power Distribution (equal vs. unequal)
  • Egalitarian power shared, equal access to
    information,
  • education, equal opportunity to influence
    decisions,
  • equal rights/vote, and equal access to economic
  • resources/consumer goods. (often also
    co-operative)
  • Hierarchical power distributed unevenly,
    greater
  • power to those higher in hierarchy. (often also
  • competitive

12
Deutsch psychological dimensions
  • 3. Task-orientated vs. Social-emotional
  • Task orientated - Production-oriented,
    economic-oriented
  • institutions
  • Socio-emotional - Families, friendship groups
  • 4. Formal vs. Informal
  • Informal relationship - definitions of
    activities, times and
  • locations are left largely to participants e.g.
    social clubs
  • Formal relationships social rules/norms largely
    determine
  • interactions. e.g. bureaucracy formal
    regulations (Merton,
  • 1957).

13
II. Functionalist Theories
  • Examines institutions of society in terms of
    contribution to the maintenances of whole social
    system often referred to as systems theory
  • Society has functional pre-requisites basic
    needs necessary for existence.
  • Institutional arrangements such as education and
    family meet needs that are common to all
    societies e.g. Murdock (1949) family exists in
    all societies.
  • But cant be assumed that social institutions
    perform same functions in all societies
  • Functionalist theories propose that
  • In any system made of interconnected parts there
    must be integration between these parts or a
    degree of fit.
  • Social norms derived from same basic societal
    values structure behaviour in institutions of
    society, e.g. function of the family is to ensure
    continuity by reproduction and socialisation of
    new members function of religion is to integrate
    social system by reinforcing common values

14
Functionalist theories
  • a) Durkheim (1893)
  • How can consensus be achieved in society?
  • By consensus collective consciousness
    common beliefs/sentiments shared by all.
  • For example, function of division of labour
    (through economic institutions) in modern society
    is social integration of individuals, achieved
    through performance of a variety of complementary
    roles, tasks.
  • This brings about
  • SOCIAL SOLIDARITY (moral order) impossible
    without consensus

15
Functionalist theories
  • Criticisms
  • Functional unity of social institutions is
    doubtful e.g. society with various religious
    faiths, religion may divide, not unite.
  • Any part of society may be functional,
    dysfunctional or non-functional
  • No justification for assuming that family,
    religion etc. are necessary to all societies but
    functional alternatives may replace social
    institutions in some societies e.g. communism
    (replace religion)

16
4. Social Institutions Power
  • i). What is Power?
  • Power is generally defined by social scientists
    as the ability to impose ones will on others,
    even in the face of resistance.
  • "By power is meant every opportunity/possibility
    existing within a social relationship, which
    permits one to carry out one's own will, even
    against resistance, and regardless of the basis
    on which this opportunity rests." (Weber, 1946)

17
i). What is Power?
  • Power is relational saying that one
    person/party has power implies other
    people/parties in the relationship
  • Power operates reciprocally to have power over
    others, one must control things they desire or
    deem necessary but with this nearly always comes
    reverse control (to a lesser, equal or greater
    extent), e.g. an employer controls wages, working
    conditions, promotion etc. but an employee can
    control whether they leave that employment, have
    more or less commitment to the job, form/join a
    union
  • Balance of power - Because power is both
    relational reciprocal there is always a
    balance of power all parties to all
    relationships have some form of power

18
ii). Michel Foucault (1980)
  • Power and knowledge inextricably linked
  • Foucault claims belief systems (such as those in
    social institutions) gain momentum (and hence
    power) as more people come to accept the
    particular views associated with that belief
    system as common knowledge.
  • Belief systems define their figures of authority,
    such as medical doctors, teachers or priests
  • Within belief systems (or discourse) ideas
    crystallize as to what is right and what is
    wrong, what is normal and what is deviant -
    certain views, thoughts or actions become
    unthinkable.
  • These undeniable "truths", come to define a
    particular way of seeing the world, and the
    particular way of life associated with such
    "truths" becomes normalised.
  • Resistance, through defiance, defines power and
    hence becomes possible through power. Without
    resistance, power is absent

19
Foucault Power Knowledge
  • "...in a society such as ours...there are
    manifold relations of power that permeate,
    characterize and constitute the social body, and
    these relations of power cannot themselves be
    established, consolidated nor implemented without
    the production, accumulation, circulation and
    functioning of a discourse." (Foucault, 1980)

20
iii) Max Weber Social Power (1948) - Power is
legitimised by authority
  • Three Models of Authority
  • Charismatic derives from devotion felt by
    subordinates for leader believed to have
    exceptional qualities e.g. Napoleon, Fidel
    Castro. Also teachers, managers may use charisma
    for power.
  • Traditional belief in established customs and
    traditions. Obedience based on traditional status
    (usually inherited). Loyalty and obligation to
    positions of power e.g. royalty, nobles
  • Rational-legal based on acceptance of
    impersonal rules. Others accept legal framework
    supporting authority e.g. judge, tax inspector,
    military commander. Rules which authority based
    on are rational in that constructed for goal
    attainment and way to attain it e.g. laws to
    achieve goal of justice.
  • Weber believed that rational-legal authority
    produced bureaucracies

21
5. Social Institutions as Bureaucracies
  • Bureaucracies as most efficient form of
    organisation -
  • (Weber 1864-1920)
  • de Gournay coined the term "bureaucracy" (18th
    century) referring to large organisations
  • According to Weber, all large-scale organisations
    tend to be bureaucratic in nature.
  • Bureaucracies are particular types of social
    institutions and can be considered as social
    systems.
  • Depts. of state, political parties, business
    enterprises, military, education, health care,
    churches may all be organised as bureaucracies.

22
Webers Theory (Ideal Type) of Bureaucracy
(re-published 1968)
  • Hierarchy - clear-cut administrative hierarchy,
    ordered system of superordination and
    subordination every position is accountable to
    and supervised by a higher office.
  • Specialisation official tasks and positions
    clearly divided each covering distinct and
    separate area of competence.
  • Rules consistent system of activities and
    mutual relations regulated by rules (written and
    extensively defined) not personal feelings
    towards colleagues/clients. Little room for
    personal initiative/discretion.
  • Impersonality everyone within the organisation
    subject to formal equality of treatment.
  • Officials (full-time and salaried) selected on
    the basis of technical qualifications (or clearly
    recognised criteria). Individuals expected to
    make career within organisation. Promotion
    possible on basis of capability, seniority, or
    mixture of two (objective criteria).

23
Ideal Type of Bureacracy - Weber
  • Public-private division clear separation
    between official activity and private life.
  • No members of organisation own the resources with
    which they operate separation of workers from
    means of production. Unlike traditional
    communities (e.g. farmers, craft workers,
    controlled processes of production, owned tools
    they used), workers do not own offices they work
    in, desks they sit at etc.
  • These bureaucratic tendencies flourished under
    modern Western
  • capitalism but they were not new, previously
    found in ancient Egypt,
  • China, Roman Empire.
  • Effect of increasing bureaucracy was to advance a
    process Weber
  • called the disenchantment of the world (the
    removal of all sense of
  • mystery or meaning from life, reducing it to
    mundane, routine)

24
5. Professions Power
  • Barber (1963) functionalist view
  • Four essential attributes of professions
  • Systematic/generalised knowledge applied to
    variety of problems e.g. doctors
  • Concern for interests of community rather than
    self
  • interest (altruism).
  • Strictly controlled by code of ethics established
    and maintained by professional qualifications and
    learned as part of training e.g. Hippocratic Oath
    (doctors), BPS ethical standards (psychologists)
  • High rewards in terms of earnings/prestige
    reflect value of contribution to society

25
5. Professions Power
  • Parry Parry, 1976 Weberian perspective
  • 1. Restricted entry into professions control of
    training, qualifications required and numbers
    deemed necessary this maintains high demand for
    services and gains high rewards
  • 2. Professional associations promote view that
    professional conduct above reproach/committed to
    public service. They discipline their own members
    in order to prevent scrutiny and maintain
    image?
  • 3. Claim that only members qualified to provide
    services. Often reinforced by law e.g.
    solicitors monopoly on particular services.
  • Therefore professions can control rival
    occupational groups which
  • might threaten their dominance.
  • Conclusions read handout

26
6. The Physical Setting of Organizations
  • Michel Foucaults Theory of Organizations
  • The Control of Time and Space (1970, 1979)
  • Foucault believed that the structure and
    architecture of an organisation influenced the
    social make-up and practices within.
  • For example, in assembly-line production, the
    workers are quite often in large open rooms so
    that they can be seen by their superiors,
    ensuring that their job is being done. Their
    visibility determines how easily those who are
    not in charge can be subject to what Foucault
    called surveillance.

27
6. The Physical Setting of Organizations
  • Two kinds of surveillance
  • 1. Direct surveillance - as in classrooms where
    the teacher instructs the class.
  • 2. Surveillance by written records - Records are
    kept as evaluations to regulate how one is
    performing and to monitor behaviour.
  • Examples
  • High school and college reports
  • Timetables ensure that a person's duty within an
    organisation is being carried out. They regulate
    activities across time and space. In Foucault's
    words, they "efficiently distribute bodies"
    around the organisation, e.g. universities
    timetables for lecture periods.

28
Prisons Surveillance
  • Foucault was especially interested in prisons,
    commenting on the fact that prisons resemble
    other organisations like "factories, barracks,
    and hospitals."
  • According to Foucault (1975) the modern prison
    originated from a design by Jeremy Bentham
    (1748-1832) in the 1800's. It was called
    "Panopticon" (all seeing) and was a prison
    designed for maximum surveillance. see
    http//cartome.org/panopticon1.htm for further
    info

29
Prisons Surveillance
30
Prisons Surveillance
  • "Hence the major effect of the Panopticon to
    induce in the inmate a state of conscious and
    permanent visibility that assures the automatic
    functioning of power. (Foucault, 1975)
  • Prisons designed exactly like Panopticon never
    materialised but consider Supermax prisons in
    U.S.A. in terms of maximum surveillance. See link
    http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermax for
    further brief description.

31
7. Erving Goffman Total Institutions
  • Symbolic Interactionist approach
  • A total institution may be defined as a place of
    residence and work where a large number of
    like-situated individuals, cut off from the wider
    society for an appreciable period of time,
    together lead an enclosed, formally administered
    round of life

32
7. Erving Goffman Total Institutions
  • Every institution captures something of the
    time and interest of its members and provides
    something of a world for them in brief, every
    institution has encompassing tendenciesTheir
    encompassing or total character is symbolised by
    the barrier to social intercourse with the
    outside and to departure that is often built
    right into the physical plant, such as locked
    doors, high walls, barbed wire, cliffs, water,
    forests, or moors. These establishments I am
    calling total institutions, and it is their
    general characteristics I want to explore.

33
7. Erving Goffman Total Institutions
  • Goffman (1968) suggested that total
    institutions can be
  • grouped in the following 5 ways
  • Institutions established to care for persons felt
    to be both incapable and harmless these are the
    homes for the blind, the aged, the orphaned, and
    the poor.
  • Places established to care for persons felt to be
    incapable of looking after themselves and a
    threat to the community, albeit an unintended
    one TB sanitaria, mental hospitals.
  • Institutions organised to protect the community
    against what are felt to be intentional dangers
    to it, with the welfare of the persons in these
    institutions not the immediate issue jails,
    penitentiaries, P.O.W. camps, and concentration
    camps.

34
7. Erving Goffman Total Institutions
  • 4. Institutions supposedly established to pursue
  • work-like tasks and justifying themselves only on
    these
  • instrumental grounds army barracks, ships,
    boarding
  • schools, work camps, colonial compounds, and
    large
  • mansions from the point of view of those who live
    in the
  • servants' quarters.
  • 5. Establishments designed as retreats from the
    world even
  • while often serving also as training stations for
    the
  • religious examples are abbeys, monasteries,
    convents,
  • and other cloisters.

35
7. Erving Goffman Total Institutions
  • Whilst individuals in modern society typically
    sleep, play and work
  • in different places with different
    co-participants, under different
  • authorities, and without an over-all rational
    plan - the central
  • feature of total institutions is a breakdown of
    the barriers
  • ordinarily separating these three spheres of
    life. In that,
  • All aspects of life are conducted in the same
    place and under the same central authority.
  • Each phase of the member's daily activity is
    carried on in the immediate company of a large
    batch of others, all of whom are treated alike
    and required to do the same thing together.

36
7. Erving Goffman Total Institutions
  • All phases of the day's activities are tightly
    scheduled, with one activity leading at a
    prearranged time into the next, the whole
    sequence of activities being imposed from above
    by a system of explicit formal rulings and a body
    of officials.
  • Finally, the various enforced activities are
    brought together into a single rational plan
    purportedly designed to fulfil the official aims
    of the institution
  • Some of these characteristics could be found in
    other places e.g. family but not usually
    regimented and not necessarily carried out in
    immediate company of similar others

37
7. Erving Goffman Total Institutions
  • Inmate World within Total Institutions
  • Typical for inmates to come with a presenting
    culture derived from a home world
  • Integration into total institution may entail a
    kind of disculturation or untraining which
    makes it difficult for person to adjust to old
    way of life once they leave the institution.
  • Can create tensions between total institution and
    home.
  • Admission to total institution may entail
    trimming or programming where new arrival
    allows him/herself to be shaped and coded into
    an object that can be fed into administrative
    machinery of establishment. 
  • Examples ???

38
7. Erving Goffman Total Institutions
  • May involve obedience tests at outset
  • Possessions are taken and with that ones sense
    of self
  • Stripped of usual appearance
  • May suffer personal self defacement stripped of
    ones identity kit
  • Certain movements, postures, and stances will
    convey lowly images of the individual -
    examples??
  • Physical stance required to hold body in
    humiliating pose perform verbal acts of
    deference (e.g., saying sir, begging, humbly
    asking for little things like permission to drink
    water)

39
7. Erving Goffman Total Institutions
  • Conclusions
  • Total institution strips person of belief that
    they have any command over their world that they
    are individuals with adult self determination,
    autonomy, and freedom of action.
  • Inmates must show internalisation of the views
    held by the institutions staff
  • Inmates use of speech also shows their personal
    lack of self efficacy
  • External Mortification (humiliation) is
    complimented by self/internal mortification
  • Mortification is officially rationalised in terms
    of sanitation, security, its for your own
    good.
  • Demonstrates importance of power in some
    contemporary social institutions e.g. mental
    hospitals, care homes for elderly and children,
    youth offender hostels etc.
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