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Sociology is the study of societies and how humans act in groups. Sociology is a social science. People who study sociology are
called sociologists. A society is the community of people living in a particular country or region and having shared customs, laws,
and organizations.
Sociology as Science
It provides tools for understanding how and why our society functions, impact of social intuitions on individual lives, and the
challenges of social interaction between individuals and society. Through teaching, research, and service learning, the Sociology
program provides critical understanding of ways people relate to one another through the organization of society and how its
structures and cultures influence our lives. Subject matters of sociology ranges from family life to organizations, from crime to
education, from the divisions of race and social class to the shared beliefs of a common culture, from poverty to wealth. Few
fields have such a broad and exciting scope.
Sociology enables you to see the world in a new light. In a country like the United States where individualism is celebrated, it is
very easy to forget that the way we behave and feel is socially produced. Whether they be friendships, families, church groups,
socioeconomic classes, complex organizations, or nations, much of our lives are socially constructed. This is the basic premise of
sociology.
Since its founding (or emergence?) in the nineteenth century, sociology has taken on a somewhat meandering set of topics for
study: classification of whole societies, analysis of large social factors (race, crime, urbanization), study of the behavior of groups,
provision of tools for social policy design, and study of particular institutions, social movements, globalization, and the
organization of businesses. In 2007 the American Sociological Association includes 44 sections devoted to particular topics and
methods. The methods of inquiry and the models of explanation are equally varied, including quantitative analysis of large data
sets, small-N comparisons, micro-sociological investigation, process-tracing, Marxism, functionalism, structuralism, and feminism.
Sociologists examine the shared meanings that humans attach to their interactions with one another, and they study human
experience as it unfolds within societies over time. They study social patterns that are stable and also those that are changing.
Characteristics of Sociology
Sociology is a branch of knowledge which has some unique features. It is different from other sciences in several respects. From
studying those characteristics will help one to understand the field of sociology. Below are the essential characteristics of
sociology.
1. It is an Independent Science
Sociology is a specific science having its own branches of knowledge. It does not come under the umbrella of other social or
physical sciences. It has its own code of study and a separate line from other sciences.
3. It is a Categorical Science
Sociology is not concern to study the moral or immoral, right or wrong, good and evil problems. It studies the general phenomena
of social life for this it is a categorical science separate from the judgment of any type of value.
4. Pure Science
Sociology has its theoretical knowledge which is indispensible for sociologists, scientists and social worker as well as for
anthropologists. Its study does not interest in any law making or public policies and their implementation but study examine only
the social aspect of society that what is happening in the social situation. This study is important for scientists.
7. Empirical Science
Rational and empirical are the two main approaches in scientific study. Sociology applies both the approaches on its stud.
Rationalization is the collection of facts while empirical is the arrangement and coordination of these facts. Facts and theories are
interrelated to each other’s. Theories without facts are empty and facts without theories are blind.
After this discussion easily understand the important characteristics of sociology that it is an independent general and social
science having its own theoretical study and importance in social life and apply the scientific approaches of rational and empirical.
Sociology has drawn our attention to the intrinsic worth and dignity of man
Sociology has been instrumental in changing our attitude towards human beings. In a specialized society we are all limited as to
the amount of the whole organization and culture that we can experience directly. We can hardly know the people of other areas
intimately. In order to have insight into and appreciation of the motives by which others live and the conditions under which they
exist knowledge of sociology is essential.
Sociology has changed our outlook with regard to the problems of crime
It is through the study of sociology that our whole outlook on various aspects of crime has change. The criminals are now treated
as human beings suffering from mental deficiencies and efforts are accordingly made to rehabilitate them as useful members of
the society.
The value of sociology lies in the fact that it keeps us update on modern situations
It contributes to making good citizens and finding solutions to the community problems. It adds to the knowledge of the society.
It helps the individual find his relation to society. The study of social phenomena and of the ways and means of promoting what
Giddens calls social adequacy is one of the most urgent needs of the modern society. Sociology has a strong appeal to all types of
mind through its direct bearing upon many of the initial problems of the present world.
Study of society has helped governments to promote the welfare of the tribal and marginalized communities
The tribal and marginalized communities face many socio-economic and cultural problems. Studies conducted by sociologists and
anthropologists regarding tribal societies and problems have helped governments in undertaking social welfare measures and
programmes for the welfare purposes.
Areas of Sociology
1. Social Organization
Social organization refers to a pattern of relationships between and among different groups and individual people. Social
organization could be said to the fundamental basis of modern society, as it allows for the carrying out of very complex activities
that other members of society either participate in or are affected by.
Identifying and classifying different groupings of people is a crucial job for sociologists. Typically, sociologists define a group as
consisting of at least two members who:
Typically, when sociologists discuss social organizations, they are referring to:
Sociological social psychology emphasizes the relationship between individual people and the larger social structures and
processes in which they participate. While the study of social organization and structure is the defining core of sociology, all social
structure comes out of interactions between individuals. So, to understand the significance, nature, and effects of social
structure, we need to understand the the people whose behavior constitutes that structure.
Major areas of study include deviance, socialization, group dynamics, health, race and ethnicity, and gender. Sociologists in this
field have studied some really interesting subjects, such as obedience and disobedience during the Holocaust, the psychological
consequences of work and family life, and the attitudes of minority groups to the cultural mainstream.
3. Social Change
Sociologists are interested in studying both “what is” and “what changes.” In this sense, social change refers to any alteration in
how a society is organized. Sociologists thus seek to explain the causes and affects of these social changes.
Some theories of social change emphasize evolutionary explanations. These theories hold that society develops from simple to
increasingly complex forms of organization. Social change, then, is linear and progressive.
Sociologists typically identify a few key factors that influence social change:
The physical environment. Changes in the environment, such as climate change, may require different forms of social organization
in order for humans to survive. Very rapid changes in the physical environment can cause severe disruptions to social and cultural
life.
Population changes. Migrations and conquest bring new people into new places, which in turn can lead to forms of social change.
Isolation and contact. Societies that are cut off from the larger world may change very quickly once they come into contact with
outside cultures and peoples.
Technology. Advances in technology, such as the car or airplane, can dramatically change social organization as these new
technologies offer new ways for people to interact.
Major topics of study for this field include: ecological changes, population, migration, technological change, new production
techniques, culture change, political processes, social transformation, modernization, mass communication, and the impact of
natural disaster.
4. Human Ecology
This is the study of the nature and behavior of a given population and its interaction with the surrounding environment.
Specifically, it focuses on how social structures adapt to the quality and quantity of natural resources and to the existence of
other human groups
Studies of this kind have shown the prevalence of mental illness, criminality, delinquency, prostitution, and drug addiction in
urban centers and other modern, developed locales.
This area of study is concerned with the study of population number, composition, change, and quality and how these factors
influence the larger economic, social, and political systems.
This area also focuses on things such as fertility and mortality rates, the impact of migration on the distribution of certain
populations. Examples of topics that sociologists in this field study include trends in population growth and how those trends are
affected by fertility, mortality, and migration rates, how population is distributed over a particular area (for example,
segregation), poverty and inequality.
6. Applied Sociology
This field is concerned with using sociological problems to solve social problems. For instance, some of the main social problems
where I live include squatters, prostitution, too-large families, nurse shortages, and poor nutrition. An applied sociologist would
bring his or her knowledge to bear on how to solve these problems.
Let's take a look and see what that might look like:
Squatters
Squatters are usually newcomers to urban areas who live on land or in buildings that don't belong to them. An applied sociologist
would wonder why squatters came to the city in the first place. The research variables to analyze would include the squatters'
background, their employment and educational history, their occupation and sources of income.
The sociologist might discover that squatters migrate to the city to find gainful employment but can't find a job that suits their
educational qualifications. They are usually farmers, fishermen, laborers on unskilled workers. Lack of income is the primary
reason squatters can't afford to buy their own house and land.
Prostitution
An applied sociologist might learn that prostitution and squatting have many of the same causes. Usually, squatter areas are
breeding grounds for prostitution, drug abuse, and illegal gambling. The research variables may still focus on low income and
unemployment.
Migration of Nurses
Why might nurses prefer to work in other countries? Likely because of the high salary that nurses can earn in the US, Europe, and
Canada. Compared to a staff nurse in a government hospital, nurses working abroad can make 10 times as much.
The research variables to study the migration of nurses include salary, overtime pay, the exchange rate, and the country that they
want to work.
Poor Nutrition
Since children are typically the ones most affected by poor nutrition, the research variables for this social problem would include:
the family income, food intake, and family employment. Low income and unemployment is usually the cause of poor nutrition.
This field is concerned with the applicability of sociological principles and insights to study and regulate peoples' social
environment. It represents an effort to build and develop theories that can explain people's actions and behaviors.
PROPONENTS OF SOCIO
Émile Durkheim, one of the founding thinkers of sociology, was born in France on April 15, 1858. The year 2017 marks the 159th
anniversary of his birth. To honor the birth and life of this important sociologist, we'll take a look at why he remains so important
to sociologists today.
Durkheim's body of work as a researcher and theorist focused on how it is that a society can form and function, which is another
way of saying, how it can maintain order and stability (See his books titled The Division of Labor in Society and The Elementary
Forms of Religious Life). For this reason, he is considered the creator of the functionalist perspective within sociology. Durkheim
was most interested in the glue that holds society together, which means he focused on the shared experiences, perspectives,
values, beliefs, and behaviors that allow people to feel that they are a part of a group and that working together to maintain the
group is in their common interest.
In essence, Durkheim's work was all about culture, and as such, it remains deeply relevant and important to how sociologists
study culture today. We draw on his contributions to help make sense of what holds us together, and also, and quite importantly,
to help us understand the things that divide us, and how we deal (or don't deal) with those divisions.
Georg Simmel was an early German sociologist known for creating social theories that fostered an approach to studying society
that broke with the scientific methods used to study the natural world. He is also considered a structural theorist and was focused
on urban life and the form of the metropolis. A contemporary of Max Weber, Simmel is widely taught alongside him, as well as
Marx and Durkheim in courses on classical social theory.
Vilfredo Pareto, (born July 15, 1848, Paris, France—died August 19, 1923, Geneva, Switzerland), Italian economist and sociologist
who is known for his theory on mass and elite interaction as well as for his application of mathematics to economic analysis.
After his graduation from the University of Turin (1869), where he had studied mathematics and physics, Pareto became an
engineer and later a director of an Italian railway and was also employed by a large ironworks. Residing in Florence, he studied
philosophy and politics and wrote many periodical articles in which he first analyzed economic problems with mathematical tools.
In 1893 he was chosen to succeed Léon Walras in the chair of political economy at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland.
Pareto’s first work, Cours d’économie politique (1896–97), included his famous but much-criticized law of income distribution, a
complicated mathematical formulation in which Pareto attempted to prove that the distribution of incomes and wealth in society
is not random and that a consistent pattern appears throughout history, in all parts of the world and in all societies.
one of the founding thinkers of sociology, died at the young age of 56. Though his life was short, his influence has been long and
thrives today. His various works have been cited over 171,000 times.
To honor his life, we've assembled this tribute to his work and its lasting importance to sociology. Follow the links below to learn
all about Max Weber.
In his lifetime, Weber penned numerous essays and books. With these contributions, he is considered, along with Karl
Marx, Émile Durkheim, W.E.B. DuBois, and Harriet Martineau, one of the founders of sociology.
Given how much he wrote, the variety of translations of his works, and the amount written by others about Weber and his
theories, approaching this giant of the discipline can be intimidating.
This post is designed to give you a brief introduction to what are considered some of his most important theoretical
contributions: his formulation of the connection between culture and economy; conceptualizing how people and institutions
come to have authority, and how they keep it; and, the "iron cage" of bureaucracy and how it shapes our lives.
was a sociologist who wanted to better understand society and human behavior. He believed that the influence of groups within
a society had a strong impact on human behavior. In this lesson, we will discuss primary groups, the theory of the looking-glass
self and the concept that one's self and society are distinctly one unit, not two.
PIONEERS
Auguste Comte
was the first to develop the concept of "sociology." He defined sociology as a positive science. Positivism is the search for
"invariant laws of the natural and social world." Comte identified three basic methods for discovering these invariant laws,
observation, experimentation, and comparison. He is also famous for his Law of the Three Stages. These three stages are the
theological, metaphysical, and positivist. Comte discussed the difference between social statistics and social dynamics; which
have been renamed social structure and social change. Comte’s ideas have had a major role in developing structural
functionalism. His major goal was to integrate theory and practice.
Herbert Spencer
was a major figure in the intellectual life of the Victorian era. He was one of the principal proponents of evolutionary theory in
the mid nineteenth century, and his reputation at the time rivaled that of Charles Darwin. Spencer was initially best known for
developing and applying evolutionary theory to philosophy, psychology and the study of society -- what he called his "synthetic
philosophy" (see his A System of Synthetic Philosophy, 1862-93). Today, however, he is usually remembered in philosophical
circles for his political thought, primarily for his defense of natural rights and for criticisms of utilitarian positivism, and his views
have been invoked by 'libertarian' thinkers such as Robert Nozick.
Karl Marx
(1818 – 1883) was a German philosopher, economist, journalist and revolutionary who is one of the most influential figures in
history due to the impact of his theories on subsequent intellectual, economic and political history. His most famous works
include the Communist Manifesto, one of the world’s most influential political manuscripts; and Das Kapital, thefoundational
theoretical text of communist philosophy, economics and politics. Among the most influential theories of Marx are the theory of
historical materialism based on class struggle; and the theory of alienation of workers under capitalist conditions. Marx is
considered the father of modern sociology and his work in economics laid the foundation for understanding labor and its relation
to capital. Know about the contributions of Karl Marx to economics and sociology, as well as his theories regarding capitalism and
communism, through his 10 major accomplishments.
Max Weber
(born April 21, 1864, Erfurt, Prussia [Germany]—died June 14, 1920, Munich, Germany), German sociologist and political
economist best known for his thesis of the “Protestant ethic,” relating Protestantism to capitalism, and for his ideas
on bureaucracy. Weber’s profound influence on sociological theory stems from his demand for objectivity in scholarship and from
his analysis of the motives behind human action.