9A: Understanding social structure Flashcards

1
Q

Macrosociology

A

Focuses on large groups and social structure

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2
Q

Microsociology

A

Focuses on small groups and the individual

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3
Q

What is social structure?

A

A system of people within a society organized by a characteristic pattern of relationships

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4
Q

What is Functionalism? Who developed it?

A

It is the study of the structure and function of each part of society; Emile Durkheim

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5
Q

How does Functionalism view society?

A

It views society as a living organism & if it’s to function smoothly, the parts and systems must work together in harmony

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6
Q

Function

A

Beneficial consequences of peoples actions; maintains social equilibrium

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7
Q

Dysfunction

A

Harmful consequences of peoples actions; disrupts social equilibrium

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8
Q

Manifest Function

A

Action intended to help some part of a system

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9
Q

Latent Function

A

Unintended positive consequences on other parts of society

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10
Q

What is Conflict Theory? Who developed it?

A

It is a competition for power; Karl Marx

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11
Q

How does conflict theory work?

A

It states that power differentials are created and they contribute to the maintenance of social order

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12
Q

What do power differentials lead to?

A

It leads to the dominance of a particular group if it successfully outcompetes other groups for

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13
Q

What do people compete for?

A

People compete for social, political and material resources

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14
Q

What is Symbolic Interactionism?

A

Study of the ways individuals interact through a shared understanding of words, gestures and other symbols; symbols (things to which we attach meaning) are key to understanding how we view the world and communicate with each other

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15
Q

What do symbols include?

A

They are concepts in language, hand gesture and body language to the role of certain behaviors

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16
Q

What is social constructionism?

A

Focuses on how individuals put together their social reality; this arises from humans communicating and working together to agree on the significance of a concept or principle

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17
Q

What can social constructionism be applied to?

A

Physical objects such as money. Paper money and coinage do not inherently have significant value, however, as a society with imbue them with value and that they can be used to trade for goods and service

18
Q

What are social institutions?

A

Well-established social structures that dictate certain patterns of behavior or relationships and are accepted as a fundamental part of culture

19
Q

What are the 5 social institutions?

A

Education, Family, Religion, Government, Healthcare & Medicine

20
Q

What is Education?

A

It is an institution that aims to arm the population with information

21
Q

Family

A

It is a group of people affiliated by marriage and shared ancestors, it’s influenced by culture, value, systems, beliefs, practices, gender, age, race, ethnicity etc.

22
Q

Religion

A

A pattern of social activities organized around a set of beliefs and practices that seek to address the meaning of existence; Play a role in patients understanding of diseases so they can impact healthcare decisions and can be an essential component of patients coping mechanisms

23
Q

Government & Economy

A

Systematic arrangements of political and capital relationships, activities and social structures that affect rule-making, representation of the individual in society, rights and privileges, division of labor and production of goods and services.

24
Q

What are the types of government?

A

Monarchy, Democracy, Authoritarianism, Totalitarianism

25
Q

Authoritarian Goverment

A

Citizens have no right or power to participate in the government

26
Q

Totalitarian Government

A

Government has control and power over citizen’s lives in nearly all aspects

27
Q

What are the types of economic systems?

A

Capitalism and Socialism

28
Q

What is Health?

A

The total well-being of an individual

29
Q

What is Medicine?

A

The treatment for physical and mental illness of people in the society

30
Q

What are the key goals in American healthcare

A

To increase access to care, decrease cost of care, disease prevention, increase education for the public, decrease doctor knows best mentality

31
Q

What are the 4 key tenets of medical ethics?

A

Beneficence
Nonmaleficence
Patient Autonomy
Justice

32
Q

Beneficence

A

Responsible for patients best interest

33
Q

Nonmaleficence

A

Responsible for avoiding treatments or interventions in which the potential for harm outweighs the potential for benefit

34
Q

Patient Autonomy

A

Responsible for respecting patients decisions and choices about their own healthcare

35
Q

Justice

A

Responsible for treating similar patients with similar care and distribute healthcare resources fairly

36
Q

What is material culture?

A

Artifacts that have meaning for a given society

37
Q

What is symbolic culture?

A

The ideas that represent a group of people, tangible embodiment of underlying ideas of symbolic culture

38
Q

What is culture?

A

Encompasses the entire lifestyle for a given group. It binds nation-states, political institutions, marketplaces, religions and ideologies

39
Q

Values

A

What a person deems important in life, dictates their ethical principles

40
Q

Beliefs

A

What a person accepts to be truth

41
Q

Rituals

A

A formalized ceremony that involves a specific material object and additional mandates on acceptable behavior