Chapter 11 - Social Structure and Demographics Flashcards

1
Q

___ is the study of society. It can be studied on a large scale, which includes large social groups and institutions in ___ or a smaller scale which includes the individual and small groups in ___.

A

Sociology
Macrosociology
Microsociology

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2
Q

To explain interactions within a ___ or the distinct, stable organizations within a society that is made up of groups interacting through characteristic relationships, sociologists have different theories, including:
___: each individual or part of society has a ___ that provides positive benefits from their actions to keep society in equilibrium or harmony; a ___ refers to the negative benefits from a group or individual’s actions and deviating from norms
___: society functions as a result of ___ differentials, which results in a group having influence over people’s actions, ability to achieve goals, and access to political, economical, and social resources
___: society functions as result of people communicating through ___-things people attach meanings to, like words and gestures which reflect how people think and communicate-which varies by culture
___: individual function by making choices based on a mental pros (potential rewards) and cons (potential punishments) list and choose a course with max benefit, which goes against altruism
___: an individual will choose an action based on rewards (approval from a group) and punishment (disapproval from a group)–above applied to social interactions
___: society functions by making collective decisions about social reality, like money
___: society functions based on social inequalities in gender, including differences in gender roles (expected behaviour), sexuality (expectations and objectification), financial opportunity, and social mobility (hitting a glass-ceiling)

A
Social structure 
Functionalism of functional analysis; function; dysfunction 
Conflict theory 
Symbolic interactionism 
Rational choice theory 
Exchange theory 
Social constructionism 
Feminist theory
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3
Q

There are different types of functions, including ___ and ___. The first type has intentions to help. The second type provides benefits but without intention are usually unstated or unrecognized.

A

Manifest

Latent

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4
Q

___ are long-lasting social structures that are part of culture. Through them, behaviour or relationships are dictated to regulate individuals. Examples include: family, education, religion, government, economy, and health care.

A

Institutions

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5
Q

Family: teaches acceptable behaviour, socialization, and bonding through different structures. Structures vary based on cultures and are reflected in patterns of kinship. Family may be a source of domestic, elder, or child abuse (neglect, physical, verbal, sexual, emotional abuse) and ___ are legally required to report the later two.

A

Mandated reporter

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6
Q

Education: teaches society through an academic curriculum (information, cognitive skills) and a ___ ( social norms, beliefs, and attitudes). The institution also has flows in the form of ___–a self-fulfilling prophecy of students performing as well as their teachers believe they can–and inequalities with socioeconomic status which can further lead to healthcare disparities.

A

Hidden curriculum

Teacher-expectancy

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7
Q

Religion: resocializes its members with beliefs and practices to help them find meaning in life. It can be a specific ___–a universal umbrella group, a ___–a small subsection of the umbrella, or a ___–a group broken off from the parent organization. Based on ones ties to their religion, they have different levels of ___. As a result, the individual may modernize the relation, ___ /move towards science and rational thinking, or move towards ___/strictly adhere to the religious code.

A
Church (Islam, Judaism, Christianity)
Denomination 
Sect--> Cult (in extreme cases)
Religiosity 
Secularize 
Fundamentalism
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8
Q

Government: a social institution that is responsible for rule making, representation, and rights and privileges to maintain social order. The government has an institutional influence that is bidirectional with all other institutions. It is classified as a ___ if every citizen votes and elects representatives; a ___ if a royal is ruling the country though their powers are limited by parliament and a constitution; a ___ if one person holds all the political power; a ___ if religious leaders hold the political power. The institution usually has a ___ or a leader with a compelling personality.

A
Democracy 
Monarchy 
Dictatorship
Theocracy
Charismatic Authority
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9
Q

Economy: a social institution responsible for division of labour and production of goods and services, is closely related to government and is also has bidirectional institutional influence, and is organized based on the level of government intervention. A ___ economy is based on laissez faire, free trade, power in consumerism, little intervention as possible, and ___ where a large task is divided into small, specialized ones to promote efficiency. A ___ economy is based on a collective, shared businesses where the profits are equally distributed.

A

Capitalism
Division of labour
Socialist

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10
Q

Healthcare and medicine: a social institution aimed at maintaining or improving people’s health. Recent changes include increased access, lower cost, increased public outreach, a focus on prevention, and a ____ (comprehensive patient view) via a primary case physician.
Additionally, the patient role has shifted from a ___ (not responsible and exempt from social norms to seek help) to taking more ownership through diet, exercise, and overall prevention.
The doctor role has shifted from a paternalistic (doctor knows best) attitude and to more understanding of patients and their diseases with previous conditions now considered normal and new ones being medicalized.

A

Life course approach to health

Sick role

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11
Q

Despite the changes in medicine, the four key tenets of medical ethics are:
___: do no harm (benefit > potential harm)
___: act in patient’s best interests
___: respect patients’ choices and decisions
___: similar patients = similar care

A

Nonmaleficience
Beneficence
Respect for patient autonomy
Justice

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12
Q

Ethnography: the study of ___ or a group’s lifestyle through ethnographic methods. Generally, this lifestyle encompasses a group’s unique political, economic, religious, and national views.
Ethnographic methods may look at the subcategories: ___ and ___. The first focuses on ___ or items that the group makes, possess, and values. Of which, the most important is language which includes spoken, written, or signed symbols that help communicate. The later category focuses on the ideas that represent the group and are usually found in the tangible, former category.
A ___ occurs when the ideas or ___ is slower to change than the objects in ___.

A

Culture
Material
Symbolic/Nonmaterial
Artifacts (usually during seen during rituals)
Cultural lag; symbolic culture; material culture

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13
Q

An important aspect of symbolic culture includes the values, beliefs, norms, and rituals that a group has. These vary among cultures.
___: what a group finds important and dictates ethical principles and behaviours
___: what a group finds to be the truth
___: expectations on acceptable behaviour
___: ceremonies with specific schedules, material artifacts, symbolism, and norms

A

Values
Beliefs
Norms
Rituals

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14
Q

Culture influences and is influenced by evolution. For example, culture provides evolutionary ___ benefits by passing down information, creating sense of loyalty and allegiance, holding values in altruism, and so on. Moreover, some genetic traits may have started as a genetic mutation but now provide advantages and are ingrained in some people’s culture.

A

Fitness

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15
Q

___ are statistics of a population that categorize people based on age, gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and immigration status.

A

Demographics

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16
Q

Age demographics categorize people into age cohorts or brackets. This may result in ___ which is prejudice or discrimination based on age and occurs at all ages.
___ are histograms that show the number of people in each age cohort.

A

Ageism

17
Q

___ demographics categorize people based on a social construct that is based on behaviours, cultural and psychological traits. This may result in ___ which is the intentional or unintentional empowerment of one subgroup at the cost of another or ___ which separates individuals on this basis. In comparison, sex refers to the biologically determined genotype of XX (females) or XY (males).

A

Gender
Gender inequality
Gender segregation

18
Q

___ demographics categorize people based on a social construct of phenotypic differences and superficial details like skin colour. Groups may have become ___, as it is not based purely on genetics. The ___ believes that this identity shifts based on social, economic, and political factors.
In contrast, ___ demographics organize people based on a social construct around cultural factors of language, religion, nationality, and so on. This demographic can be displayed but the former is always shown. Depending on the strength of ties, individuals may have ____ where they only identity with one aspect of one’s identity.

A
Race 
Racialization 
Racial formation theory 
Ethnicity 
Symbolic ethnicity (Irish and St. Patties)
19
Q

___ is a demographic that categorizes individuals based on their sexual preferences. Examples include:
___: attracted to opposite sex
___: attracted the same sex
___: attracted to both sexes
The ___ rates a person based on their preferences with 0 being completely heterosexual and 6 being completely homosexual.
Minorities in this category are listed under the ___ umbrella.

A
Sexual orientation 
Heterosexual 
Homosexual
Bisexual 
Kinsey scale 
LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender)
20
Q

___ is a demographic that categorizes people based on nationality and residency. Generally, these individuals are also racial and ethnic minorities which results in compounding biases and prejudices with their alien status called ____.

A

Immigration status

Intersectionality

21
Q

___ are changes in the population over time and in result, a change in demographics. For example, the population in Canada and USA is getting older, more diverse, and larger. These trends are determined based on other statistics, such as fertility rate, mortality rate, migration rate, and birth rate.
___: average number of children born to a women in her lifetime
___: number of deaths per population per unit in time; usually deaths per 1000 people per year
___: number of births per population per unit in time; births per 1000 people per year
___: (rate of movement into geographic space) - (rate of movement away from geographic space) = ___ - ___
Migration is influence by both ___ (positive attributes) about destined country) and ___ (negative attributes of departure country). Also, birth and death rates can be reported as ___, which are rates adjusted to a certain population size and from there multiplied by a constant to give a whole number.

A
Demographic shifts 
Birth rate
Death rate 
Birth rate
Migration rate = immigration rate - emigration rate 
Pull factors; push factors
Crude rate
22
Q

Another example of a demographic shift is a ___, which occurs when countries go from preindustrial to industrial economic system. This change occurs in four stages.
Stage 1: preindustrial; birth and death rates are both high
Stage 2: death rate drops due to better sanitation, health, etc. while birth rate is the same –> population increase
Stage 3: birth rate drops, fertility rate drops with increases in contraception, more industries etc.
Stage 4: birth rates and both death rates reach equilibrium at low levels
Overall, population reaches a new equilibrium at a higher total.

A

Demographic transition

23
Q

___ believes the population will outgrow the ability to grow food and leading to social degradation, disorder, and mass starvation.

A

Malthusian theory

24
Q

Populations also respond to social structure and demographics through social movements, globalization, and urbanization.
___: promote (___) or resist (___) change to the social structure in response to ___ or a decrease in resources, representation, etc. compared to before.
___: creating a global economy through free trade and opening up to foreign markets which results in increased food supply, higher unemployment, rising prices, civil unrest, and global terrorism
___: creating areas of dense of population or cities because of better economic opportunities but at the cost of poor air quality, environment hazards, disease, and SES disparity in regions like ___ (ethnic and racial enclaves) or ___ (extremely poor regions)

A

Social change; proactive; retroactive
Globalization
Urbanization
Ghettos; slums