Social Issues through Theory and Perspectives

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SARI VICIAWATI MACHDUM
1
0
 OKTOBER
 & 17 OKTOBER
 201
6
Perspektif 
d
alam Menganalis
is
Masalah Sosial
:
 P
atologi Sosial
,
D
isorganisasi Sosial, Konflik
Nilai dan Perilaku Menyipang
Social theory is a system of interconnected
abstraction or ideas that condenses and organizes
knowledge about the social world
What is Theory?
Neuman, 2000. 40
undefined
Social theory and ideology
Ideology
Social Theory
Offers absolute certainty
Has all the answer
Fixed, closed, finished
Avoids test...
Blind to opposing evidence
Locked into specific moral belief
Highly partial
Has contradiction
Rooted in specifuc potition
Conditional
Incomplete, recognizes uncertainty
Growing, open...
Welcomes test, positive and
negatives evidence
Changes based on evidence
Detached, disconnected, strong
moral stanc
Neutral considers all sides
Strongly seeks logical consistency
Trancends, ...
Neuman, 2000. 41
Contains a set of assumption or a starting point
Explains what the social world is like, how/why it
changes
Offers a system of concepts/ideas
Specifies relationship among concepts, tells what
causes what
Provides an interconnected system of ideas
Similarities
Neuman, 2000. 41
Apa beda teori, perspektif dan model? (Payne, 2005, h. 5)
A theory is an organized statement of ideas about the world
Explanatory theory accounts for why an action results in or causes
particular consequences and identifies the circumtances in which it
does so
Perspectives express values or views of the world which allow
participants to order theirminds sufficiently to be able to manage
themselves while participating
Model describe what happens during practice in a general way, in wide
range of situations and in a structured form, so that they extract certain
principles and patterns of activity which give practice consistency
 
Concepts
 
Relationship
 
scope
The parts of theories 
(see Neuman!)
Theoretical Perspectives
(Mooney, Knox, and Schacht,  2011, p. 9)
Theories in sociology provide us with different
perspectives with which to view
 our social world.
A perspective is simply a way of looking at the world.
A theory 
is a set of interrelated propositions or
principles designed to answer a question
 
or explain a
particular phenomenon; it provides us with a
perspective.
Sociological 
theories help us to explain and predict
the social world in which we live.
Elements of Social Structure and Culture
Social 
structure 
:
The way society is
 
organized including
institutions
, 
social groups
, 
statuses
,
and 
roles
.
Kornblum and Julian, 2012,
p.4-5
institution
An established 
and enduring pattern of social
relationships.
social group
Two or more 
people who have a common
 
identity,
interact, and form a
 social relationship.
Primary groups,
which tend to involve small numbers of individuals, are
characterized by intimate
 
and informal interaction.
Families and friends are examples of primary
 
groups.
Secondary groups, which may involve small or
large numbers of individuals,
are task-oriented and are characterized by impersonal
and formal interaction.
 
Examples of secondary groups
include employers and their employees
 
and clerks and
their customers.
Statuses
is a position that a person occupies within a social
group.
 
The statuses we occupy largely defi ne our
social identity. The statuses in a family
 
may consist
of mother, father, stepmother, stepfather, wife,
husband, child,
 
and so on. Statuses can be either
ascribed or achieved
ascribed status
Individual has no control.
achieved status
individual has some control
Roles
 
the set of rights, obligations,
 
and
expectations associated with a
statu
ses
Elements of Culture
The meanings and 
ways of life
that characterize
a society, including beliefs,
values, norms, sanctions,
and symbols
.
?
Beliefs 
refer to defi nitions and explanations about
what is assumed to
 be true.
Values 
are social agreements about what is
considered good and bad, right
 
and wrong, desirable
and undesirable.
A symbol 
is something that represents something
else. Without
 
symbols, we could not communicate
with each other or live as social beings.
Malcolm Spector and John
Kitsuse (1987) outlined the following major stages
(Kornblum and Julian, 2012)
Stage 1—Problem definition.
Stage 2—Legitimacy.
Stage 3—Reemergence of demands.
Stage 4—Rejection and institution building.
T
hree major theoretical perspectives:
 
T
he structural
 
functionalist
perspective,
 
T
he conflict perspective,
T
he symbolic interactionist
perspective.
Each perspective offers a
variety of explanations
about the
causes of and possible
solutions to social problems.
(Kornblum and Julian, 2012) 
Kornblum and Julian, 2012,  p. 8
Conflict
Views society as marked by conflicts
due to inequalities in class, race, ethnicity,
gender, age, and other divisions that
produce conflicting values. Defines social
problems as conditions that do not
conform to society’s values.
Groups with different values and
differing amounts of power meet
and compete.
Build stronger social movements
among groups with grievances.
The conflicting groups may then
engage in negotiations and reach
mutual accommodations.
Interactionist
 
 
Two dominant theories of social problems grew out
of the structural-functionalist
 
perspective: 
social pathology 
social disorganization.
social pathology
S
ocial 
D
isease”
This view was rooted in the organic analogy that
 
was
popular at the time
 (In 
the late 1800s and early 1900s
),
Human society was seen as analogous to a vast organism,
all of
 
whose complex, interrelated parts function together
to maintain the health and stability
 of the whole.
Social problems arise when either individuals or social
institutions fail
 
to keep pace with changing conditions
and thereby disrupt the healthy operation of
 
the social
organization; such individuals or institutions are
considered “sick”
(Kornblum and Julian, p.9, 2012)
Mooney, Knox, and Schacht,  2011, p. 10
To prevent or solve social problems, members of
society must receive
....
proper socialization and moral education, which may be
accomplished in 
 
the
 
family, schools, churches, or workplace
and/or through the media.
?
it is associated with 
the idea that the poor and other
“deviant” groups are less fit to survive from an evolutionary
perspective and hence should not be encouraged to
reproduce
Do 
not focus on the behaviors and problems of individuals
they see social problems 
as arising out of the failure of
institutions like the family, the schools, and the
 
economy to
adapt to changing social conditions.
Some sociologists believed the social-pathology viewpoint
could not adequately explain the widespread existence of
these social problems
  (mmigration, urbanization, and
industrialization increased -> slums, 
Alcoholism, drug
addiction, mental illness
, etc)
.
(Kornblum and Julian, 2012, p. 10)
social disorganization
 
(Kornblum and Julian, 2012)
A situation that results when the set of
expectations or rules seen to be governing a
society fail; 
it is
 
manifested in three major ways: 
(1) 
normlessness
 (anomie)
, which arises
 
when
people have no rules that tell them how to
behave;
(2) 
culture conflict, which occurs when people
feel trapped by
 
contradictory rules; 
and (3) 
breakdown, which takes place when
obedience to a set of rules is not rewarded or is
punished.
Mooney, Knox, and Schacht,  2011, p. 11
Solutions to teenage 
drinking may involve
strengthening norms 
against it through
public education,
 
restricting media depictions
of youth and alcohol, imposing 
stronger sanctions
against the use of fake IDs to purchase alcohol, and
educating parents 
to model
 
moderate and
responsible drinking behavior.
C
onflict 
P
erspective
(Kornblum and Julian, 2012)
Rejects the idea that social problems can be
corrected by reforming disfunction institutions
social problems arise out:
major contradictions in the way societies are organized
contradictions that lead to large-scale conflict between “the
have” and “the have not”
 
Marx (1848, 1867)
in the way societies arrange access to wealth and power
Capitalism
Marx (1848, 1867)
Tangdilinting, dkk
Perpektif ini dipandang lebih tajam dari pada perspektif
patologi sosial, dan lebih fleksibel dari pada disorganisasi
sosial
Penyebab masalah sosial adalah 
konflik nilai 
atau 
kepentingan
Tangdilinting, dkk
Kondisi objektif
Merujuk pada kontak dan kompetisi
Kondisi Subjektif
Mencerminkan perbedaan dalam cara merumuskan dan
mengevaluasi kontak dan kompetisi serta pembagian benda
dan hak
Tangdilinting, dkk
Konflik dapat menjadi sumber ketegangan yang
merugikan: Mengorbankan nilai yang lebih penting
Konflik dapat menjadi sumber ketegangan yang
menguntungkan: menyadari nilai yang seharusnya
ada
Tangdilinting, dkk
Solusi:
Konsensus
Pihak yang bertikai memilih nilai yang tertinggi
Trade
Menegosiasikan penyelesaian
Naked power
Pihak yang kuat dimenangkan, pihak yang lemah dikalahkan
Perilaku Menyimpang (Tangdilinting, dkk)
Salah satu pendekatan untuk memahami masalah
sosial
Muncul setelah disorganisasi sosial muncul secara
dominan (PD II s.d. 50-an)
Merton dan Nisbet:
Perilaku menyimpang melihat masalah sosial sebagai akibat
dari suatu tindakan yang menyimpang dari perangkat nilai
yang berkaitan dengan status sosial seseorang
Perilaku menyimpang tergantung pada 
status 
(contoh, laki-
laki yang berperilaku seperti wanita)
 
Sebutan bagi yang menyimpang:
Menyimpang
Abnormal
Hilang akal
Orang asing (
outsider
)
Brian J. Heraud (1970)
Penyimpangan statistic
Penyimpangan dari kebiasaan umum sehari-hari (misalnya
makan dengan tangan kiri)
Penyimpangan medis atau patologis
Mempunyai sebab atau akibat sosial atau individual, sehingga
perlu di kaji lebih lanjut
Konsep penting
Anomie : keadaan kacau tanpa aturan (Durkheim).
Bunuh diri
Bunuh diri egoistic,
Mempunyai ikatan sosial lemah sehingga bunuh diri ketika stress
Bunuh diri altruistic
Bunuh diri karena ikatan yang kuat terhadap kelompok primer
untuk berkorban
Bunuh diri anomie
Respon terhadap perubahan yang terjadi secara tiba-tiba
Alienasi (keterasingan)
Karya ilmiah mendukung (Tangdilinting, dkk)
Teori anomie
Teori asosiasi deferensial
Tipe Adaptasi
Karakteristik perilaku menyimpang
Masalah sosial didefinisikan sebagai pelanggaran
terhadap norma yang dianut oleh masyarakat
Penyebab adalah sosialisasi (dari kelompok primer)
yang tidak tepat
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Social theory is a system of interconnected ideas that organizes knowledge about the social world. It helps us analyze social problems like social pathology, disorganization, conflicts in values, and deviant behaviors. Differentiating theory, perspective, and model, it's key to note that theories provide organized ideas about the world, perspectives express values, and models describe general activities. Theoretical perspectives in sociology offer diverse viewpoints to understand the social world thoroughly, focusing on concepts, relationships, and scope.

  • Social theory
  • Perspectives
  • Social issues
  • Analysis
  • Sociology

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  1. Perspektif dalam Menganalisis Masalah Sosial: Patologi Sosial, Disorganisasi Sosial, Konflik Nilai dan Perilaku Menyipang SARI VICIAWATI MACHDUM 10 OKTOBER & 17 OKTOBER 2016

  2. What is Theory? Social theory is a system of interconnected abstraction or ideas that condenses and organizes knowledge about the social world Neuman, 2000. 40

  3. Neuman, 2000. 41 Social theory and ideology Social Theory Ideology Offers absolute certainty Has all the answer Fixed, closed, finished Avoids test... Blind to opposing evidence Locked into specific moral belief Highly partial Has contradiction Rooted in specifuc potition Conditional Incomplete, recognizes uncertainty Growing, open... Welcomes test, positive and negatives evidence Changes based on evidence Detached, disconnected, strong moral stanc Neutral considers all sides Strongly seeks logical consistency Trancends, ...

  4. Neuman, 2000. 41 Similarities Contains a set of assumption or a starting point Explains what the social world is like, how/why it changes Offers a system of concepts/ideas Specifies relationship among concepts, tells what causes what Provides an interconnected system of ideas

  5. Apa beda teori, perspektif dan model? (Payne, 2005, h. 5) A theory is an organized statement of ideas about the world Explanatory theory accounts for why an action results in or causes particular consequences and identifies the circumtances in which it does so Perspectives express values or views of the world which allow participants to order theirminds sufficiently to be able to manage themselves while participating Model describe what happens during practice in a general way, in wide range of situations and in a structured form, so that they extract certain principles and patterns of activity which give practice consistency

  6. The parts of theories (see Neuman!) Concepts Relationship scope

  7. Theoretical Perspectives (Mooney, Knox, and Schacht, 2011, p. 9) Theories in sociology provide us with different perspectives with which to view our social world. A perspective is simply a way of looking at the world. A theory is a set of interrelated propositions or principles designed to answer a question or explain a particular phenomenon; it provides us with a perspective. Sociological theories help us to explain and predict the social world in which we live.

  8. Elements of Social Structure and Culture Social structure : The way society is organized including institutions, social groups, statuses, and roles. Kornblum and Julian, 2012, p.4-5

  9. institution An established and enduring pattern of social relationships.

  10. social group Two or more people who have a common identity, interact, and form a social relationship. Primary groups, which tend to involve small numbers of individuals, are characterized by intimate and informal interaction. Families and friends are examples of primary groups. Secondary groups, which may involve small or large numbers of individuals, are task-oriented and are characterized by impersonal and formal interaction. Examples of secondary groups include employers and their employees and clerks and their customers.

  11. Statuses is a position that a person occupies within a social group. The statuses we occupy largely defi ne our social identity. The statuses in a family may consist of mother, father, stepmother, stepfather, wife, husband, child, and so on. Statuses can be either ascribed or achieved ascribed status Individual has no control. achieved status individual has some control

  12. Roles the set of rights, obligations, and expectations associated with a statuses

  13. Elements of Culture The meanings and ways of life that characterize a society, including beliefs, values, norms, sanctions, and symbols.

  14. ? Beliefs refer to defi nitions and explanations about what is assumed to be true. Values are social agreements about what is considered good and bad, right and wrong, desirable and undesirable. A symbol is something that represents something else. Without symbols, we could not communicate with each other or live as social beings.

  15. Malcolm Spector and John Kitsuse (1987) outlined the following major stages (Kornblum and Julian, 2012) Stage 1 Problem definition. Stage 2 Legitimacy. Stage 3 Reemergence of demands. Stage 4 Rejection and institution building.

  16. Three major theoretical perspectives: The structural functionalist perspective, The conflict perspective, The symbolic interactionist perspective. Each perspective offers a variety of explanations about the causes of and possible solutions to social problems. (Kornblum and Julian, 2012)

  17. Kornblum and Julian, 2012, p. 8 Perspective View of Society and Social Problems Origins of Social Problems Proposed Solutions Functionalist Views society as a vast organism whose parts are interrelated; social problems are disruptions of this system. Also holds that problems of social institutions produce patterns of deviance and that institutions must address such patterns through strategic social change. Social expectations fail, creating normlessness, culture conflict, and breakdown. Social problems also result from the impersonal operations of existing institutions, both now and in the past. Engage in research and active intervention to improve social institutions. Create new organizations to address social problems.

  18. Perspective View of Society and Social Problems Views society as marked by conflicts due to inequalities in class, race, ethnicity, gender, age, and other divisions that produce conflicting values. Defines social problems as conditions that do not conform to society s values. Origins of Social Problems Proposed Solutions Conflict Groups with different values and differing amounts of power meet and compete. Build stronger social movements among groups with grievances. The conflicting groups may then engage in negotiations and reach mutual accommodations.

  19. Perspective View of Society and Social Problems Origins of Social Problems Proposed Solutions Interactionist Holds that definitions of deviance or social problems are subjective; separates deviant and nondeviant people not by what they do but by how society reacts to what they do. Society becomes aware that certain behaviors exist and labels them as social problems. Resocialize deviants by increasing their contacts with accepted patterns of behavior; make the social system less rigid. Change the definition of what is considered deviant.

  20. Two dominant theories of social problems grew out of the structural-functionalist perspective: social pathology social disorganization.

  21. social pathology Social Disease This view was rooted in the organic analogy that was popular at the time (In the late 1800s and early 1900s), Human society was seen as analogous to a vast organism, all of whose complex, interrelated parts function together to maintain the health and stability of the whole. Social problems arise when either individuals or social institutions fail to keep pace with changing conditions and thereby disrupt the healthy operation of the social organization; such individuals or institutions are considered sick (Kornblum and Julian, p.9, 2012)

  22. Mooney, Knox, and Schacht, 2011, p. 10 To prevent or solve social problems, members of society must receive.... proper socialization and moral education, which may be accomplished in the family, schools, churches, or workplace and/or through the media.

  23. it is associated with the idea that the poor and other deviant groups are less fit to survive from an evolutionary perspective and hence should not be encouraged to reproduce Do not focus on the behaviors and problems of individuals they see social problems as arising out of the failure of institutions like the family, the schools, and the economy to adapt to changing social conditions. Some sociologists believed the social-pathology viewpoint could not adequately explain the widespread existence of these social problems (mmigration, urbanization, and industrialization increased -> slums, Alcoholism, drug addiction, mental illness, etc).(Kornblum and Julian, 2012, p. 10)

  24. social disorganization (Kornblum and Julian, 2012) A expectations or rules seen to be governing a society fail; it is manifested in three major ways: (1) normlessness (anomie), which arises when people have no rules that tell them how to behave; (2) culture conflict, which occurs when people feel trapped by contradictory rules; and (3) breakdown, which takes place when obedience to a set of rules is not rewarded or is punished. situation that results when the set of

  25. Mooney, Knox, and Schacht, 2011, p. 11 Solutions to teenage drinking may involve strengthening norms against it through public education, restricting media depictions of youth and alcohol, imposing stronger sanctions against the use of fake IDs to purchase alcohol, and educating parents to model moderate and responsible drinking behavior.

  26. Conflict Perspective (Kornblum and Julian, 2012) Rejects the idea that social problems can be corrected by reforming disfunction institutions social problems arise out: major contradictions in the way societies are organized contradictions that lead to large-scale conflict between the have and the have not

  27. Marx (1848, 1867) in the way societies arrange access to wealth and power Capitalism Marx (1848, 1867) Tangdilinting, dkk Perpektif ini dipandang lebih tajam dari pada perspektif patologi sosial, dan lebih fleksibel dari pada disorganisasi sosial Penyebab masalah sosial adalah konflik nilai atau kepentingan

  28. Tangdilinting, dkk Kondisi objektif Merujuk pada kontak dan kompetisi Kondisi Subjektif Mencerminkan perbedaan dalam cara merumuskan dan mengevaluasi kontak dan kompetisi serta pembagian benda dan hak

  29. Tangdilinting, dkk Konflik dapat menjadi sumber ketegangan yang merugikan: Mengorbankan nilai yang lebih penting Konflik dapat menjadi sumber ketegangan yang menguntungkan: menyadari nilai yang seharusnya ada

  30. Tangdilinting, dkk Solusi: Konsensus Pihak yang bertikai memilih nilai yang tertinggi Trade Menegosiasikan penyelesaian Naked power Pihak yang kuat dimenangkan, pihak yang lemah dikalahkan

  31. Perilaku Menyimpang (Tangdilinting, dkk) Salah satu pendekatan untuk memahami masalah sosial Muncul setelah disorganisasi sosial muncul secara dominan (PD II s.d. 50-an) Merton dan Nisbet: Perilaku menyimpang melihat masalah sosial sebagai akibat dari suatu tindakan yang menyimpang dari perangkat nilai yang berkaitan dengan status sosial seseorang Perilaku menyimpang tergantung pada status (contoh, laki- laki yang berperilaku seperti wanita)

  32. Sebutan bagi yang menyimpang: Menyimpang Abnormal Hilang akal Orang asing (outsider)

  33. Brian J. Heraud (1970) Penyimpangan statistic Penyimpangan dari kebiasaan umum sehari-hari (misalnya makan dengan tangan kiri) Penyimpangan medis atau patologis Mempunyai sebab atau akibat sosial atau individual, sehingga perlu di kaji lebih lanjut

  34. Konsep penting Anomie : keadaan kacau tanpa aturan (Durkheim). Bunuh diri Bunuh diri egoistic, Mempunyai ikatan sosial lemah sehingga bunuh diri ketika stress Bunuh diri altruistic Bunuh diri karena ikatan yang kuat terhadap kelompok primer untuk berkorban Bunuh diri anomie Respon terhadap perubahan yang terjadi secara tiba-tiba Alienasi (keterasingan)

  35. Karya ilmiah mendukung (Tangdilinting, dkk) Teori anomie Teori asosiasi deferensial

  36. Tipe Adaptasi Tujuan Budaya Cara Terlembaga Tipe Adaptasi + + konformitas + - inovasi - + ritualisme - - Menarik diri + + memberontak

  37. Karakteristik perilaku menyimpang Masalah sosial didefinisikan sebagai pelanggaran terhadap norma yang dianut oleh masyarakat Penyebab adalah sosialisasi (dari kelompok primer) yang tidak tepat

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