Functionalism Flashcards
Briefly outline the key features of the functionalist view of society.
- Macro, structural theory.
- Focus: needs of the social system and how these needs shape all main features of society.
- Society: based on consensus among members about values, goals and rules.
- Modernist theory.
- Shares goals of Enlightenment project.
Briefly explain the organic analogy.
Society is like a biological organism. Parsons identifies 3 similarities between society and a biological organism.
Briefly outline Parsons’ three similarities between society and a biological organism.
- System: Organisms and societies are self-regulating systems of inter-related, interdependent parts that fit together in fixed ways. Body - organs, cells etc. Society - institutions, individuals roles etc.
- System needs: Organisms have needs e.g nutrition. Organisms will die if needs aren’t met. Functionalists: social system has basic needs which need to be met for survival. Ex: members must be socialised.
- Functions: For Functionalists - function of any part of a system is the contribution it makes to meeting the system’s needs ensuring its survival. E.g: body - circulatory system carries nutrients + oxygen to the tissues. Society - economy helps maintain the social system by meeting need for food and shelter.
According to Parsons, how is social order achieved?
Through the existence of a shared culture or, in his words, a central value system.
Define culture.
A set of norms, values, beliefs and goals shared by members of a society.
Define value consensus.
The glue that holds society together.
Briefly explain how value consensus makes social order possible.
By integrating individuals into the social system, thereby directing them towards meeting the systems needs.
Example: the system has to ensure that people’s material needs are met, and so the consensus may include a general value about the need for people to work.
Briefly outline the following two mechanisms for ensuring that individuals conform to shared norms and meet the system’s needs:
- Socialisation
- Social control
- Socialisation: Social system - can ensure that needs are met by teaching individuals to want to do what is requires them to do. Through socialisation - individuals internalise norms and values so society becomes part of their personality structure.
- Social control: Positive sanctions reward conformity. Negative ones punish deviance.
E.g: if the value system stresses individual achievement through educational success, those who deviate by dropping out may be stigmatised as layabouts. Conversely, conformists: rewarded with college diplomas.
How does integration into a shared value system make orderly social life possible?
Makes their behaviour oriented towards pursuing society’s shared goals + meeting its needs. The behaviour of each individual will be relatively predictable and stable, allowing cooperation between them.
According to Durkheim, what were the features of traditional society?
- Based on ‘mechanical solidarity’ with little division of labour, where all its members are alike.
- Strong ‘collective conscience’ bound them so tightly together that individuals in the modern sense didn’t really exist.
According to Durkheim, in what ways is modern society different from traditional society?
- In modern society, the division of labour promotes differences between groups and weakens social solidarity.
- Brings greater freedom to the individual, but this must be regulated to prevent extreme egoism destroying all social bonds.
Briefly explain what Durkheim means by anomie. What is its impact on society?
Rapid change undermines old norms without creating clear new ones, throwing people into a state of anomie or normlessness that threatens social cohesion.
Briefly outline Durkheim’s view of society and social facts.
- Society exists as a separate entity over and above its members - a system of external ‘social facts’ shaping their behaviour to serve society’s needs.
- Durkheim’s belief that social facts can be explained in terms of their function is the basic principle of functionalist analysis.
Briefly explain the ‘building blocks’ in Parsons’ model of the social system.
At the bottom we have individual actions. Each action we perform is governed by specific norms or rules. These norms come in ‘clusters’ called status roles. Status roles also come in clusters, known as institutions. In return, related institutions are grouped together into sub-systems. These sub-systems together make up the social system as a whole.
Briefly outline the four basic system needs (AGIL schema) that Parsons identifies.
- Adaptation: The social system meets it members’ material needs through the economic sub-system.
- Goal attainment: Society needs to set goals and allocate resources to achieve them. This is the function of the political sub-system, through institutions such as parliament.
- Integration: The different parts of the system must be integrated together to pursue shared goals. This is the role of the sub-system of religion, education and the media.
- Latency: Refers to the processes that maintain society over time. The kinship sub-system provides pattern maintenance and tension management.