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Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change
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Page 1: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change

Page 2: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Objectives (slide 1 of 2)

17.1 Collective Behavior• Define collective behavior and explain its

challenges to sociologists.• Compare and contrast types of collectivity.• Examine examples of mass behavior.17.2 Social Movements• Illustrate the various types of social movements.17.3 Stages of Social Movements• Describe the stages of a social movement.

Page 3: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Objectives (slide 2 of 2)

17.4 Social Movements in the United States• Analyze key social movements in the

United States.

17.5 Theories of Social Movements• Explain the main theories of social

movements.17.6 Social Change• Illustrate theories of social change.

Page 4: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Collective Behavior

• Collective behavior: Behaviors involving a large number of individuals that are usually unplanned, often controversial, and sometimes even dangerous

• Collectivity: A large number of individuals whose minimal interaction occurs without the benefit of conventional norms– Localized collectivities emerge among people who share

close physical proximity.– Dispersed collectivities involve people who influence

one another even though they are spread over a large area.

Page 5: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

How Collectivities Differ from Social Groups

CollectivitiesMembers have only minimal interaction other individuals in the collectivity.

No clear social boundaries.

Characterized by the emergence of weak and often unconventional social norms that are insufficient to regulate the actions of individuals.

Social GroupsIndividual members have considerable interaction withone another.

Members share a sense of identity.

Characterized by strong norms and have the goal of regulating the behavior of members of the group.

Page 6: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Localized Collectivities

• Crowd: A temporary gathering of people who share a common focus of attention and who influence one another

• Types of crowds:– Casual– Conventional– Expressive– Acting– Protest

Page 7: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Riots and Mobs

• Mob: A highly emotional crowd that pursues a destructive or violent goal

• Riot: An eruption of social activity that is highly emotional, undirected, and violent

Page 8: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Theories of Crowd Behavior

• Contagion theory argues that crowds have a hypnotic effect on their members, causing people to act in ways they would not ordinarily act.

• Convergence theories argue that crowd behavior comes from like-minded individuals.

• Emergent norm theory states that it is possible to observe patterns that help predict the behaviors of individuals within the collective.

Page 9: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Dispersed Collectivities: Rumors

• Rumors: Unconfirmed information that people spread, often by word-of-mouth

• Characteristics of rumors:– They occur in situations in which there are large

degrees of uncertainty and in which facts are difficult to authenticate.

– They are unstable and change frequently.– They are difficult to stop.

• Gossip: Rumors about the personal affairs of a person

Page 10: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Propaganda and Public Opinion

• Public opinion: Widespread attitudes or beliefs about a particular issue

• Propaganda: Information that is given with the intention of influencing public opinion through:– Facts or evidence– Emotions– Authority

Page 11: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Fads and Fashions

• Fashion: A social pattern that is adopted or followed by a large number of people

• Conspicuous consumption: Spending money on things that advertise status and prestige

• Fad: A unique or unconventional social pattern that is adopted briefly and enthusiastically by members of a social group or society

Page 12: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Other Collective Behaviors

Panic and Mass Hysteria• Panic: A form of collective

behavior in which people react to a perceived threat in a frantic and irrational way

• Moral panic (mass hysteria): A form of dispersed collective behavior in which people react to a perceived threatening event with an irrational fear

Disasters• Disaster: An event that

causes extensive harm to people and property

• Types of disasters:– Natural disasters– Technological disasters– Intentional disasters

Page 13: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Social Movements

• Social movement: Any organized activity that encourages or discourages social change

• The cultural variety that accompanies industrial and postindustrial societies makes social conflict more likely.

Page 14: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Types of Social Movements

• Alternative social movement: A social movement that seeks to change only very limited aspects of society

• Redemptive social movement: A social movement that seeks radical change for a specific, targeted group of people

• Reformative social movement: A social movement that targets a broad group of people but whose changes are limited in scope

• Revolutionary social movement: A social movement that seeks radical change of an entire society– Progressive movements promote new social patterns– Reactionary movements oppose movements that seek

change

Page 15: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Why Do People Join Social Movements?

• Sociologists have identified four main reasons people join social movements:– Personal advantage– Principled commitment– Sense of self-identity– Desire to be part of a group

• Claims making: The process of trying to convince people that the cause of a social movement is important

Page 16: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Stages of Social Movements

• Emergence: The tendency for social movements to form to address a perceived social problem

• Coalescence: A stage of social movements in which the social movement begins to mobilize resources to achieve its goal

• Bureaucratization: The tendency for a social movement to adopt the characteristics of a bureaucratic organization to achieve its goals

• Decline: The tendency for all social movements to fade in power and significance

Page 17: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

The American Civil Rights Movement

• The American civil rights movement:– Fought to end racial discrimination through

litigation, education, and lobbying efforts– Was centered around peaceful, but forceful,

motivation

Page 18: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

The Women’s Movement

• The women’s movement:– A series of movements occurring over many

years that have been committed to achieving equal rights for women.

– Three phases:• Phase 1: Concerned with the basic rights of

women.• Phase 2: Focused on issues of sexuality, family, and

the workplace.• Phase 3: Evolved to criticize social definitions of

what it means to be a woman.

Page 19: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

The Environmental Movement

• The Environmental movement has had two main goals:– Conservation– The creation of social policies that will lead

to environmental sustainability

Page 20: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

The Gay Rights Movement

• The gay rights movement:– The goal of achieving acceptance and equal

rights for people of all sexual orientations and sexualities

– Works through the media and the legal system

Page 21: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

The Occupy Wall Street Movement

• The Occupy Wall Street movement:– Attempted to raise awareness of growing

income inequality and corporate influence– Relied on consensus-based decisions made in

large assemblies– Did not have clear-cut goals

Page 22: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

The Tea Party Movement

• The Tea Party movement:– Arose in protest of increasing government

intervention in the lives of citizens– Articulated a clear set of demands from its

inception– Has remained politically relevant at state and

local levels

Page 23: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Mass Society Theory

• Mass society theory: A theory that suggests that people join social movements because it gives them a sense of belonging to something larger than themselves

Page 24: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Deprivation Theory

• Deprivation theory: A theory that states people join social movements because they feel deprived in some way– Relative deprivation: The feeling of

dissatisfaction upon realizing that while conditions are improving, they are improving more for other people than for you

Page 25: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Resource Mobilization Theory

• Resource mobilization theory: A theory that suggests that for a social movement to be successful, it has to accumulate and mobilize substantial resources

• Political process theory: A theory of social movements that emphasizes the role of the political structure and public opinion in the outcomes of social movements

Page 26: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Culture Theory

• Culture theory: A theory that argues that cultural symbols are important for the development of a social movement

Page 27: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

New Social Movement Theory

• New social movement theory: A theory that suggests that social movements in postindustrial societies are substantially different from social movements that occurred in industrial societies

Page 28: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Marxist Theory

• Marxist theory: A theory of social movements that suggests that societies change through a dialectical process

Page 29: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Categories of Social Change: Natural Cycles

• Natural cycle theories attempt to explain the rise and fall of entire civilizations.– Every civilization faces challenges.– Groups within a society develop solutions

that often conflict with the ruling class.– The ruling elite eventually turns to force to

keep the masses under control.– The resultant fracturing of society leads to

the inevitable decline of the empire.

Page 30: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Evolutionary Theories

• Evolutionary theories suggest that societies develop from lower forms to higher forms.– All societies go through phases of cultural

progress.– As they develop, cultures become more

complex.

Page 31: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Conflict Over Power

• Conflict-over-power approaches are based in the dialectic of Karl Marx.– Antitheses are conflicts over who gains or

maintains power in society.– Between societies, conflicts over power

often occur in violent clashes or as indirect competition.

Page 32: Chapter 17: Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change.

Technology

• Technology changes society through three main processes:– Invention: The combining of existing

materials to form new ones– Discovery: A new way of seeing reality– Diffusion: The spread of discovery or

invention from one area to another