Topic 2 Societies
Topic 2 Societies
Topic 2 Societies
Contemporary
Societies
2. Social organisation
To understand how societies are organised, we try to identify different groups in
it. A social group is a number of individuals who share different features or identifies
themselves as part of that group. From this point of view, is easy to understand that
many groups may be distinguished. But we specially identify two major ones: primary
and secondary.
In primary groups there are strong links among the people who belong to them.
An example of this is families and religious communities.
In secondary groups it is just some shared activities or interests that bind them
together. For instance, political parties or sport clubs.
Therefore, the difference between them is simply the stronger or weaker links
that keep the members together.
Diversity in societies is a term referred to the different kinds of people we can
find in them. That is to say, if most people belong to the same social groups or there are
great differencescultural, religious, political...among them.
In modern societies, diversity is becoming more and more usual. In Spain, for
example, it is quite common to find people from other countries and cultures. In other
countries with even a longer tradition of immigration
diversity is even wider. That is the case of the United
States, a country formed on the basis of Native
Americans, European immigrants and African slaves
carried along several centuries. When social diversity
is so widespread that is an essential characteristic of a
given society we talk of multicultural society.
3. Types of society
The most common classification of societies as a whole divide them between
hierarchical or closed societies and dynamic or open societies.
an
in
individual
society
opportunities
to
to
conflict,
population
Violence
then
has.
may
coming
sometimes
immigrants
have
difficulties
to
achieved than in other countries, specially taking into account the high percentage they
represent over the whole population of the country (12%)
European families are becoming more diverse than it was common in the past.
The traditional nuclear family composed of a heterosexual couple and their descendants
is no longer the only model of family. Single-parent households or homosexual families
are becoming more common in recent times.
In Northern Europe its common that both parents work outside home. In the
Southern part of the continent this is less frequent because of unemployment and
cultural traditions that tend to make of wives homemakers. There is also a huge
difference between Northern and Southern Europe regarding the age at which young
people leave home. In the former, it is not much later than 18 years old while in
countries such as Spain it can be delayed well into the twenties or even later.
of
Western
societies from
the
very
beginning of
their
formation. In
the last years
in
Spain
it
has been boosted as a result of the economic crisis, which has extraordinarily
widened the breach between poor and rich people.
-
Physical conditions make some people not to be able to exert all the rights
granted to the majority of individuals, for instance the physically or mentally
handicapped persons.
In
order
to
correct
these
and
neighbourhood