1.3 Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology: Table 1.1 "Theory Snapshot"
1.3 Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology: Table 1.1 "Theory Snapshot"
1.3 Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology: Table 1.1 "Theory Snapshot"
Major assumptions
Functionalism
Conflict theory
Symbolic
interactionism
People construct their roles as they interact; they do not merely learn the
roles that society has set out for them. As this interaction occurs,
individuals negotiate their definitions of the situations in which they find
themselves and socially construct the reality of these situations. In so
doing, they rely heavily on symbols such as words and gestures to reach a
shared understanding of their interaction. Symbolic interactionism is a
micro theory.
Utilitarianism
(rational
choice
theory or exchange
theory)
Theoretical
perspective
Major assumptions
cooperate and to make compromises when necessary. Utilitarianism is a
micro theory.
Schools of Thought
Posted on February 17, 2011by Beth M
Within most scientific disciplines there are hundreds of thinkers writing hundreds of books on
hundreds of topics. Without a framework to classify these thinkers its difficult to link the theories
proposed or effectively evaluate them. It is also difficult then to contrast their teammates or
opponents in thought. One of the solutions to this plethora of ideas is to note the connections
between thinkers and lump them into Schools of Thought. For example, when studying
Psychology one of the most famous schools of thought is Psychoanalysis, originally developed by
Freud, but perpetuated by many thinkers after him. Also important to note, not all thinkers
within the schools hold all of the same beliefs, some even disagree with each other on some
principles, others elaborate on minor themes of the original founders. However, they do hold to
the basic theories of the school of thought.
there are four contemporary schools of thought, which I will briefly outline below, along with
some of their notable contributors.
Structural Functionalism. This school views the world as a structure made of a series of
interrelated parts. What are these structures? Well, these sociological thinkers (namelyTalcott
Parsons (1902-1979)) looked at social institutions likes schools and governments as the
structures, and what they provided as their functions. Another sociologist, Robert Merton ( 19102003), observed their functions and observed that they had some intended and some
unintended consequences from their actions. Both of these men built their work on the back
of Emile Durkheim (1858-1917), whos kind of a big deal in the world of social sciences for his
work on social facts, order, integration, and anomie. All three emphasize the how structures
contribute to orderliness and stability.
Conflict Theory This school is born out of the other two earliest contributors to the fieldMax
Weber (1864-1920) and Karl Marx (1818-1883), and continued on particularly in theChicago
School of thought, notably C.Wright Mills (1916-1962). These thinkers all held that there will
inevitably be struggles between the powerful and the powerless.
FILIPINO SOCIOLOGIST
Walden Bello
After earning his PhD in sociology in 1975 from Princeton, he then became part of the antiMarcos movement, began teaching at theUniversity of California, Berkeley and became a
member of the Communist Party of the Philippines.[1] In 1978 after being arrested multiple times
during protests, he was arrested after leading the takeover of the Philippine consulate in San
Francisco. Bello was later released following a hunger strike to bring attention to the situation the
Philippines was facing.[3] In the early-1980s, Bello also broke into the World Bank headquarters
and stole 3,000 pages of confidential documents that he said would show the connection of the
IMF and World Bank to Marcos.[3] He later wrote Development Debacle: the World Bank in the
Philippines in 1982 surrounding the documents stating that this publication contributed toward
the 1986 People Power Revolution in the Philippines, with Bello returning to his native state two
years later.
Ledivina Vidallon Cario
A Filipino sociologist and political scientist. She was University Professor (the highest
academic rank in the University of the Philippines), and later University Professor Emeritus,
at the National College of Public Administration and Governance of the University of the
Philippines Diliman (UP-NCPAG). She also once served as president of the Philippine Sociological
Society.
Cario also sat as dean of the College of Public Administration (UP-CPA), later the UP-NCPAG, for
two
terms
and
as
vice
president
for
public
affairs
under
then University
of
the
needed]
University Professor by the University of the Philippines, making her the youngest person to hold
the said rank in the Universitys history. As aUniversity Professor, she was entitled to teach in any
college, institute, center, or department within the University.
In 1995, the National Academy of Science and Technology (NAST) named her Academician.
Karina Constantino-David
David held leadership posts at the Caucus of Development NGO Networks (president, 1989
1998); Women's Action Network for Development (vice chairperson, 19901998); Partnership of
Philippine Support Service Agencies (chairperson, 19891995); Independent Commission on
Population and the Quality of Life (commissioner, 19921996); and People's Forum for Habitat II
(national convenor, 19951996). David also served as consultant to poverty and women's
program policy planning of the Asian and Pacific Development Centre. [1]
In 1989, she was a consultant for the women's mission of GTZ or Deutsche Gessellscahft Fur
Technische Zusammenarbeit and the Canadian International Development Agency(CIDA).[1]
From 1988 to 1989, David was the over-all consultant of the Philippine Development Plan for
Women at the National Commission on the Role of Filipino Women (NCRFW). David rendered
consultancy services at the NCRFW from 1995 to 96 for the Philippine Plan for Gender
Responsive Development.
RANDY DAVID
He is currently a professor at the Department of Sociology of the University of the Philippines. He
has been part of the UP Faculty since 1967. He teaches courses on general sociology, political
sociology and development sociology. He was a member of the UP Board of Regents who
represented the faculty in 1999. His column, Public Lives, has appeared every Sunday in the
Philippine Daily Inquirer from 1995 up to the present. He holds a degree in sociology from the
University of the Philippines and is director of the Third World Studies Center (TWSC) and the
editor of KASARINLAN."
During the Martial Law era under Ferdinand Marcos, he chose to remain in the country rather
than pursue his doctoral studies at the University of Manchester.
Over eleven years he has made himself a household name, hosting the popular multi-awarded
public affairs program Public Forum on GMA7. It tackles issues about government and policy,
the economy, business, and non-governmental organizations. He promoted the use of Filipino as
a medium of serious political and social discourse, since his was the only public affairs show
in Filipino at the time. The Cultural Center of the Philippines even chose it as one of the ten
outstanding television programs. He was also a newscaster and hosted Public Life with Randy
David and Off the Record with Katrina Legarda.
David was named one of the UP Centennial Fellows for his valuable contributions to Philippine
sociology and social awareness. He was a visiting professor at the National Autonomous
University of Mexico in 1996, lecturing on Philippine development and democracy. In 1990, he
was also a Visiting Professor at the Ryukoku University in Kyoto, Japan where he lectured and
conducted research about Filipino migrant workers. He has also been appointed by the United
Nations University in Tokyo as the Southeast Asian Coordinator on its Asian Perspectives
Program, where he organized a network of young scholars from the ASEAN countries to
undertake joint research and to offer alternative views on the regions development experience.
He has authored several books including Reflections on Sociology and Philippine Society,
published in 2001, and Nation, Self, and Citizenship: An Invitation to Philippine Sociology,"
published in 2002, that won the National Book Award in 2002 and 2003 respectively. Most of his
writings featured a broad range of topics including the cabo system on the Manila waterfront, the
social roots of Philippine poverty, the role of transnational corporations in the banana industry,
language and consciousness, culture and development, Filipino workers in Japan, political parties
and the financing of electoral campaigns.
Czarina Saloma-Akpedonu
She earned her academic degrees from Bielefeld Universitaet (Dr. rer. soc., magna cum laude),
Peking University (MA), and University of the Philippines in Diliman (BA, cum laude). She is
President of the Philippine Sociological Society, Secretary of the Board of the International
Sociological Association (ISA) Research Committee on the Sociology of Science and Technology,
and Editor of the Philippine Sociological Review. In 2007, she was named Outstanding Young
Scientist by the the National Academy of Science and Technology.She is the co-author (with Erik
Akpedonu) of "Casa Boholana: Vintage Houses of Bohol" (Ateneo de Manila University Press,
2011), a sociohistorical introduction-cum-architectural guide to the provinces traditional houses.
She is also the author of "Possible Worlds in Impossible Spaces: Knowledge, Globality, Gender
and Information Technology in the Philipines (Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2006), an
ethnographic study on the "doing" of IT in the Philippines.Among her engagements: Fellow of the
Asian Scholarship Foundation (ASF)/Ford Foundation where she studied technological actors in
the Malaysian automotive and information technology industries (2003/04); Gender and ICT
specialist for eHomemakers (Malaysia) and International Development Research Councils
research project on Homeworkers and ICTs in Southeast Asia (2005); Consultant (Sociologist and
gender specialist) in the development of a Metro Iloilo-Guimaras Tourism Strategic Plan (2007);
and Workshop director of the Sixth Asian Public Intellectuals Workshop and editor of book on
workshop papers (2007).
1: Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
The first professor of sociology in France, Emile Durkheim is known as one of the three fathers of
sociology, and he is credited with helping sociology be seen as actual sciencewhich we think
makes him pretty influential. He first made a splash with 1893s The Division of Labor in
Society, which refuted Karl Marxs critique of industrialization. [Karl Marx is also one of the three
founding fathers of sociology, but since he was born and died in the 19th century, he didnt make
this list.] Durkheims seminal work was introduced in his 1895 publication, Suicide, which
pioneered the separation of social science from psychology (hence the acceptance of sociology
as legitimate science). The work presented his research on the connection between social
integration and suicide rates; in short, he theorized that individuals with low social interaction
are more likely to commit suicide.
that we are all actors playing our respective roles in everyday life, as outlined in his seminal
1959 book, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Goffman theorized that our concept of
self is dependent on time, place, and audiencein other words, we work to fit ourselves to
cultural norms and values in order to gain acceptance. His work on the concepts of stigma,
spoiled identity, and impression management are also cited often.
science over whether structure (recurring patterns) or agency (free choice) is the primary shaper
of human behavior; Giddens theorizes that neither is prime, but that they work in conjunction
and must be studied as such. Third, in the 90s Giddens began publishing work on his theories of
modernity (the historical period marked by the move from feudalism toward capitalism and
industrialization) and its relationship to globalization and politics; he suggests a Third Way that
reconciles the policies of the political left and the political right in order to form a system of
ethical socialisma balance of capitalism and socialism.