Soc Pol Cul 3
Soc Pol Cul 3
Soc Pol Cul 3
* Lower class
-farm employees, skilled and unskilled artisans, service workers, and people who may be
unemployed or underemployed or those who belong to indigent families or informal sectors.
* NORMS
- serve as guides or models of behavior that influence how people behave. Are often in a form of
rules, standards, or prescriptions that are strictly followed by the people who adhere on certain
conventions and perform specific roles.
- It indicate a society’s standards of propriety, morality, ethics, and legality.
The most adhered norms in a society are the following;
1. Norms of Appropriateness or Decency
- Is common exhibited on the type of clothing a person wears in a specific occasion.
- This norm also includes the manners and behaviors that show a person’s refinement
and civility (for instance, how to treat guests cordially).
2. Norms of Conventionality
- are beliefs and practices that are acceptable to certain cultures but can be inimical to
other cultures.
* CONFORMITY/ DEVIANCE
Social control
– a set of means that ensure people behave in expected and approved ways.
Conformity
– as the state of having internalized norms as part of the social expectations.
- to enforce conformity as a potent mechanism in the socialization process, there are forms of
behavior that are relatively or distinctly set away from a norm.
Deviant or Nonconformist
- behavioral patterns can be tolerated, approved, or disapproved depending on societal views.
- Is also seen as a form of power struggle.
- Deviance is divided into two types:
1. formal
- Includes actions that violate enacted laws, such as robbery, theft, graft, rape, and
other forms of criminality.
2. informal
- Refers to violations to social norms that are not codified into law, such as pricking
ones’s nose, belching loudly, and spitting on the street, among others.
* POLITICAL DYNASTY
- Is a tactic of self-preservation and expansion, a means of preserving the political power of
one’s self and family.
* TABOOS
- related to food are also manifestations of deviancy.
* SOCIAL CHANGE
- refers to variations or modifications in the patterns of social organization, of sub-groups within
a society, or of the entire society itself.
- Three causes of social change;
a. invention – a new combination or a new use of existing knowledge.
b. discovery – takes place when people reorganized existing elements of the world they
had not noticed before or learned to see in a new way.
- it contributes to the emergence of a new paradigm or perspective, and even
reshapes and reinvents worldviews.
- it provides something new to the culture because it becomes an integral part of culture only
after a discovery happens or take place.
c. Diffusion – refers to the spread of culture traits from one group to another. It creates
changes as cultural elements spread from one society to another through trade, migration,
and mass communication.
- it provides something new to the culture because it becomes an integral part of culture
only after a discovery happens or take place.
Culture can be spread through the processes of enculturation, socialization, association, and
integration.
a. Enculturation – takes place when one culture spreads to another through learning.
Example : Education
b. Socialization – refers to learning through constant exposure and experience to culture
which ultimately imbibes the latter to the system of values, beliefs, and practices of an
individual or groups.
c. Association – is establishing a connection with the culture thereby bridging areas of
convergence and cultural symbiosis.
d. Integration – is the total assimilation of culture as manifested by change of worldviews,
attitudes, behavior, and perspectives of looking things.
* POLITICAL CHANGE
- it is the change occurs in the realm of civil and political societies and in the structures of
relations among civil society, political society, and the state.
- It includes all categories of change in the direction of open, participatory, and accountable
politics.
Example: Youth awareness and participation during elections.
* CULTURAL CHANGE
- Refers to all alterations affecting new traits or trait complexes and change in a culture’s
content and structure.
- These change are cause by several factors such as physical environment, population, war, and
conquest, random events, and technology.
a. Physical Change
- disaster and other interruptions of the environment and even claim human lives.
b. Population movement
- brought about by migration and transnational origin whether due to dislocation,
deterritorialization or urban explosion as well as an increase or decline in population also
perpetuate change.
c. War
- constant fighting for territorial sovereignty and even recognition of one’s political
determination or identity.
d. Random event
- acts of man can also lead to change.
Example : oil price
e. Technology
- serves as one of the causes of change. The impact of science and technology on social institution
like family, school, church, and state is a major impetus for change.
Examples : Invention of the computers and internet access generated software applications that
ultimately built multi-million dollar in social networking sites such as Facebook.
CULTURAL FORMS AND THREATS