CHAPTER 16: SOCIAL CHANGE AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Explain macrochange and microchange (in social contents) and give examples of its positive and negative consequences.
- Discuss and give examples of the common characteristics of social change.
- Elaborate and give examples of the three main theories of social change (functionalism and evolutionary, conflict, and cyclical)
- Be able to engage in grounded discussion about whether societies with more complex social institutions and technology are more civilized than those with less complex institutions and technology
- Discuss, and support your discussion with examples, how social change, social conflict, racism, and SES are related.
- Relate the theory of social change proposed by Sorokin to today’s popular culture, social turmoil, and sexuality.
- Identify and explain the three major global theories of social change and discuss the strengths and weaknesses of each theory
- Define modernization.
- List the three general characteristics of modernization.
- Elaborate on and give examples of the social and economic consequences of modernization.
- Explain how Fernando Tonnies’ gemeinschaft and gesellschaft correlated with the societal development and social change of the United States in the last 100 years.
- Be able to debate the question, “As countries develop, change, and become more and more specialized and bureaucratized, do they come under greater and greater degrees of government management and control?”
- Be able to debate the question whether individuality is lost in a high-tech post-industrialized, modernized society and give supporting evidence for your position.
- Explain how social change can lead to personal and societal powerlessness.
- Define collective behavior and describe its characteristics.
- Describe the broad types of social movements (personal transformation, reform or radical social change, and reactionary).
- Discuss the relationship between increases in racial, ethnic, gender, and SES inequality as societies change socially, technologically, and economically.
- Explain how type of directedness relates to deviance.
- Discuss the relationship between cultural transformation, cultural diffusion, and religion, religious practices, and social inequity on a personal, national, and global level.
- Be able to explain the relationship between war, terrorism, and social change and give examples of these events since the Civil War in America (in 1861-1865) and the destruction of the Germany with the World War II.
- Discuss cyberspace, how it developed, and how it has contributed to continued social change.
- Identify the five characteristics of collective behavior and explain how they impede or further social change.
- Discuss the origin of social movements, the theories explaining the development of social movements, and the aspects that contribute to people mobilizing for social change.
- Define the difference between reform movement, radical movements, and reactionary movements.
- Briefly describe the political process theory and the internal and external factors associated with this process.
- Name two social structural theories and two individual level theories of social movement.