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• nadia dresscher• University of Aruba• 2011• I simply can’t track this woman down. I don’t
know if I am heisting this from some publisher.
Framing Social Problems
An introduction to a theoretical framework for the analysis of social problems 2
Different theoretical perspectives for approaching social problems
A perspective influences how you:
Approaches
• Levels of analysis of social problems• Sociological paradigms:– Structural functionalism, conflict theory, symbolic
interactionism, feminist theory, queer theory, social constructionism, critical constructionism
• Normative paradigms– Human-rights, basic needs, human development and
capability approach• Social movements– Changing social structures
Levels of Analysis of Social Problems
Level of analysis:1. Level of social life where social problems are
manifested2. Objective and subjective analysis of the
construction of social problems3. Macro and micro level of society
Level of social life
• Social problems are manifested at multiple levels of social life. The factors that cause, facilitate, and help to perpetuate social problems are found at the following levels:
• Individual (e.g. attitudes) • Group (e.g. ideologies of terrorist groups, segregation,
stereotyping social groups)• Societal (e.g. the government, the community)• Global (e.g. climate, globalization of economy)• The multiple-level factors: in interaction with each other
objective vs. subjective analysis of SP’s
Macro vs. micro analysis
Social structures
individual
Micro and Macro level analysis
• The different sociological perspectives are like the photographers' lenses, allowing different ways of looking at a common subject (Newman, 2000):
For the analysis of Social Problems you can take:
• a Micro sociological lens: zoom lens• a Macro sociological lens: wide-angle lens• or any number of perspectives located on the
continuum between the two
Macro and Micro level analysis:
• The micro perspective assumes that society’s larger structures are shaped through individual interactions;
while,
• The macro perspective assumes that society’s larger structures shape those individual interactions and individual lives.
• Think of these perspectives as being on a
continuum
Sociological Paradigms
Structural Functionalism
Structural functionalism
• Level of analysis: macro• Assumption about society: order• Society is held together by a set of social institutions, each
of which has a specific function in society (an integrated system). This perspective focuses on social systems and the way in which their independent parts maintain order, bound together by shared values and norms.
How the theory might explain social problems:• Problems arise out of social disorganization, a state in
which consensus about norms has broken down.
Structural functionalism questions
• How does the problem reflect changes among social institutions and structures?
• What are the functions and dysfunctions of the problem?
Conflict Theory
Conflict theory
• Level of analysis: macro• Assumption about society: conflict• Society is held together by power and coercion.
Conflict and inequality are inherent in the social structure. This perspective focuses on contradictory interests of groups, in equalities in society and the resulting conflict and change.
How the theory might explain social problems:• Problems are the result of dominance over, and
exploitation of, some groups by others.
Conflict theory questions:• How does the problem originate from the
competition between social groups and from the social structure itself?
• What groups are in competition and why?
Symbolic interactionism
Symbolic interactionism
• Level of analysis: micro• Assumption about society: • Society is created through social interaction. This
perspective focuses on the interaction between individuals, the importance of knowing individuals perspectives to understand their behavior, and the ways in which social life is constructed through interaction.
How the theory might explain social problems:• A situation or form of behavior becomes a problem
when people define it as such
Symbolic interactionism questions:• How is the problem socially constructed and
defined?• How is the problem behavior learned through
interaction?• How is the problem labeled by those concerned
about it?
Defining social problems in terms of the 3 paradigms:
a social problem: is a condition or pattern of behavior that:1. contradicts some other condition or pattern of
behavior and is defined as incompatible with the desired quality of life
2. is caused, facilitated, or prolonged by factors that operate at multiple levels of social life
3. involves intergroup conflict and4. requires social action to be resolved
Interaction between these factors:
Feminist Approach
Feminist Theory• Is a theoretical approach that looks at gender inequalities in
society and the way that gender structures the social world• Macro and Micro analysis• Conflict theory, social constructionism, symbolic
interactionism, structural-functionalism and critical constructionism and other normative approaches
Queer Theory
Queer Theory
• A perspective that proposes that categories of sexual identity are social constructs and no sexual category is fundamentally either deviant or normal
• We create these meanings socially (which means we can change those meanings as well
• Questions the basis of all social categories, including but not limited to those involving sexuality
• Macro and micro level of analysis of social problems
• Has elements of conflict theory, social constructionism, post-modernism and symbolic interactionism
Questions‘subjective’ SP’s
• Why are some seemingly harmful phenomena considered social problems and not other seemingly harmful phenomena?
• Why do some social problems get more attention that other social problems?
Social Constructionism
Social Constructionism
• Is concerned with how the meanings of social problems are constructed and examines these processes
• Why and How is a problem defined as a social problem? and by Whom, What processes are going on here?
Problem construction involves the following process:
Constructing a social problem
Social Constructionism
• SC suggests that the degree to which a social problem is perceived as problematic, as well as the kind of problem it is understood to be, is a function of social interaction
• Social problems aren’t immediately obvious, but need to be interpreted and presented to us.
• Some people have more power to deliver a message to the public than others.
We define this as a
social problem
Critical Constructionism
Critical constructionism
• It is a synthesis of conflict theory and symbolic interactionism, it tries to answer the question posed:– Why are some seemingly harmful phenomena considered
social problems and not other seemingly harmful phenomena?
– Why do some social problems get more attention that other social problems?
• Differs from social constructionism only in that it emphasizes the role of elite interests in the process of problem construction
Critical Constructionism
Who are the ‘elite’ according to critical constructionists?
Media
Tough Guise
Capitalism rationale
(Corporate/political) networks of interests
Homogenization of culture
Recap: Critical constructionists are critical on the role of these factors in constructing SP:
• Elite groups that can shape policies and public domain• The media• Capitalism rationale• Corporation networks of interests• Homogenization of (American lifestyle) culture
Framing Social Problems
An introduction to a theoretical framework for the analysis of social problems 3
Normative approaches
Normative approaches to social problems
• These are more normative frameworks for the approach of social problems.
• These approaches have an ideal as objective (Utopia? Universalism?). They want to catalyze social change.
• They have a strong emphasis on human development, quality of life, sustainability and equality for all,
• Advocacy, activism, influence on policies, they want to change the social structure that reproduces social inequality
Normative frameworks:
• Human-Rights based approached• Basic Needs Approach• Human Development and Capability Approach
(HDCA)
Human Rights approach
• Human right as a claim to a fundamental benefit that should be enjoyed universally by all people everywhere on the basis of equality and non-discrimination
• Violation of human rights is considered a social problem.
5 underlying human rights principles:
1. universality: they apply to all people everywhere by virtue of their humanity
2. Equality: the benefits of human rights should be enjoyed on the basis of equality and non-discrimination
3. Inalienability: human rights cannot be transferred or taken away
4. Indivisibility: civil, political, economic and social rights are indivisible: one cannot give priority to one over the others
5. Interdependence: economic, social, civil and political rights are deeply interdependent.
The basic needs approach
The Basic needs approach
• Incomes + public services + participation• The basic needs approach is a reminder that
the objective of development is to provide human beings with the opportunity for a full life
• Social problems are identified in terms of absence of basic needs, like: income, education, health etc.
Human Development and Capability Approach (HDCA)
• I refer to sheets of unit 2 an unit 3 of GE 6 (The future of development) for an elaborated presentation of the HDCA
• Capabilities, Functionings, Agency and Freedom
Human Rights, basic needs and human development are complementary and reinforce each other
• Human rights express the bold idea that all people have claims to social arrangements that protect them from the worst abuses and deprivations-and that secure the freedom for a life of dignity. (“basic needs”)
• Human development in turn, is a process of enhancing human capabilities- to expand choices and opportunities so that each person can lead a life of respect and value. When human development and human rights advance together, they reinforce one another- expanding people’s capabilities and protecting their rights and fundamental freedoms. (UNDP, 2000, p2)
Social Movements
Social movements• Is an organized effort by a large number of people to bring
about or impede social change. • Defined in this way, social movements might sound similar to
special-interest groups, and they do have some things in common. But a major difference between social movements and special-interest groups lies in the nature of their actions.
• Special-interest groups normally work within the system via conventional political activities such as lobbying and election campaigning.
• In contrast, social movements often work outside the system by engaging in various kinds of protest, including demonstrations, picket lines, sit-ins, and sometimes outright violence.
The major types of social movements1. reform movements, 2. revolutionary movements, 3. reactionary movements, 4. self-help movements, 5. religious movements.
Through movements/activism individuals collectively try to change social structures
Micro and Macro influences that influence the rise of social movements
• A key micro factor is social attachment, as social movement participants tend to have friendships and organizational ties that “pull” them into movements and promote their continued participation in a movement.
• Macro factors include certain social, economic, and political conditions in the larger social environment that generate interest in joining a movement and/or weaken the government as it attempts to deal with a social movement.
Social movements in Aruba
• History of social movements• Future of social movements