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Structural Functionalism

Structural Functionalism. Talcott Parsons and the structure-agency debate. Talcott Parsons (1902–1979). US sociologist who attempted to integrate all the social sciences into a science of human action. Parson ’ s ‘ voluntaristic theory ’ of social action

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Structural Functionalism

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  1. Structural Functionalism Talcott Parsons and the structure-agency debate

  2. Talcott Parsons (1902–1979) • US sociologist who attempted to integrate all the social sciences into a science of human action. • Parson’s ‘voluntaristic theory’ of social action • Social agency is not reducible to arbitrary actions or total free will, but is … • framed within the patterned structure of relationships which are reproduced in… • social order and norms • Thus, Parsons has a notion of individual agency but this is NOT reducible to biological or psychological factors but involves • A synthesis between individual actions and social systems

  3. Structural Functionalism (SF) • Parsons a structural functionalist. • Functionalism originally attempted to explain social institutions as collective means to fulfil social needs, especially social solidarity • social institutions are functionally integrated to form a stable system • SF develops from this to hold that society consists of various institutions, e.g. police, hospitals, schools, etc., each of which has its own function.

  4. Parson’s contribution to SF • Parsons argued that the crucial feature of societies is homeostasis (maintaining a stable state) ("The Social System" 1951). • He believed in the interconnectedness of different elements of society • This supported individual integration into social structures. • His great achievement was to construct a system or general theory of social action to include all its aspects, drawing on several disciplines and reinterpreting previous theories ("The Structure of Social Action" 1937). • Structural determinist I.e. emphasis the power of the social system to shape the behaviour of individuals.

  5. How did Parsons see the Structure-Agency problem? • Voluntaristic theory of action acknowledged an individual's capacity to 'act on the basis of their own decisions, desires and choices and not on the requirements enforced by the brute workings of an economic system that thrived on the inequalities of wealth and power' (Layder, 1994: 15). (contra Marxism) • The successful functioning of society required altruism, or collectivism, as opposed to the notion of instrumental rational action. (contra individualism) • opposed to positivist social science (biological determinism) as this overlooks the purposeful character of human action • Q: ‘How can society persist given that each of its members pursues his or her own goals?’ (Parsons, 1951 89-94). • A: ‘people are both goal-oriented and constrained' (Baert, 1998: 48).

  6. Social order and norms • 'Order', he argued, was the result of the influence of certain values in society rather than in structure such as the economic system (capitalism). • counter to Weber, who noted the experiences of alienation and anomie in modern, industrial societies. • Closer to Durkheim, who suggested that societies are reflections of the 'collective consciousness', in which people internalise the shared norms and standards of society. • Link between 'values' and 'norms' he argued ,was to be found in the fact that the core values of individuals and groups found expression in norms. • 'Order' thus amounts to a reflection of the general values of a society

  7. Social order and norms (2) • “ the problem of order, and thus of the nature of stable systems of social interaction that is, of social structure, thus focuses on the integration of the motivation of the actors with the normative cultural standards which integrate the action system, in our context, interpersonally” (Parsons, 1951: 36-7). • Order = successful integration of individuals + normative standards + uphold social structures • Q: Is Parsons making any assumptions here?

  8. How do these processes of integration take place? • four levels at which the individual is socialised into society. • Each level represents a separate category with its own dynamics • but TOGETHER they underpin the social system.

  9. Integration 1 – Physiological

  10. Integration 2 – Personality system

  11. Integration 3 –social system

  12. Integration – social system (2) • Parsons on social systems “Social systems emerge from interactions which are repeated over time and which produce durable expectations about the behaviour of those involvedm, In a fully developed social system such as modern societym these expectations become ‘institutionalised’. That im they become part ocf the accepted fabric of soceity which people have to take into acount when formulating their behaviour” (Layder, 1994: 17). • Parsons on individual units of society such as the family: “It is because the human personality is not "born" but must be "made" through the socialisation process that in the first instance families are necessary. They are factories which produce human personalities” (Parsons, 1955: 16)

  13. Integration 4 – Cultural System

  14. Integration 4 – Cultural System (2) • Schools are examples of the meritocratic principles of society • This means that everyone is treated in the same way and that everyone has the same chances to succeed. • Therefore those that achieve the most in school do so on merit. • Talent will naturally rise to the top: Ability + Effort = Merit. • Schools ensure that the best people will perform the most important jobs - and this will benefit society as a whole.

  15. Universalistic values • a) The value of achievement by rewarding those who achieve through exam success. • b) The value of equality of opportunity by offering everyone an equal chance to succeed. • c) role allocation by testing and evaluating students, schools match the students' talents and capacities to the jobs they are best suited for. • Does your school or college actually do this in practise? Does this happen in the world of work - the economy?

  16. Structural Functionalism 2 Talcott Parsons

  17. Roles and Norms • P interested in the external forces that shaped individual motivations and interests • individuals adapted their choices they made (roles) to the 'norms' of society • There is a correspondence between the roles taken by individuals in society and the prevailing norms of a society • Meritocracy was a successful way of allocating roles in ways that ensured the ultimate wellbeing or stability of the social system. • Social stratification, he suggested was an outcome of the role allocation which created the "differential ranking of human individuals who compose a given social system and their treatment as superior or inferior relative to one another in certain socially important respects" (Parsons, Analytical Approach to Social Stratification, 69)

  18. Fundamental Axes of Stratification: • Ascription vs. Achievement - Ascribed Status and Achieved status • Moral Evaluation defined by: • Membership in kinship unit (by birth, marriage) • Personal qualities (sex, age, personal beauty, intelligence strength) • Achievements (result of individual's actions) • Possessions (material & non-material things belonging to an individual and transferable) • Authority ("institutionally recognized right to influence actions of others", p. 76; resides in position or office) • Power (ability to influence others and secure possessions)

  19. Stratification (class or status differences) • "the class status of an individual is that rank in the system of stratification which can be ascribed to him (sic) by virtue of those of his (sic) kinship ties which bind him to a unit in the class structure" (Parsons Analytical Approach to Social Stratification, 77-8) • Stratification (in USA): • Occupation: universalistic criteria; achieved status; not determined at birth; equality of opportunity • Kinship: ascribed status determined at birth • Contradictions women not allowed to compete on an equal footing for the jobs of men otherwise, this would threaten the stability of the family, and hence of society.

  20. Stratification and gender roles • Separation of sex roles to prevent competition: • Exclusion of Women's Independent Status • "The separation of the sex roles in our society is such as, for the most part, to remove women from the kind of occupational status which is important for the determination of the status of a family" (Parson, 80) • Instrumental Roles = men = outside family; occupational world; adaptation of society • Expressive Roles = women = inside family; tension management in family; socialization of children • Q: In the light of this account, is stratification and the social organisation of gender roles a social fact? Or a social construct?

  21. Pattern variables & the social system • P retained an idea of ‘voluntarism', i.e. that we exercise some degree of freedom or agency in taking different courses of action. • He also argued that individuals confronted a range of options or choices (PVs) • refer to the concrete opportunities in which we make decision which reflect general social parameters of social behaviour. • While we have freedom to make choices, the choices and decisions we do make are generally shaped by existing social values and conventions.

  22. Pattern Variables –influences on our choices/agency • Particularism vs universalism. In some contexts we related to people according to the rules or standards that we apply generally (universalism), in other cases we apply qualifications or exceptions so that we favour or discriminate against them (particularism). • Performance vs quality; related to the scenario above, whereby we alter our attitudes or treatment of others according to who they are rather than what they might achieve (e.g Black boys in the education system) • Affective neutrality vs affectivity: refers to the degree of investment we have in engaging with different groups. We distinguish between certain intimate or open relations (affectivity) vs more 'business-like' or transactional relations (aff. Neutrality). • Specificity vs neutrality: some interactions are very basic/instrumental or transactive (i.e. buying an item/booking a hotel room), others are more complex and involve different layers of common interests, so diffuse (relationship with partner).

  23. Social system in fulfilling the functional needs of society • A successful society must meet the needs of its members in order to reproduce itself • Through meeting these needs societies establish an equilibrium • Allocation of resources - material, human, cultural (money and distribution systems). • Defining and sustaining the pursuit of certain fundamental goals (political and decision-making or executive systems) • Maintaining solidarity (the management of conflict. • Sustaining the motivations of its actors (socialisation, reproduction of values and norms).

  24. Adaptation/ Goal Attainment/ Integretion/ Latency • Parsons - the relationship between people and society is a mutual one because certain human responses or adaptations are required in order to ensure that the four 'needs' of the system are met. These are: • Adaptation - both agents and structures need to relate appropriately or adapt to the environment and resources available • Goal attainment - the decision-making or political systems and structures must appropriately motivate social actors • Integration - appropriate structures and mechanisms must be constructed in order to maintain order • Latency – the maintenance of the cultural and socialising structures and mechanisms.

  25. Critiques of Parsonianism • Cold War ideological and political concern • propagates the superiority of capitalism and western liberal democracy. • Universalistic - assumes a normative model of human relations, uniform cultural and social values • Individual vs society - little or no sense of mediating group structures such as classes, regional or national or ethnic categories • Mechanistic view of socialisation (4 levels)

  26. Critiques of Parsonianism (2) • Assumes normative values - no sense of resistance to 'mainstream' values, or of difference or dissent, or of the marginalisation or suppression • Insufficient attention paid to social conflict. • No sense of power; assumes that all actors have equal access to social goods and services • As with any other sociological theorist, he cannot establish a precise correspondence between action theory (agency) and system theory (structure), so the dilemma persists.

  27. Merton’s Functional theory

  28. Robert Merton • A student of Parsons • But critical of some elements • Tried to bring Marx back in • Opposed to grand theory • Theory of the Middle Range

  29. Criticisms • opposed functional unity. • Need not be functional for all parts of society • opposed universal functionalism. • Not all elements of a society are functional • opposed indispensability. • Different societies have different functions. • Structures work differently in different settings

  30. Merton’s theory • focus on groups, organizations, societies, and culture • standard patterns of behavior and society • functions • observed consequences that make for adaptation or adjustment of a system. • dysfunctions—negative consequences • nonfunctional—none of the above • levels of analysis—functional for one and not for another • manifest—planned functions • latent functions—unplanned unanticipated consequences

  31. Merton and anomie • A good example of middle range theory • A theory of deviance • We agree on the values—the American dream • We don’t all have access to the means—structural barriers • We create new means—deviance

  32. Davis and Moore • The functional theory of stratification • What is the function of inequality? • It gets people into positions that are needed • Important positions

  33. Criticisms of structural-functionalism • It is ahistorical. • Could not deal with change • Conservative bias • Vague terms • Teleology • explain by consequences a logical problem

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