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CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF SOCIAL CHANGE CHALLENGES TO SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS social belonging is an important element of personal growth and development group membership and conformity are important elements in fulfilling the need to belong The need to belong may be greater than one’s own values and overpowers one’s rational decision-making FESTINGER – SOCIAL COMPARISON THEORY individuals routinely compare themselves with others to judge their status and abilities led to other theories on social comparison Upward comparison: When one compares self to someone who is better off ie. An amateur hockey player to an NHL hockey player Downward comparison: when one compares self to someone who is worse off ie. A student who compares to a low-achieving student Overall, people prefer making upward comparisons ie. Juliet Schor: competitive emulation – trying to keep pace with others in material goods and lifestyle MASLOW’S HIERARCHY OF NEEDS the motivation towards self-improvement drives an individual’s need to belong the ultimate goal in life is balance / equilibrium the individual must meet certain needs to achieve this Deficit needs – physiological, safety, emotional failure to meet these needs may result in alienation – distance of people from each other, from what they find meaningful, or from their sense of self Being needs – esteem, self-actualization lead to confidence, feelings of accomplishment, reaching full potential SHERIF: THE IN-GROUP / OUT-GROUP DYNAMIC The Robbers Cave Experiement: https://youtu.be/6QGNxRGgBwM the IN-group – individuals will produce a group structure with a hierarchy and roles when brought together for a shared goal the OUT-group – hostile attitudes would result if two distinct groups were formed and brought together in competition ROBERT MERTON – SOCIAL STRAIN TYPOLOGY deviance is a naturally occurring element in any society social norms place pressure on an individual to conform to an expected mode of behaviour this forces an individual to either work within the structure of society or break from it and seek alternative means of expression this leads to participation in a subculture – an alternative system of values and beliefs that does not conform to the mainstream culture MERTON, cont’d IN WHAT WAYS CAN DEVIANCE BE POSITIVE? MERTON’S TYPOLOGY CONFORMISTS - people who accept the cultural goals of society and the means by which to attain them RITUALISTS - accept the means or standards necessary to achieve the end goal but not necessarily accept the cultural goals of society INNOVATORS – goals are in line with society but will not use acceptable channels and means to accomplish them RETREATISTS – individuals who have chosen to disengage from mainstream culture altogether REBELS – share much in common with RETREATISTS but do not isolate themselves as they do, instead attempt to change the society in which they live MELVIN SEEMAN – SOCIAL ISOLATION when social relationships become strained and the ability to interact in social groups is limited social isolation leads to severe trust issues and the inability to perform basic functions or fully participate in social living powerlessness – behaviour cannot determine the desired outcome meaninglessness – a diminished sense of the ability to predict future outcomes normlessness – social norms are no longer an effective guide self-estrangement – an individual denies/negates personal interests and engages in impersonal/external activities to satisfy needs