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SOCIAL CHANGE
Social Change

Alterations in various aspects of a society over time
 Values,
norms, traditions, religion, etc
Functionalist Perspective
•Change occurs to
maintain order and
stability
Conflict Perspective
•Change occurs due to
conflict within a society
Cyclical
Theory
Evolutionary
Theory
Social
Change
Equilibrium
Theory
Conflict
Theory
Cyclical Theory




FUNCTIONALIST
Historical view of social
change in which societies are
seen as rising and then falling
or as continuously moving
back and forth between
stages of development.
Like a human life childhood, youth, adulthood,
old age  gives way for
new societies
Critics – doesn’t explain
WHY societies change
Evolutionary Theory


FUCTIONALIST
Views change as a process
that moves in one direction –
tending toward increasing
complexity
 Change
= additive process
 Attempts to explain WHY
societies change  because
of changing economic base
and technological advances

Critics – not all societies
change for future progress
Equilibrium Theory


FUNCTIONALIST
Society is like a living organism in which change in one
part of the social system produces change in all other
parts as the system attempts to regain balance, or
equilibrium.
Disrupted
Stability

Other Parts
of Society
Adjust
Equilibrium
Restored
Social
Change!
Critics – always assumes equilibrium can be met again,
some societies constantly have disruptions without social
change
Conflict Theory


CONFLICT
Social change results from conflicts between
groups with opposing interests.




Violent and Nonviolent





Mostly conflicts over power and wealth
Conflict is natural  change is inevitable
Societies are in a state of constant change
Class conflicts – French Revolution, Occupy
Movement
Racial conflicts – Civil Rights Movement
Gender conflicts – Women’s Liberation Movement
Political – Rise of the Tea Party
Critics – too narrow, conflict doesn’t always cause
social change (ex: technological change)
But What CAUSES Social Change?

We have our theories… but what contributes to the
shifts, conflicts, and cycles that cause social change
to occur?
 Population
shifts
 Urbanization and modernization
 Collective behavior
 Social movements
Population Shifts

Demography – the scientific study of human
populations
Birth Rate
Shifts in
Population
Migration
Rate
Death
Rate
Population Shifts

Migration rate – annual difference between inmigration and out-migration in a society
 City,
town
 State
 Country

Push and pull factors
 Pushed
out – loss of job, religious persecution
 Pulled in – opportunity for job, religious freedom
Population Shifts

Birth rate = (# live births/total population) X 1000
 For
every 1000 people, how many live births occurred in a
year?

Death rate = (# deaths/total population) X 1000
 For

every 1000 people, how many died in a year?
Infant Mortality Rate – indicates the overall health of a
society = (# infant deaths/total live births) X 1000
 For
every 1000 live births, how many infants died in a year?
Population Shifts

Countries with a…
Low birth rate
 Low death rate
 Low infant mortality rate

… have generally a higher
life expectancy


average # of years a
person in a particular
society can expect to live
How are population shifts
related to social change?
Gapminder
The Wealth and Health of Nations
Video
Website
Urbanization and Modernization


Urbanization – the concentration of population in
cities
Modernization – process by which a society becomes
increasingly complex as the society moves towards
industrialization
URBANIZATION
MODERNIZATION
US Urbanization

Periods of growth in US
cities…
Colonial settlements –
1565-1800
 Urban expansion –
1800-1860
 Metropolitan era –
1860-1950



Metropolis – large city
that politically,
economically, and socially
controls an urban area
Urban decentralization –
1950-present
Modernization


Urbanization leads to
modernization
How are urbanization
and modernization
connected to social
change?
Collective Behavior

Collectivity - a gathering of people who do not normally
interact and who do not share clearly defined norms. 
exhibit collective behavior
 Collective behavior - The relatively spontaneous social
behavior that occurs when people respond to similar
stimuli.
 Crowds
 Fashion
 Public
opinion
Crowds

Temporary gathering of people who are in close
enough proximity to interact.
Casual Crowd
• Least interaction, least organized, most temporary
• Ex: people in line for movie tickets, people observing the aftermath
of an accident
Conventional
Crowd
• Little interaction, but highly structured, rules for behavior, usually
gathered for a common purpose
• Ex: funeral, watching a film in a theater, baseball game
Expressive
Crowd
• Forms around emotionally charged activities, behaviors would be
considered inappropriate in other times
• Ex: rock concert, New Years Eve in Times Square
Acting Crowd
• Violent, emotions are more intense (hostile, destructive), particular
target, violates established norms
• Ex: violence that breaks out at sporting events towards officials, riots,
mobs
Fashion


Enthusiastic attachments
among large numbers of
people for particular styles
of appearance or behavior
Present in industrialized
societies

Change is valued and
desired


Social mobility is valued


Get the newest and
improved fashion!
Can be demonstrated by
having fashionable clothes,
car, home, etc.
Fashion can represent
desired social change.
Public Opinion

Public – a group of geographically scattered people
who are concerned with or engaged in a particular
issue.


A different publics for different issues – changes depending
on who gains/loses interest in an issue
Public opinion - Refers to the collection of differing
attitudes that members of a public have about a
particular issue

Important because the public has a great deal of “sway” in
a society – politics, laws, businesses, advertising, etc
Propaganda to Sway Public Opinion
Technique
Description
Testimonials
Endorsements by famous people to transfer the public’s admiration for the
celebrity to the social movement
Transfer
Attempt to associate the social movement with something the public already
approves of or respects
Bandwagon
Appeals to the public’s desire to conform by promoting the social movement
as already popular with the public
Testimonial - Gun
Violence and Control
Celebrity PSA
Transfer – Dodge
Challenger “Freedom”
Commercial
Propaganda to Sway
Public Opinion
Name Calling
Anti-Obama
Ad – name
calling
Uses negative labels or images in order to make opponents of the social
movement appear unfavorable
Plain-Folks Appeal Attempts to sway public opinion by appealing to the “average citizen”
with whom everyone can identity
Glittering
Generalities
Uses words that sound positive but have little real meaning – portrays
social movement in positive light but provides little actual information
Card-Stacking
Presents facts in a way that puts the social movement in a favorable light
– presents stats or survey results in a particular way
Collective Behavior




How can crowds cause social change?
How can fashion cause social change?
How can public opinion cause social change?
BECAUSE COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR CREATES SOCIAL
MOVEMENTS!!!
Social Movements

A long-term deliberate effort to promote or prevent
social change.
 Long-lasting
 Highly
structured with formally recognized leaders
 Deliberate attempt to block or institute societal change

How many famous social movements can you identify?
Reactionary Movements

MAIN GOAL: to reverse current social trends
 Suspicious
of and hostile to social change
 Return society to some version of the past that is seen
as “ideal” or “better”
Neo-Nazism
Anti-feminism
Conservative Movements

MAIN GOAL: to protect what they see as society’s
prevailing values from change that they consider to
be a threat to those values.
Early 20th Century
Temperance Movement
Anti Same-Sex Marriage Groups
Christian Right
Movement, began in
1940s
Revisionary Movements

MAIN GOAL: to improve, or revise, some part of
society through social change.
 Usually
seek legal means
 Typically focuses on a certain issue
Left: Civil Rights Movement
Above: Pro Same-Sex Marriage
Right: Women’s Suffrage Movement
Revolutionary Movement

MAIN GOAL: a total and radical change of the
existing social structure and government
American Revolution
Arab Spring