Acting via roles, social networks, and status, social structure can affect the health, values, occupational attainment, and sense of belonging in society. (We will also consider how some other social psychological variables are relevant influences on these.)
Q. What is the relationship between social structure and social interaction?
Social structures and cultures are founded upon social interactions. By interacting with one another, people design rules, institutions and systems within which they seek to live. Symbols are used to communicate the expectations of a given society to those new to it, either children or outsiders.
Table of Contents
- Q. What is the relationship between social structure and social interaction?
- Q. How important are the social functions of social structure to the stability of society?
- Q. What are the patterns of social interaction?
- Q. What is another word for structures?
- Q. What is another name for a social class hierarchy?
- Q. What is theory of Karl Marx and Max Weber about social stratification?
Q. How important are the social functions of social structure to the stability of society?
Society’s social institutions perform important functions to help ensure social stability. Slow social change is desirable, but rapid social change threatens social order. Social problems weaken a society’s stability but do not reflect fundamental faults in how the society is structured.
Q. What are the patterns of social interaction?
The most common forms of social interaction are exchange, competition, conflict, cooperation, and accommodation.
Q. What is another word for structures?
What is another word for structures?
engineering | planning |
---|---|
installations | structure |
surveying | architectonics |
construction | building |
building design |
Q. What is another name for a social class hierarchy?
What is another word for social hierarchy?
pecking order | dominance |
---|---|
power structure | social ladder |
social order | social pyramid |
social stratification | social structure |
chain of command | line of dominance |
Q. What is theory of Karl Marx and Max Weber about social stratification?
Marx’s main argument is that class is determined by economic factors alone, whereas in contrast, Weber argues that social stratification cannot be defined solely in terms of class and the economic factors which affect class relationships.