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Teen Pregnancy |
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| Teenage
pregnancy occurs when women under the age of 20 become pregnant.
Barring both medical and physical concerns, problems of teenage
pregnancy arise from individual, familial, and social factors... |
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Unemployment |
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| In
economics, a person who is able and willing to work at a prevailing
wage rate yet is unable to find a paying job is considered to be
unemployed... |
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Welfare |
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| Welfare
is financial assistance paid by the government to certain entities or
groups of people who are unable to support themselves alone... |
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Society
A society is a self-reproducing grouping of individuals occupying a particular
territory, which may have its own distinctive culture and institutions.
As culture is generally considered unique to humans, the terms
"society" and "human society" have the same meaning. "Society," may
refer to a particular people, such as the Nuer, to a nation state, such
as Austria, or to a broader cultural group, such as Western society.
Origin and usage
The English word society emerged in the 15th century and is derived from the French société. The French word, in turn, had its origin in the Latin societas, a "friendly association with others," from socius meaning "companion, associate, comrade or business partner." Thus the
meaning of society is closely related to what is considered to be
social. Implicit in the meaning of society is that its members share
some mutual concern or interest, a common objective or common
characteristics. As such, society is often used to mean the
collective citizenry of a country as directed through national
institutions concerned with civic welfare.
In political science, the term is often used to mean the totality of human relationships, generally in contrast to the State, i.e., the apparatus of rule or government within a territory:
- "I
mean by it [the State] that summation of privileges and dominating
positions which are brought into being by extra-economic power... I
mean by Society, the totality of concepts of all purely natural
relations and institutions between man and man..."
The social sciences generally use the term society to mean a group of people that form a semi-closed social system, in
which most interactions are with other individuals belonging to the
group. More abstractly, a society is defined as a network of relationships between social entities. A society is also sometimes defined as an interdependent community, but the
sociologist Tonnies sought to draw a contrast between society and
community. An important feature of society is social structure, aspects of which include roles and social ranking.
According to sociologist Richard Jenkins, the term “society” addresses a number of important existential issues facing people:
- How
humans think and exchange information – the sensory world makes up only
a fraction of human experience. In order to understand the world, we
have to conceive of human interaction in the abstract form (i.e.,
society).
- Many phenomena cannot be reduced to individual
behavior – to explain certain conditions, a view of something ‘’greater
than the sum of its parts’’ is needed.
- Collectives often endure beyond the lifespan of individual members.
- The
human condition has always meant going beyond the evidence of our
senses; every aspect of our lives is tied to the collective.
Evolution of societies
Gerhard
Lenski, a sociologist, differentiates societies based on their level of
technology, communication and economy: (1) hunters and gatherers, (2)
simple agricultural, (3) advanced agricultural, (4) industrial. This is
somewhat similar to the system earlier developed by anthropologists
Morton H. Fried, a conflict theorist, and Elman Service, an integration
theorist, who have produced a system of classification for societies in
all human cultures based on the evolution of social inequality and the
role of the state. This system of classification contains four
categories:
- hunter-gatherer bands, which are generally egalitarian.
- tribal societies in which there are some limited instances of social rank and prestige.
- stratified structures led by chieftains.
- civilizations, with complex social hierarchies and organized, institutional governments.
Over
time, some cultures have progressed toward more-complex forms of
organization and control. This cultural evolution has a profound effect
on patterns of community. Hunter-gatherer tribes settled around
seasonal foodstocks to become agrarian villages. Villages grew to
become towns and cities. Cities turned into city-states and
nation-states.
Characteristics of society
The following three components are common to all definitions of society:
- Social networks
- Criteria for membership, and
- Characteristic patterns of organization
Each will of these will be explored further in the following sections.
Social Networks
Social
networks are maps of the relationships between people. Structural
features such as proximity, frequency of contact and type of
relationship (e.g., relative, friend, colleague) define various social
networks.
Organization of society
Human
societies are often organized according to their primary means of
subsistence. As noted in the section on "Evolution of societies",
above, social scientists identify hunter-gatherer societies, nomadic
pastoral societies, horticulturalist or simple farming societies, and
intensive agricultural societies, also called civilizations. Some
consider industrial and post-industrial societies to be qualitatively
different from traditional agricultural societies.
One
common theme for societies in general is that they serve to aid
individuals in a time of crisis. Traditionally, when an individual
requires aid, for example at birth, death, sickness, or disaster,
members of that society will rally others to render aid, in some
form—symbolic, linguistic, physical, mental, emotional, financial,
medical, or religious. Many societies will distribute largess, at the
behest of some individual or some larger group of people. This type of generosity can be seen in all known cultures; typically, prestige accrues to the
generous individual or group. Conversely, members of a society may also
shun or scapegoat members of the society who violate its norms.
Mechanisms such as gift-giving and scapegoating, which may be seen in
various types of human groupings, tend to be institutionalized within a
society.
Some societies will bestow status on an individual
or group of people, when that individual or group performs an admired
or desired action. This type of recognition is bestowed by members of
that society on the individual or group in the form of a name, title,
manner of dress, or monetary reward. Males, in many societies, are
particularly susceptible to this type of action and subsequent reward,
even at the risk of their lives. Action by an individual or larger
group in behalf of some cultural ideal is seen in all societies. The
phenomena of community action, shunning, scapegoating, generosity, and
shared risk and reward occur in subsistence-based societies and in more
technology-based civilizations.
Societies may also be
organized according to their political structure. In order of
increasing size and complexity, there are bands, tribes, chiefdoms, and
state societies. These structures may have varying degrees of political
power, depending on the cultural geographical, and historical
environments that these societies must contend with. Thus, a more
isolated society with the same level of technology and culture as other
societies is more likely to survive than one in closer proximity to
others that may encroach on their resources (see history for
examples}. A society that is unable to offer an effective response to
other societies it competes with will usually be subsumed into the
culture of the competing society.
Shared belief or common goal
Peoples
of many nations united by common political and cultural traditions,
beliefs, or values are sometimes also said to be a society (such as
Judeo-Christian, Eastern, and Western). When used in this context, the
term is employed as a means of contrasting two or more "societies"
whose members represent alternative conflicting and competing
worldviews (see Secret Societies).
Some academic, learned and scholarly associations describe themselves as societies (for example, the American Society of Mathematics. More commonly,
professional organizations often refer to themselves as societies
(e.g., the American Society of Civil Engineers, American Chemical
Society). In the United Kingdom and the United States, learned
societies are normally nonprofit and have charitable status. In
science, they range in size to include national scientific societies
(i.e., the Royal Society) to regional natural history societies.
Academic societies may have interest in a wide range of subjects,
including the arts, humanities and science.
In some
countries (for example the United States and France), the term
"society" is used in commerce to denote a partnership between investors
or to start a business. In the United Kingdom, partnerships are not
called societies, but cooperatives or mutuals are often known as
societies (such as friendly societies and building societies). In Latin
America, the term society may also be used in commerce denoting a
partnership between investors, or annonymous investors; for example:
"Proveedor Industrial Anahuac S.A." where S.A. stands for Annonymous
Society (Sociedad Anonima); however in Mexico in other type of
partnership it would be declared as S.A. de C.V.
Ontology
As
a related note, there is still an ongoing debate in sociological and
anthropological circles as to whether there exists an entity we could
call society. Some Marxist theorists, like Louis Althusser, Ernesto
Laclau and Slavoj Zizek, have argued that society is nothing more than
an effect of the ruling ideology of a certain class system, and
shouldn't be used as a sociological notion. Marx's concept of society
as the sum total of social relations among members of a community
contrasts with interpretations from the perspective of methodological
individualism where society is simply the sum total of individuals in a
territory.
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