Submitted By: Cyril M. Ampoloquio: Structural Functionalism
Submitted By: Cyril M. Ampoloquio: Structural Functionalism
Submitted By: Cyril M. Ampoloquio: Structural Functionalism
STRUCTURAL FUNCTIONALISM
STRUCTURALISM
Favorite Methods
Participant observation, qualitative interviewing, interaction
analysis and context existing sources analysis.
Case Studies
A case study is defined as an in-depth study of one person. Some of
of Freud's most famous case studies include Dora, Little Hans,
and Anna O. and had a powerful influence on the development of his
psychoanalytic theory.
In a case study, the researcher attempts to look very intensely at
every aspect of an individual's life. By carefully studying the person
so closely, the hope is that the researcher can gain insight into how
that person's history contributes to their current behavior. While the
hope is that the insights gained during a case study might apply to
others, it is often difficult to generalize the results because case
studies tend to be so subjective.
The Conscious and Unconscious Mind
The unconscious mind includes all of the things that are outside of our
conscious awareness. These might include early childhood memories, secret
desires and hidden drives. According to Freud, the unconscious contains
things that may be unpleasant or even socially unacceptable. Because these
things might create pain or conflict, they are buried in the unconscious.
While these thoughts, memories, and urges might be outside of our
awareness, they continue to influence the way that we think, act and behave.
In some cases, the things outside of our awareness can influence behavior in
negative ways and lead to psychological distress.
The conscious mind includes everything that is inside of our awareness. The
contents of the conscious mind are the things we are aware of or can easily
bring into awareness.
The Id, Ego, and Superego
Id: Freud believed that personality was composed of three key elements. The first of these to emerge
is known as the id. The id contains all of the unconscious, basic and primal urges.
Ego: The second aspect of personality to emerge is known as the ego. This is the part of the
personality that must deal with the demands of reality. It helps control the urges of the id and makes
behave in ways that are both realistic and acceptable. Rather than engaging in behaviors designed to
satisfy our desires and needs, the ego forces us to fulfill our needs in ways that are socially acceptable
and realistic. In addition to controlling the demands of the id, the ego also helps strike a balance
between our basic urges, our ideals, and reality.
Superego: The superego is the final aspect of personality to emerge and it contains our ideals and
values. The values and beliefs that our parents and society instill in us are the guiding force of the
superego and it strives to make us behave according to these morals.
THE EGO’S DEFENSE MECHANISMS
A defense mechanism is a strategy that the
ego uses to protect itself from anxiety. These
defensive tools act as a safeguard to keep the
unpleasant or distressing aspects of the
unconscious from entering awareness. When
something seems too overwhelming or even
inappropriate, defense mechanisms help keep
the information from entering consciousness in
order to minimize distress.
Some Weaknesses of Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis grew in its influence over the course of the
early twentieth-century, but it was not without its critics.
Freud's theories overemphasized the unconscious mind,
sex, aggression and childhood experiences.
Many of the concepts proposed by psychoanalytic
theorists are difficult to measure and quantify.
Most of Freud's ideas were based on case studies and
clinical observations rather than empirical, scientific
research.
Strengths of Psychoanalysis
Despite its critics, psychoanalysis played an important role in the development
of psychology. It influenced our approach to the treatment of mental health
issues and continues to exert an influence in psychology to this day.
While most psychodynamic theories did not rely on experimental research,
the methods and theories of psychoanalytic thinking contributed to the
development of experimental psychology.
Many of the theories of personality developed by psychodynamic thinkers are
still influential today, including Erikson's theory of psychosocial
stages and Freud's psychosexual stage theory.
Psychoanalysis opened up a new view on mental illness, suggesting that
talking about problems with a professional could help relieve symptoms of
psychological distress.
INSTITUTIONALISM
“WHAT IS THE MOST POWERFUL LEVER YOU CAN IMAGINE? A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY IF IT’S IN THE HANDS
OF A TRULY OUTSANDING ENTREPRENEUR. IT STARTS WITH THE PERSON AND THE IDEA, AND GROWS
TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
Institutions
include any form of constraint (formal or informal) that human beings devise to
shape their interaction
reduce uncertainty by establishing a stable structure to human interaction
Historical institutionalism
INSTITUTIONALISM
formal political institutions matter: but which ones and how?
the institutional structure of the polity is a crucial factor behind behaviour and
outcomes
“WHAT IS THE MOST POWERFUL LEVER YOU CAN IMAGINE? A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY IF IT’S IN THE HANDS
OF A TRULY OUTSANDING ENTREPRENEUR.
‘structuralism’ IT STARTS
(institutions) vs.WITH THE PERSON AND
‘functionalism’ THE IDEA, AND GROWS
(needs)
TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
a state consists of institutions which are able to influence group conflict
Key concepts of historical institutionalism
Institutions:
organizations
rules, conventions, norms, etc.
provide an environment for individuals, who benefit by following
certain patterns of behaviour
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disproportionately distribute power across social groups
“WHATare central
IS THE in determining
MOST POWERFUL LEVER YOU CANhistorical
IMAGINE? Adevelopment
BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY IF IT’S IN THE HANDS
OF A TRULY OUTSANDING ENTREPRENEUR. IT STARTS WITH THE PERSON AND THE IDEA, AND GROWS
are never a single factor
TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
Rational choice institutionalism
INSTITUTIONALISM
Institutions are:
- culturally-specific
- moral templates
Individuals
“WHAT internalize
IS THE MOST POWERFULthe norms
LEVER associated
YOU CAN IMAGINE? with institutional
A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY roles (=>
IF IT’S IN THEidentity
HANDS
OF A TRULY OUTSANDING ENTREPRENEUR. IT STARTS WITH THE PERSON AND THE IDEA, AND GROWS
and preferences) TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
Individuals perceive their actions in a particular context
)
Studies of international Institutional theories
institutions
That said, since the experiences and perspectives of women and girls
were historically excluded from social theory and social science, much
INSTITUTIONALISM
feminist theory has focused on their interactions and experiences
within society in order to ensure that half the world's population is not
left out of how we see and understand social forces, relations, and
“WHAT IS THE MOST POWERFUL LEVER YOU CAN IMAGINE? A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY IF IT’S IN THE HANDS
problems.
OF A TRULY While most
OUTSANDING feminist theorists
ENTREPRENEUR. throughout
IT STARTS WITH THE PERSON ANDhistory
THE IDEA,have been
AND GROWS
women, today peopleTOofTHE allINSTITUTION.
gendersALL canTHREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
be found working in the
discipline.
By shifting the focus of social theory away from the
perspectives and experiences of men, feminist theorists have
created social theories that are more inclusive and creative
than those which assume the social actor to always be a man.
Part of what makes feminist theory creative and inclusive is
that it often considers how systems of power and oppression
interact, which is to say it does not just focus on gendered
INSTITUTIONALISM
power and oppression, but on how it might intersect with
systemic racism, a hierarchical class system, sexuality,
“WHAT IS THE MOST POWERFUL LEVER YOU CAN IMAGINE? A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY IF IT’S IN THE HANDS
nationality,
OF A TRULY and (dis)ability,
OUTSANDING ENTREPRENEUR. among
IT STARTS WITH other
THE PERSON AND THEthings.
IDEA, AND GROWS
TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
GENDER DIFFERRENCES
Some feminist theory provides an analytic framework for
understanding how women's location in, and experience of, social
situations differ from men's. For example, cultural feminists look at the
different values associated with womanhood and femininity as a
reason why men and women experience the social world differently.
Other feminist theorists believe that the different roles assigned to
women and men within institutions better explain gender difference,
including the sexual division of labor in the household. Existential and
INSTITUTIONALISM
phenomenological feminists focus on how women have been
marginalized and defined as “other” in patriarchal societies. Some
feminist theorists focus specifically on how masculinity is developed
“WHAT IS THE MOST POWERFUL LEVER YOU CAN IMAGINE? A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY IF IT’S IN THE HANDS
through
OF socialization,
A TRULY OUTSANDING and how
ENTREPRENEUR. its development
IT STARTS WITH THE PERSON interacts
AND THE IDEA,with the
AND GROWS
TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
process of developing
GENDER INEQUALITY
Feminist theories that focus on gender inequality recognize that women's location
in, and experience of, social situations are not only different but also unequal to
men's. Liberal feminists argue that women have the same capacity as men for
moral reasoning and agency, but that patriarchy, particularly the sexist division of
labor, has historically denied women the opportunity to express and practice this
reasoning. These dynamics serve to shove women into the private sphere of the
household and to exclude them from full participation in public life. Liberal
feminists point out that gender inequality exists for women in a heterosexual
INSTITUTIONALISM
marriage and that women do not benefit from being married. Indeed, these
feminist theorists claim, married women have higher levels of stress than
unmarried women and married men. Therefore, the sexual division of labor in
“WHAT IS THE
both the MOST and
public POWERFUL LEVER
private YOU CAN
spheres IMAGINE?
needs A BIG
to be IDEA, BUT
altered in ONLY
orderIF for
IT’S IN THE HANDS
women to
OF A TRULY OUTSANDING ENTREPRENEUR. IT STARTS WITH THE PERSON AND THE IDEA, AND GROWS
achieve equality inALL
TO THE INSTITUTION. marriage.
THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
STRUCTURAL OPPRESION
Structural oppression theories posit that women's oppression and inequality are a
result of capitalism, patriarchy, and racism. Socialist feminists agree with Karl
Marx and Freidrich Engels that the working class is exploited as a consequence of
capitalism, but they seek to extend this exploitation not just to class but also to
gender. Intersectionality theorists seek to explain oppression and inequality
across a variety of variables, including class, gender, race, ethnicity, and age. They
offer the important insight that not all women experience oppression in the same
way, and that the same forces that work to oppress women and girls also oppress
people of color and other marginalized groups. One way in which structural
oppression of women, specifically the economic kind, manifests in society is in the
gender wage gap, which shows that men routinely earn more for the same work
INSTITUTIONALISM
than women. An intersectional view of this situation shows us that women of
color, and men of color, too, are even further penalized relative to the earnings of
white men.
“WHAT IS THE MOST POWERFUL LEVER YOU CAN IMAGINE? A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY IF IT’S IN THE HANDS
In the
OFlate 20th
A TRULY century, ENTREPRENEUR.
OUTSANDING this strain ofITfeminist theory
STARTS WITH was extended
THE PERSON to AND
AND THE IDEA, account
GROWSfor
the globalization of capitalism TO and how its methods
THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREEof
AREproduction and
INTERTWINED’’- BILLof
DRAYTON
accumulating wealth center on the exploitation of women workers around the
HERMENEUTICAL PHENOMENOLOGY
“HISTORICAL EXEGESIS IS ONLY THE PRELIMINARY PART OF INTERPRETATION; APPLICATION IS ITS
ESSENCE. EXEGESIS WITHOUT APPLICATION SHOULD NOT BE CALLED INTERPRETATION AT ALL” - J.I.
PACKER
What is hermeneutic phenomenology in social
science?
Like phenomenology, hermeneutic
phenomenology is concerned with the life world or
human experience as it is lived. ... While Husserl
focused on understanding beings or phenomena,
INSTITUTIONALISM
Heidegger focused on 'Dasein', that is translated as
'the mode of being human' or 'the situated meaning
“WHAT IS THE MOST POWERFUL LEVER YOU CAN IMAGINE? A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY IF IT’S IN THE HANDS
ofENTREPRENEUR.
OF A TRULY OUTSANDING a human in the
IT STARTS world'.
WITH THE PERSON AND THE IDEA, AND GROWS
TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
Hermeneutic phenomenology is a qualitative research methodology
that arose out of and remains closely tied to phenomenological
philosophy, a strand of continental philosophy. Although
phenomenology’s roots can be traced back centuries, it became a
distinct philosophical project in the mid-1890s with the work of
Edmund Husserl. Husserl argued that we are always already in the
world and that our only certainty is our experience of our world, thus
to understand the structure of consciousness can serve as the
INSTITUTIONALISM
foundation for all knowledge (Husserl, 1970). Husserl’s project has
been extended, contested, and modified by countless philosophers,
including
“WHAT IS THEMartin Heidegger,
MOST POWERFUL Maurice
LEVER YOU Merleau-Ponty,
CAN IMAGINE? Jean-Paul
A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY IF IT’S IN THESartre,
HANDS
OF A TRULY OUTSANDING ENTREPRENEUR. IT STARTS WITH THE PERSON AND THE IDEA, AND GROWS
Emmanuel Lévinas, Jean-Luc Nancy, and Jean-Luc Marion, creating a
TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
vibrant and eclectic philosophical tradition.
In the mid-1950s, however, the phenomenological “method” was also
taken up by a group of non-philosophers in the Netherlands. They
were not interested in phenomenology as a philosophy but as a
unique way to understand human existence (van Manen, 2014).
Retrospectively, this group, comprised of pedagogues, physicians,
psychiatrists, and psychologists, were called the “Utrecht School.” They
were the first to adopt phenomenology as a distinct research
INSTITUTIONALISM
methodology and greatly influenced contemporary articulations of the
methodology including Max van Manen’s Phenomenology of Practice
andISAmadeo
“WHAT Giorgi’sLEVER
THE MOST POWERFUL descriptive phenomenological
YOU CAN IMAGINE? A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLYpsychology.
IF IT’S IN THE HANDS
OF A TRULY OUTSANDING ENTREPRENEUR. IT STARTS WITH THE PERSON AND THE IDEA, AND GROWS
TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
HUMAN-ENVIRONMENT SYSTEMS
“ A NATION THAT DESTROYS ITS SOILS DESTROYS ITSELF. FORESTS ARE THE LUNGS OF OUR LAND,
PURIFYING THE AIR AND GIVING FRESH STRENGTH TO OUR PEOPLE”- FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
Human-environment systems Systems which combine both human
and natural components to show complex interactions, and feedback
between them, are called human-environment systems. The most
internationally accepted framework for studying such systems is the
DPSIR model (drivers, pressures, state, impact, response). This
framework for human-environment systems recognises the human
activities which place pressure on the environment and how these
pressures modify the current state of the atmosphere, hydrosphere,
INSTITUTIONALISM
lithosphere and biosphere. This leads to impacts on the environment
as well as on social and economic systems. In turn, human society
attempts
“WHAT IS THEto problem-solve
MOST in order
POWERFUL LEVER YOU to remove,
CAN IMAGINE? A BIG IDEA,reduce
BUT ONLYor prevent
IF IT’S the
IN THE HANDS
OF A TRULY OUTSANDING ENTREPRENEUR. IT STARTS WITH THE PERSON AND THE IDEA, AND GROWS
drivers and pressures, restore the state of the environment and
TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
mitigate impacts.
INSTITUTIONALISM
“WHAT IS THE MOST POWERFUL LEVER YOU CAN IMAGINE? A BIG IDEA, BUT ONLY IF IT’S IN THE HANDS
OF A TRULY OUTSANDING ENTREPRENEUR. IT STARTS WITH THE PERSON AND THE IDEA, AND GROWS
TO THE INSTITUTION. ALL THREE ARE INTERTWINED’’- BILL DRAYTON
THANK YOU!