Sociology and Demography Perspectives On
Sociology and Demography Perspectives On
Sociology and Demography Perspectives On
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ABSTRACT
Sociology and demography, as distinct although related disciplines,
should haae different perspectiaes on matters concerning population. A rmiew
of sociologiul published material and organizational practices indicates that
sociologists haoe not been true to their discipline where population topics are
dealt with. Suggestions are giaen for alteing this tendency and sociologists
(especially those whose prior interests haoe not included populntion) Are en-
couraged to contribute to areal sociology ofpopulation.
At least since the time of August Comte, learned men and women have
attempted to define the scope and content of various scientific endeavors.
tacing the boundaries of the human sciences and making significant dis-
tinctions among them has been a difficult task and one which has created
scholarly conflicts and may sometimes have impeded scientific progress.
American universities act as if the matter is fairly clearcut, although
organizational differences appear. For example, the biological sciences
generally have departmental status within a larger college or division
that covers the natural and physical sciences. The social sciences are ac-
corded a separate place in the structure, and disciplines such as economics,
sociology, and political science fall neatly within. Other acknowledged
disciplines, whose concerns may span across these broader rubrics, are fre-
quently assigned to one or another college or division on the basis of the
discipline's principal interests, the slant of the department's programs, or
the predilection of some key faculty members. Thus, anthropology may
be found in the humanities division rather than the social sciences, psy-
chology may be treated as a natural science instead of a social or behavioral
science, geography may be joined to the earth sciences rather than be
located in the socral sciences, and so on.
The institutional base of these traditional disciplines becomes firmly
entrenched. Their stability liss not so much in the constancy of their subject
tPresidential address delivered at the annual meeting of the Southem
Sociological Society,
1982.
o 1982 The University of North Carolina Press. ffi37-n3218210m359-73901.50
359
360 / Social Forces Volume 61:2, December 1982
matter or their scientific approach, both of which may undergo change, but
through reinforcement of national and regional professional associations
and their journals, and the tendency for conservatism and inertia in aca-
demic organization and review. Activities of scholars in interstitial areas of
science are generally frowned upon because of their threat to the integrity
of the existing academic disciplines and the confusion it causes among
academic administrators. On occasion, such interstitial realms become rec-
ognized for their unique perspectives and contributions and may even be
recognized through establishment of a research center or laboratory in
which interdisciplinary study can proceed without upsetting the accepted
table of academic organization. It is rare for an interstitial area of this kind
to acquire the status of an academic department although one can find
examples, particularly in universities outside the United States.
Contemporary writers have acknowledged the difficulty of accepting
the existing academic order of the sciences. Piaget questioned Comte's
linear classification of the sciences, including the placement of sociology
above the other social sciences, and allowed as to how
In reality none of the sciences can be displayed on a single plane, for each involves
hierarchical levels . . . the order of the sciences must become circular . . . the sci-
entific system as a whole is caught up in an endless spiral, the circular motion of
which has no negative effects in itself but simply gives expression to the dialectic
between subject and object in its most general form (45).
"It is apparent,"
says Sills, "that the question 'What are the social sci-
ences?'is one to which no final answer can be given, since-like other
groupings of scientific and academic fields-the social sciences differ in
their scope from one generation to another. There are also within-genera-
tion differences" (xxi). Homans argues that "the social sciences together
constitute a single science, a science of human-and, if you like, even
animal-social behavior" (80).
Yet, the social sciences and the constituent disciplines have acquired
a firm identity. "]ust as the scientific revolution gave rise to an array of
highly specialized natural and physical sciences which we conveniently
label 'science,"' writes Mitchell, "so too we can now speak of a group of
disciplines whose interests are in rnan and society, which may be con-
veniently referred to as social science" (192). The National Association for
the Promotion of Social Science was founded in Britain in1857, and the
American Social Science Association came into being in 1865. The con-
ception of an all-embracing social science was not, however, accepted by
scholars in various disciplines until the twentieth century. In the meantime,
the separate social sciences became recognized and grew in both numbers
of members and their teaching, research, and professional development.
Perspectives on Population / 361
The central position given to population rather than to the individual has estab-
lished a close affinify of human ecology with demography. The point of contact lies
at the interface of the mathematical properties of population and ecosystem struc-
ture. . . . the population of interest to human ecology is not the aggregate of all
units conforming to a given definition but the aggregate of units which are subject
to inclusion in a given set of relationships, that is, the aggregate which possesses or
is in process of acquiring unit character. . . . Accordingly, human ecology finds
it necessary to pursue the meaning of population well beyond the conventional
denotation of demography (120).
Perspectives on Population / 363
lation and partly from the fact that other disciplines heat population as
peripheral to their central focus.
Population is of interest to biologists, but the substantial and critical
subject matter of biology is the structure and function of various units of
life as they interact with their broader environments. Population is of in-
terest to economists, but the central concem of economics is the allocation
of resources in the context of supply and demand and extraneous physical
and social conditions. Population should be of interest to sociologists, but
the essential subject matter of sociology is the way in which various social
forms (gloups, institutions, and aggregates) influence social behavior and
are in turn influenced by it.
In such a sense, the substantial and critical subject matter of demog-
raphy is variations in the size and structure of human populations and
how these variables interact with other aspects of societies. Only demog-
raphy views the workings of the population system and its components in
a total and systematic mannet although other disciplines deal with par-
ticular population linkages as they are related to the central concems of
those disciplines.
The confusion that exists in differentiating demography and the
sociology of population arises, in part, because the newer field of de-
mography does not have a departmental home at least anywhere in this
country, and it has been more or less adopted administratively by soci-
ology, and occasionally other social science departments. An integral treat-
ment of demography can only be found, if at all, in demographic centers or
institutes which are not necessarily tied to any other discipline.
Scholars who see themselves principally as demographers and sec-
ondarily as sociologists are academic schizophrenics, while those who re-
gard themselves as principally sociologists and, perhaps, secondarily as
demographers are often viewed as academic bootleggers who are car4zing
on some illicit activity using a respectable front. If one should profess to
being only a sociologist with a principal interest in population and no
demographer at all, he or she is to be suspected of academic deception and
watched carefully by the department chairperson. I would guess that all
three situations have their examples in academic sociology.
One of the main points I want to make is that historically, and at present,
the study of population has received incomplete and inadequate attention
within sociology. An examination of the treatment of population within
sociology shows a lack of comprehension of the basic relationships in-
volved as reflected in major writings in the field, introductory textbooks,
and professional association activities.
Perspectives on Population / 365
lation are usually found near the end of the book and, like the human
appendix, are accorded a physical but nonfunctional spot in sociological
analysis.
TWo textbooks in sociology which can be considered exceptions to
these generalizations have been out of print for some time and are not in
general use in introductory sociology courses. I refer to Kingsley Davis,
Human Society and Everett Wilson's Sociology: Rules, Roles, Relationships.
Although Davis treated population in more of a demographic than a soci-
ological framework in the two chapters devoted wholly to the topic, he is
exceedingly analytical and integrative in his approach. Wilson deals with
demographic conditions affecting the social order at the outset of his vol-
ume and reconsiders its importance atvarious points throughout the book.
It is also of interest to contemplate how population has fared in the
discipline's principal professional establishment, the American Sociologi-
cal Association. One rnight cite the number of persons with strong popula-
tion interests who have served as Presidents of the Association. Included
would be Fairchild, Hankins, Vance, Dorothy Thomas, Hauser, and Haw-
ley, all of whom happened also to have been Presidents of the Population
Association of America. Of the total membership of the Association, over
6 percent identified population as their area of competence in1975. These
speak of a rninor but healthy constituency.
Despite this type of structural representation, one can argue that the
subject matter of population has been increasingly neglected and poorly
understood within the Association. Over the past dozen or so years, while
the number of sessions on the annual meeting program has been expand-
ing the proportion devoted to population topics has been declining. (The
one exceptional year was when Hawley was President and program or-
ganz,er.)
On another plane, the extension some years ago of sections rep-
resenting subfields of sociology within the Association provided an op-
portunity for members with special interests to convene separately at the
annual meeting as well as guarantee an additional number of section-
related sessions on the program. Section designation required a minimum
of. 200 members subscribing to the section and paying section dues. So-
ciology of education was one of the first areas to be designated section
status. A Section on the Sociology of Population was approved in1977,
The title was consciously chosen to convey the idea that members were
interested in the section activities as sociologists rather than as demog-
raphers, and the significance of it was conveyed to the Association office
along with the official Section by-laws. Yet, to this day, the Association
generally omits the "Sociology o(' part of the title in its publications and
other communications. Population is still viewed as the sociological or-
phan. There are now however, close to 400 members of that Section.
368 / Social Forces Volume 61:2, December 1982
How, then, should population subject matter be integrated within the field
of sociology? Are there models we can point to that assist in achieving this
goal? Can we differentiate the sociological from the demographic perspec-
tive on population and yet enrich sociological knowledge in the realm of
population?
One problem in the past has been the tendency of many sociologists
to eschew the study of population because demography was the discipline
that examined such issues. But most sociological topics have links to other
disciplines. For example, psychologists, biologists, and sociologists can
each bring their perspectives to bear on deviant behavior, on what leads
persons to commit certain kinds of acts which society deems inappropriate.
In analyzing studies in this area, sociologists do not feel compelled to offer
psychological or biological explanations. They are best equipped to identify
social elements in the process and they offer sociological explanations.
It is most proper for sociologists to focus the sociological perspective
on demographic matters. In trying to account for social behavior with re-
gard to fertility, mortality, and mobility, and in attempting to understand
the basis for changing demographic structures, sociologists should employ
the conceptual apparatus of their discipline. Since these demographic con-
cems are not basically different from other social concems which occupy
the attention of the vast array of sociological specialists, sociologists should
try to relate their field's basic concepts to population variables.
Certainly, some notable attempts have been made in these direc-
tions. Ryder argued that the "concept of a population, which is closely
allied with the concept of a society, is brought closer to the concept of an
individual when the latter is viewed as a member of a cohort aggregate
which is in turn a constituent of a population. Thus one avenue is provided
in sociology for the perplexing questions of the relationships between the
individual and the societ;r" (460). Goldscheider advanced the notion that
populations and societies are systems which are interlocked. Hence,
changes in one system have impacts on the other. Ford and DeJong like-
wise emphasized element and system traits and processes which involved
population, social, and cultural variables, and suggested identifying these
in particular demographic situations.
Perhaps the most specific and detailed approach to interrelating
population and social variables has been offered by Broom and Selznick in
their introductory textbook. They present a taxonomy cross-classifying 9
Perspectives on Population / 359
Econorqy
Religion
Science
Goverrrnent
Leisure
Social change
370 / Social Forces Volume 61:2, December 1982
Conclusions
The gist of my remarks should be taken for their heuristic value. I have
tried to show that there is a largely uncharted area of undertaking within
the scope of the sociology of population. More importantly, sociologists
need to adopt a sociological perspective in communicating population
structures and processes to their students, and they should involve them-
selves in sociology of population research topics which have previously
been relegated to, and often inept$ handled by, demographers.
In a world in which population dynamics are made real to us day in
and day out, it is not sufficient for sociologists to routinely mimic the cen-
sus or vital statistician's descriptions of populations, or to decry the eco-
nomic or environmental plight of communities resulting from population
increase, or to dwell on what old man Malthus had to say nearly two cen-
turies ago, or to leave the subject of population along the wayside of socio-
logical analysis because it is something to be dealt with by demographers.
The challenge is out to sociologists far and wide, both those who
have concemed themselves with population topics before and those who
have not, to examine the agenda I have placed before you. The fruit of all
our work in this regard will brighten the cornucopia of sociological knowl-
edge in the years ahead and establish within sociology a tradition and
responsibility it has long avoided.
Notes
1. It should not be surprising, however, that demographers are older, on the average, than
other sociologists. There is hardly any exposure of students at the secondary school oi under-
graduate college level to demography, and many social scientists move into the field after
having spent some time in other areas of their original discipline. This tendency prompted
Rupert Vance to remark that demographers were just sociologists broken down by age and
2. Wilbert Moore has also referred to Broom and Selznick's textbook as a model for studying
sociology-demography interrelationships.
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