释义 |
social structure ThesaurusNoun | 1. | social structure - the people in a society considered as a system organized by a characteristic pattern of relationships; "the social organization of England and America is very different"; "sociologists have studied the changing structure of the family"social organisation, social organization, social system, structuresociety - an extended social group having a distinctive cultural and economic organizationfeudal system, feudalism - the social system that developed in Europe in the 8th century; vassals were protected by lords who they had to serve in warpatriarchy, patriarchate - a form of social organization in which a male is the family head and title is traced through the male linematriarchate, matriarchy - a form of social organization in which a female is the family head and title is traced through the female linemeritocracy - a form of social system in which power goes to those with superior intellectspluralism - a social organization in which diversity of racial or religious or ethnic or cultural groups is toleratedform of government, political system - the members of a social organization who are in powerclass structure - the organization of classes within a societyseparatism, segregation - a social system that provides separate facilities for minority groupssystem, scheme - a group of independent but interrelated elements comprising a unified whole; "a vast system of production and distribution and consumption keep the country going" |
social structure
social structure - any relatively enduring pattern or interrelationship of social elements, e.g. the CLASS structure.
- the more or less enduring pattern of social arrangements within a particular society group, or social organization, e.g. the 'social structure of Great Britain’.
No single agreed concept of social structure exists in sociology, despite its widespread usage. The definition employed depends upon the theoretical perspective within which the concept is used. For example, Herbert SPENCER was interested in showing how social structure, conceived as analogous with, if not identical to, a biological organism, became increasingly differentiated and more specialized as the result of'social evolution’. MARX, on the other hand, stressed the overriding importance of the basis (or infrastructure) and the more or less dependent superstructure, as the two main components of social structure. In general, disagreement exists as to whether the most decisive elements of social structure consist of the 'surface’ rules, roles and social institutions (e.g. PARSONS, 1951, or Nadel, 1957), or whether these arise from mechanisms and processes which are hidden from view but which underpin social life, as for MARX or for LÉVI-STRAUSS (see also STRUCTURE, STRUCTURALISM). Whilst a focus on the interrelation of social parts – and hence 'structural’ thinking – can be seen as one of the defining features of sociology, numerous reservations exist about the uses to which the concept of social structure is put. Disagreement and debate about the role of structural thinking in sociology derives from the differences of degree, if not of kind, which would seem to exist between the types of structures that exist in the physical and the biological world and social structures. Reservations exist particularly about the appropriateness of mechanical and biological analogies and the use of conceptions of HOMEOSTASIS, FUNCTION, SOCIAL SYSTEM as well as conceptions of TELEOLOGY in sociology (see FUNCTIONALISM). The fact is that social structures do not possess the relatively clear-cut ‘boundaries’ in time and space of many physical and most biological structures, nor do they possess the precisely identifiable tendencies to homeostasis possessed by organic structures. Reservations about structural thinking exist particularly in connection with functionalist thinking, but the identification of the ‘essential’ or central features of particular social structures, or types of social structure, is often controversial whether or not functional thinking is involved. Social Structure (in Russian, sotsial’naia struktura), the network of stable and regularized relations between elements of a social system, determined by the relations between classes and other social groups, the division of labor, and the nature of the social system’s institutions. A distinction is made between the social structure of society as a whole, which comprises all social relations, and the social structure of society’s subsystems and spheres, such as production, politics, science, and culture. Marxism-Leninism posits that economic relations (structure) determine all other social structures but emphasizes that the other social structures have an important effect on economic relations. A society’s class structure is of utmost importance. The requirements of public management necessitate the study of the social structure of the population in terms of other components, for example, occupation, nationality, sex, age, and culture. social structure Related to social structure: social stratificationSynonyms for social structurenoun the people in a society considered as a system organized by a characteristic pattern of relationshipsSynonyms- social organisation
- social organization
- social system
- structure
Related Words- society
- feudal system
- feudalism
- patriarchy
- patriarchate
- matriarchate
- matriarchy
- meritocracy
- pluralism
- form of government
- political system
- class structure
- separatism
- segregation
- system
- scheme
|