Bureaucracy and Formal Organizations

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Organization Management
Advertisements

Social Interaction and Social Groups
Sociology: A Down-to-Earth Approach 7/e
Social Groups and Formal Organizations Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. This multimedia product and its contents are protected.
Sociology, Tenth Edition GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS. Sociology, Tenth Edition SOCIAL GROUP A social group is defined as Two or more people, Who identify with.
CHAPTER 4 Social Structure
CHAPTER 3 Social Structure
CHAPTER 6 Groups & Formal Organizations. Section 1: Primary & Secondary Groups.
Formal Organizations Chapter 4, Section 5.
Chapter 1: Introduction to Organizational Behavior.
Chapter 10 Improving Performance Through Empowerment, Teamwork, and Communication Learning Goals Describe why & how organizations empower employees. Distinguish.
> > > > Improving Performance Through Empowerment, Teamwork, and Communication Chapter 10.
Chapter 5 Groups, Networks, and Organizations. Chapter Outline  Human Relations  Social Processes  Groups  Social Networks  Complex Organizations.
© 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Chapter 5: Groups and Organizations. Objectives (slide 1 of 2) 5.1 Types of Social Groups Define what a social group is and describe types of groups.
GROUPS AND ORGANIZATIONS
Chapter 6 Groups and Societies
SOCIAL INTERACTION & GROUPS, ORGANIZATIONS, BEAURACRACIES.
McGraw-Hill© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Slide 1 SOCIOLOGY Richard T. Schaefer Education 16.
Introduction to Sociology, 5/e © 2012 BVT Publishing.
Chapter six: Social Groups and Formal Organizations.
CHAPTER 4 Social Structure
Groups and Organizations
Social Groups and Organizations Chapter 6. Learning Objectives  Distinguish between primary and secondary groups.  Explain the functions of groups.
SOCIAL INTERACTION & GROUPS, ORGANIZATIONS, BEAURACRACIES.
Social Groups and Formal Organizations
Social Groups and Formal Organizations Chapter 5.
Types of Social Interaction
Groups & Organizations Chapter 6. Groups  Social group: collection of people who interact frequently, share a sense of belonging, and have a feeling.
Social Interaction, Social Structure, and Groups Chapter 5.
Chapter Preview 4 Chapter Preview · Section 4 Formal Organization (pages 190–196) A formal organization is created to achieve some goal. Most are bureaucratic.
Formal Organizations Chapter 6 Section 4. Nature of Formal Organizations Formal Organizations: A group deliberately created to achieve one or more long.
GROUPS AND ORGANIZATIONS CHARACTERISTICS OF GROUPS 1. DEFINITION OF SOCIAL GROUP: TWO OR MORE PEOPLE WHO INTERACT FREQUENTLY AND SHARE A COMMON IDENTITY.
Ch. 6.3 Types of Social Interaction. Five types of Group Social Interaction – (Robert Nisbert) Cooperation – combining of effort to reach some goal. –
Chapter 4 Social Structure. Read to Discover What are the two major components of social structure? How do these two components of social structure affect.
1 BA116IU Introduction to Social Sciences Semester 1, School of Business Administration IU – VNU HCMC Instructor: Dr. Truong Thi Kim Chuyen USSH.
Social Status and Roles Review Status: a socially defined position within a group or society Role: the behavior (actions) expected of a person who holds.
Stratification and Inequality Part 3. how you see it…
CHAPTER 6 Section 4: Formal Organizations. JOURNAL #26 How can conflict be positive? Give an example.
Chapter 6. Group: consists of at least 2 or more people who share one or more goals and think, feel & behave in similar ways -in regular contact -take.
Chapter 5 Groups and Organizations. Social Group Two or more people who identify and interact with one another Category – a cluster of people who share.
Sociology & Groups Unit 4.
6.4 Formal Organizations. The Nature of Formal Organizations Deliberately created to achieve one or more long-term goals Deliberately created to achieve.
Social Structure and Group Behavior
Formal Organizations Unit 3: Socialization. Formal Organizations  We spend most of our lives interacting with secondary groups  Formal organization.
1 The Subject Is Organizations I. What is a Formal Organization? Special type of secondary group designated to allow a relatively large number of people.
ANSWERS Bureaucracies Worksheet. Where are bureaucracies most commonly used? Business, Education, Government, Religion.
THE FIELD OF SOCIOLOGY Chapter 1. HOW DID SOCIOLOGY DEVELOP?  Developed as an academic discipline in the 1800s  In France, Germany, and England  Social.
Social Structure. Exchange Happens whenever an interaction between people occurs Reciprocity Getting something in return when you give something Leads.
SOCIOLOGY A Down-to-Earth Approach 8/e SOCIOLOGY Chapter Seven: Bureaucracy and Formal Organizations This multimedia product and its contents are protected.
Chapter 6- Groups and Organizations. Types of Groups  Group: any number of people with similar norms, values, and expectations who interact regularly.
BureaucracIEs and formal OrganIZatIons
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
Social Interaction & Social Structure
Chapter 2: Management Theorists
GROUPS & ORGANIZATIONS
BureaucracIEs and formal OrganIZatIons
Module 19: Understanding Organizations
Principals of Bureaucracy
The Evolution of Management Thinking
Working for the Corporation
Social Structure, Social Groups, and Social Organizations
Bureaucracy and Formal Organizations
Groups and Organizations
5. Social Groups and Organizations
Bureaucracies.
Ch. 5: Social Interaction, Groups & Social Structure
Formal Organizations and Bureaucracies
Networks & Organizations
Social Groups and Formal Organizations
Presentation transcript:

Bureaucracy and Formal Organizations Chapter 7 Henslin’s Sociology: A Down to Earth Approach (Rubinfield and Zumpetta)

The Rationalization of Society How did the rationalization of society come about? The term rationalization of society refers to a transformation in people’s thinking and behaviors—one that shifts the focus from following time-honored ways to being efficient in producing results. Max Weber, who developed this term, traced this change to protestant theology, which he said brought about capitalism. Karl Marx attributed rationalization to capitalism itself.

What Are Formal Organizations? Formal organizations are secondary groups designed to achieve specific objectives. Their dominant form is the bureaucracy, which Weber said consists of a hierarchy, a division of labor, written rules and communications, and impersonality of positions—characteristics that make bureaucracies efficient and enduring.

What Dysfunctions Are Associated With Bureaucracies? The dysfunctions of bureaucracies include: Alienation Red tape Lack of communication between units Goal displacement Incompetence (as seen in the Peter principle-People rise to the level of their incompetence).

In Weber’s View… The impersonality of bureaucracies tends to produce alienation among workers—the feeling that no one cares about them and that they do not really fit in.

Marx’s View… Marx’s view of alienation is somewhat different—workers do not identify with the product of their labor because they participate in only a small part of the production process.

What Are the Functions of Voluntary Associations? Voluntary associations are groups made up of volunteers who organize on the basis of common interests. These associations further mutual interests, provide a sense of identity and purpose, help to govern and maintain order, mediate between the government and the individual, give training in organizational skills, help provide access to political power, and pave the way for social change.

What Is "the Iron Law of Oligarchy"? Sociologist Robert Michels noted that formal organizations have a tendency to become controlled by an inner circle that limits leadership to its own members. The dominance of a formal organization by an elite that keeps itself in power is called the iron law of oligarchy.

How Does the Corporate Culture Affect Workers? The term corporate culture refers to an organization’s traditions, values, and unwritten norms. Much of corporate culture, such as its hidden values, is not readily visible. Often, a self-fulfilling prophecy is at work: people who match a corporation’s hidden values tend to be put on tracks that enhance their chance of success, while those who do not match those values are set on a course that minimizes their performance.

What Does It Mean to Humanize the Work Setting? Humanizing a work setting means to organize it in a way that develops rather than impedes human potential. Among the attempts to make bureaucracies more humane are quality circles, work teams, and corporate day care. Employee stock ownership plans give workers a greater stake in the outcomes of their work organizations, but they do not prevent worker-management conflict. Cooperatives are an alternative to bureaucracies. Conflict theorists see attempts to humanize work as a way of manipulating workers.

How Do Japanese and U.S. Corporations Differ? The Japanese corporate model contrasts sharply with the U.S. model in terms of hiring and promotion, lifetime security, interaction of workers outside the work setting, broad training of workers, and collective decision making. Much of this model is a myth, an idealization of reality, and does not reflect Japanese corporate life today