COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOUR DEFINED. COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOUR The term "collective behavior" was first used by Robert E. Park, and employed definitively by Herbert.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Theoretical Issues: Structure and Agency
Advertisements

CHAPTER 17 Collective Behavior and Social Movements
Collective Behavior and Social Movements
17 Crowds and Collectives A detailed study of groups would be incomplete if it did not consider the dynamics of larger social collectives. For centuries.
Soc. 100 C17 Lecture 15 CB 1a Edit 4/3/97. A CB Knowledge Quiz 1b Will be discussed in class.
Collective Behaviour and Social Movements
“Social Movements as Politics” Charles Tilly. Introduction By 21C SM recognized as Global phenomenon: Zimbabwe, EU, Jubilee 2000, Costa Rica to Canada.
Lesson 1: Sociological Constructs and Theories
Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change
GOVT : Comparative Social Movements Course Review.
“Social Movements as Politics” Charles Tilly. Introduction By 21C SM recognized as Global phenomenon: Zimbabwe, EU, Jubilee 2000, Costa Rica to Canada.
Theories of Collective Behaviour
Professor Vicky Herbel October 8, 2014 St. Charles Community College
Social Movements Suggested sources: 1.Social Movement. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 2.Social Movement Theories. Professor E. Wilma van der Veen, University.
WarmUp: Journal Entry Respond to the following scenario in your journals. Please be detailed in your response. You are sitting in a movie theater watching.
Developing a Sociological Consciousness Sociology 10-Introduction to Sociology.
Social Problems.
Social Structure & Interaction in Everyday Life
Chapter 1 – Introduction Sociological Imagination Sociologists are concerned with how social conditions influence our lives an individualsSociologists.
THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES Unit 1 – Chapter 2. What is a Theoretical Perspective?
Developing a Sociological Consciousness
Collective Behavior & Social Movements
PROFICIENCY #2. The Prompt Analyze how common ethics or moral principles contribute to the structure of a society. Terms to know: Analyze: to examine.
Political Science An introduction.
Chapter 7 The Mass Media.
The Big 5.
Carlo Ruzza - Università di Trento 1 Social Movements Theories and Nationalism Three theories of Nationalism: (a) Primordialist (b) Modernist (c) Ethnicists.
Presenter: Ms. N. Lewis.  The pattern of living that directs human social life.  Everything that humans learn and the things they learn to use. ◦
Copyright © 2003 Allyn & Bacon1 Sociology Sixth Edition Chapter Twenty One Collective Behavior and Social Movements This multimedia product and its contents.
Collective Behavior and Social Movements
UNIT 5: WARMUP #2 In a hypothetical situation, you are sitting in a movie theater watching a film & the film breaks. How does the audience respond? Why.
COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR Any event during which a group of people engages in unusual behavior Any event during which a group of people engages in unusual behavior.
Lesson 12 Functionalism and Conflict Theory Robert Wonser SOC 368 – Classical Sociological Theory Spring 2014.
Sociological Paradigms on Collective Behaviour and Social Movements
Sociology.
Interpretative Theories BASIC IDEAS The social world is a world made up of purposeful actors who acquire, share, and interpret a set of meanings, rules,
What Are Social Movements? Consider this definition from Tilly (2004:3-4): "As it developed in the West after 1750, the social movement emerged from an.
Group Behaviour Collective/Mass/Crowd. Why do groups form? single variables such as:  anonymity of crowds  economic deprivation  alienation  strong.
Chapter One: Crime and Criminology. Criminology Is an integrated approach to the study of the nature, extent, cause, and control of criminal behavior.
The Real World Copyright © 2008 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. 1 Chapter 16 Social Change: Looking Toward Tomorrow.
+ Introduction to Sociology 1.1 – The Basics of Sociology.
Aliant videos. Lofland’s typology of Spontaneous Collective Behaviour CROWDMASS Fear - Panic Exit - Bomb Threats - Hostages -Stock Market Crash - Crime.
What are the factors that keep society together?
Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change
Explanations of Crowd Behaviour A. Contagion Theory B. Convergence Theory C. Emergent-Norm Theory.
Collective Behavior.
What is Research?. Intro.  Research- “Any honest attempt to study a problem systematically or to add to man’s knowledge of a problem may be regarded.
The CHICAGO SCHOOL Of SOCIOLOGY Robert Park W. I. Thomas Charles H. Cooley George Herbert Mead.
Collective Behaviour, Social Movements, and Social Change.
DEFINED.  Collective behaviour is a meaning-creating social process …in which…   new norms of behaviour that challenges conventional social action.
The Origins of Sociology The Founding Fathers. The Historical Context AC1.3 Explain the historical development of sociology and of the social context.
CONVENTION & DESTINATION MARKETING Prepared by Yooshik Yoon, Kyunghee University
In your notebooks: 1.) Write down the following names: 1. Auguste Comte 2. Harriet Martineau 3. Herbert Spencer 4. Emile Durkeim 5. Max Weber 6. Karl Marx.
Some Philosophical Orientations of Educational Research You Do What You Think, I Think.
Chapter 16, Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change Collective Behavior Social Movements Social Movement Theories Social Change in the.
Collective Behavior & Social Change
Chapter 8: Collective Behavior and Social Movements
Aggression as an adaptive response Group display of aggression in humans.
Social Change New societal behaviors with long term consequences.
COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOUR DEFINED.
SOCI 3006 – Collective Behaviour
Classic theories of crowd behaviour
The Sociological Perspective and Culture
Collective Behavior Chapter 17, section 1.
Contemporary Political Theory
Social Change and Collective Behavior
THE FIELD OF COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOUR
Defining Collective Behavior
Defining Collective Behavior
SOC 525: Social Movements Collective Behavior (or collective action) as a component of social movements.
Presentation transcript:

COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOUR DEFINED

COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOUR The term "collective behavior" was first used by Robert E. Park, and employed definitively by Herbert Blumer, to refer to social processes and events which do not reflect existing social structure (laws, conventions, and institutions), but which emerge in a "spontaneous" way.

Collective Behaviour defined Collective behaviour is a meaning- creating social process in which new norms of behaviour that challenges conventional social action emerges.

Examples of Collective Behaviour Some examples of this type of behaviour include panics, crazes, hostile outbursts and social movements Fads like hula hoop; crazes like Beatlemania; hostile outbursts like anti- war demonstrations; and Social Movements. Some argue social movements are more sophisticated forms of collective behaviour

SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Social movements are a type of group action. They are large informal groupings of individuals and/or organizations focused on specific political or social issues, in other words, on carrying out, resisting or undoing a social change.

CBs and SMs 19 th C. ROOTS Modern Western social movements became possible through education and the increased mobility of labour due to the industrialisation and urbanisation of 19th century societies

Tilly’s DEFINITION SM Charles Tilly defines social movements as a series of contentious performances, displays and campaigns by which ordinary people made collective claims on others [Tilly, 2004].]:

Three major elements of SMs For Tilly, social movements are a major vehicle for ordinary people's participation in public politics [Tilly, 2004:3]. He argues that there are three major elements to a social movement [Tilly, 2004

THREE ELEMENTS OF SMs 1.Campaigns: a sustained, organized public effort making collective claims on target authorities; 2.Political action: creation of special-purpose associations and coalitions, public meetings, solemn processions, vigils, rallies, demonstrations, petition drives, statements to and in public media, and pamphleteering; and 3. Public displays Democracy: participants' concerted public representation of worthiness, unity, numbers, and commitments on the part of themselves and/or their constituencies.

Three Theories of Collective Behaviour 1. CONTAGION-LE BONN 2. CONVERGENCE-symbolic interaction 3. Emergent Norms-functional interaction

TWO CRITIQUES 1. GAME THEORY-Berk 2. ROLE THEORY-McPhail

Resource Mobilization and Social Movements: A Partial Theory John D. McCarthyand Mayer N. Zald

CROWD PSYCHOLOGY 1.Crowd psychology-leads to CB and SM studies… 2.Crowd psychology is a branch of social psychology. 3. How ordinary people can typically gain direct power by acting collectively.

Crowds in History Historically, because large groups of people have been able to effect dramatic and sudden social change in a manner that bypasses established due process they have also provoked controversy. See American Revolution 1776 French Revolution 1789

LeBon The Crowd Crowd and group mind The whole is greater than the sum of its parts Crowds take on a life of their own Collective consciousness (Durkheim)

Symbolic Interaction critique LeBonn Human Interaction is not only caused by social interaction but also results from interaction within the individual… SI -(on-going though processes of how we define the situation.)

SI vs SF Structure vs Agency. TheTemporal-Present The focus is on the present, not the past…human are influenced by what’s happening now… Yes, we have values and belief learned through socialization, but at ese preconceived notions can break down…ie. Breaches.

Collective behaviour, symbolic interaction and the social act The social act is a "dynamic whole," a "complex organic process," within which the individual is situated, and it is within this situation that individual acts are possible and have meaning "

Symbolic Interactionism: Four Central Ideas 1.Instead of focusing on the individual and his or her personality characteristics (psychology) 2. How the social structures cause behaviour,(Functionalism) 3.Focus on social interaction. -dynamic, fluid activities within social settings 4.Collective behaviour involve groups of individual in social settings

Social Settings for Collective Behaviours 1.Rock concerts 2.Student rallies 3.Strikes 4.Protests 5.Mobs and lootings 6.Anywhere in which collectivities gather

LeBon The Crowd (a functionalist theory) Crowd and group mind The whole is greater than the sum of its parts Crowds take on a life of their own (see Durkheim) Collective consciousness

Comparison on CBs and SMs 1.Structural functionalist focus upon predictable roles, statuses, values 1.Symbolic interactionists describe human beings as unpredictable…free will, choices, assess situations…we are not automatons

Le Bon: Group Mind Le Bon’s idea that crowds foster anonymity and sometimes generate emotion has become somewhat of a cliché. Yet, it has been contested by some critics, such as Clark McPhail who points out that some studies show that "the madding crowd" does not take on a life of its own, apart from the thoughts and intentions of members.

Who concert Norris Johnson, after investigating a panic at a 1979 Who concert concluded that the crowd was composed of many small groups of people mostly trying to help each other.

SEE SOCIAL PROBLEMS (1987) The Who Concert Stampede: An empirical Assessment….

IRRATIONAL CROWD? However, it must be noted that if Le Bon often referred to the cliché of the irrational crowd, which was current in the 19th century and before (in particular in the field of criminology, which tended to describe crowds as irrational and criminal groups), he considered himself the founder of "crowd psychology

Le Bon Aristocrat afraid of `the herd’? Herd behavior describes how individuals in a group can act together without planned direction. The term pertains human conduct during activities such as stock market bubbles and crashes, street demonstrations, sporting events, episodes of mob violence and even everyday decision making, judgement and opinion forming.

19 th century Le Bon Le Bon was a pioneer in propaganda, which he considered a suitable and rational technique for managing groups, using for example communal reinforcement of beliefs, etc.

Nazi impact Le Bon's 1895 The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind influenced many 20th century figures, including Adolf Hitler, whose Mein Kampfinsisted on Le Bon's work.

Symbolic Interactionism: Four Central Ideas 1.Instead of focusing on the individual and his or her personality characteristics (psychology) 2.OR How the social structures cause behaviour,(Functionalism) 3.Focus on social interaction. -dynamic, fluid activities within social settings 4.Collective behaviour involve groups of individual in social settings

Social Settings for Collective Behaviours 1.Rock concerts 2.Student rallys 3.Strikes 4.Protests 5.Mobs and lootings 6.Anywhere in which collectivities gather

Convergence Theory Convergence theory holds that crowd behavior is not a product of the crowd itself, but is carried into the crowd by particular individuals. Thus, crowds amount to a convergence of like-minded individuals.

Irrational Crowds? Ralph Turner and Lewis Killian developed the emergent-norm theory of crowd dynamics. These researchers concede that social behavior is never entirely predictable, but neither are crowds irrational. If similar interests may draw people together, distinctive patterns of behavior may emerge in the crowd itself.

Crowds as Emergent Crowds begin as collectivities, acting, and protest crowds – norms may be vague and changing as when, say, one person at a rock concert holds up a lit cigarette lighter to signal praise for the performers, followed by others. In short, people in crowds make their own rules as they go along.

Emergent Norm Theory Decision-making, then, plays a major role in crowd behavior, although casual observers of a crowd may not realize it. Emergent-norm theory points out that people in a crowd take on different roles. leSome step forward as leaders; others become lieutenants, rank-and-file followers, inactive bystanders or even opponents.

Criticisms and Evidence Berk has used game theory to suggest that even during a panic in a burning theator actors may conduct themselves rationally. This is a striking suggestion, given that panics have been described as the purest form of collective behaviour.

Berk Berk contends that if the members of the audience decide that it is more rational to run to the exits than to walk, the result may look like an animal-like stampede without in actuality being irrational.

Clark McPhail Clark McPhail, mentioned above, has examined many actual human gatherings. In, he concludes that such assemblies can be seen as lying along a number of dimensions, and that traditional stereotypes of emotionality and unanimity often do not describe what happens

Summary The study of CBs and SMs began with LeBonn Moved to Chicago School Now sophisticated theories-convergence, emergent norms.. Key issue: to what extent does the social environment influence the individual..