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Chapter 16, Collective Behavior, Social Movements, and Social Change Collective Behavior Social Movements Social Movement Theories Social Change in the Future
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Conditions for Collective Behavior Contributing factors: Structural factors that increase the chances of people responding in a particular way. Timing A breakdown in social control mechanisms and a corresponding feeling of normlessness. A common stimulus.
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Types of Crowd Behavior Casual crowds - people who happen to be in the same place at the same time. Conventional crowds - people who come together for a scheduled event and share a common focus. Protest crowds - crowds that engage in activities intended to achieve political goals.
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Types of Crowd Behavior Expressive crowds - people releasing emotions with others who experience similar emotions. Acting crowds - collectivities so intensely focused that they may erupt into violent behavior.
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Explanations of Crowd Behavior Contagion Theory - People are more likely to engage in antisocial behavior in a crowd because they are anonymous and feel invulnerable. Social unrest and circular reaction - the discontent of one person is communicated to another who reflects it back to the first person.
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Explanations of Crowd Behavior Convergence theory - focuses on the shared emotions, goals, and beliefs people bring to crowd behavior. Emergent norm theory - crowds develop their own definition of the situation and establish norms for behavior that fits the occasion.
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Types of Social Movements Reform movements seek to improve society by changing an aspect of the social structure. Revolutionary movements seek to bring about a total change in society. Religious movements seek to produce radical change in individuals and typically are based on spiritual or supernatural belief systems.
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Types of Social Movements Alternative movements seek limited change in some aspect of people's behavior. Resistance movements seek to prevent or undo change that has already occurred.
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Stages in Social Movements Preliminary stage - people begin to become aware of a threatening problem. Coalescence stage - people begin to organize and start making the threat known to the public. Institutionalization stage - organizational structure develops.
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Conditions Necessary for Social Movements Structural conduciveness Structural strain Spread of a generalized belief Precipitating factors Mobilization for action Social control factors
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