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Collective Behavior Chapter 17, section 1
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Introduction In general, social behavior is patterned and predictable.
Collective Behavior: when social behavior is not patterned and predictable people make up new norms as they go along in unclear situations short lived, spontaneous, and emotional
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Characteristics of Collectives
Limited Interaction: short or non-existent Unclear Norms: no set rules Limited Unity: seldom share a group identity
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There are many different types of collectives.
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Crowd Definition: a temporary gathering of people
Casual Crowd: least organized, most temporary Example: lines to buy movie tickets Conventional Crowd: more structured, gather for a common reason Example: funeral, ball game Expressive Crowd: no apparent goal or purpose; common behavior includes cheering, dancing, and/or shouting Example: concert Acting Crowd: violent; intense emotions which are usually hostile, destructive, and focused on one target Examples follow
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Mob The most violent form of an acting crowd United by a violent goal
Usually has a leader or leaders Generally unstable and limited Example: lynch mobs
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More Acting Crowds Riots: erupt into generalized destructive behavior; less unified and focused than mobs; participants lack power Example: LA riots after the Rodney King beatings Panics: triggered by fear Example: Chicago Fire of 1903 Moral Panics: people become fearful, without reason, about behavior that appears to threaten society’s core values Example: Gay Marriage concerns
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Mass Hysteria: an unfounded anxiety shared by people scattered over a wide geographic area; involves irrational beliefs and behaviors spread by the population and fueled by the media; short lived Example: swine flu Fashions: enthusiastic attachments among large numbers of people for particular styles of appearance or behavior; subject to change Example: grunge look
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Fads: an unconventional object, action, or idea that a large number of people are attached to for a very short time Example: mood rings; pet rocks Rumors: an unverified piece of information that is spread rapidly from one person to another; changes from person to person Example: news about a classmate Urban Legends: stories that teach a lesson and seem realistic, but are untrue Example: bring one in for homework!
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Public Opinion: the collection of differing attitudes that members of a group of geographically scattered people have about a particular issue; often influenced by propaganda Example: views on equality
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Explaining Collective Behavior
Contagion Theory: crowds are so hypnotic, people give up their individuality Emergent-Norm Theory: traditional norms don’t apply in this crowd, so people have to act quickly Value-Added Theory: the pre-conditions for collective behavior build on one another—see next slide
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Pre-Conditions Structural Conduciveness Structural Strain
Growth and Spread of a Generalized Belief Precipitating Factors Mobilization for Action Social Control
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