UCSP (STATUES AND ROLES)
STATUSES AND ROLES
any position that an individual can occupy in society.
not ranked position but simply a label that implies certain roles that must be
performed
some statuses are acknowledged and recognized as prestigious
can change depending on the context (like you are a mother and a daughter)
💡 We occupy the status and play a role
STATUS
In our society, we are not only considered as a member but we are identified in
accordance with our statues
important in positioning and locating people in a social structure
💡 We occupy the status and play a role
Status Set
statuses that a person hold at a given time e.g. one can be a female, student,
daughter, and a wife
Ascribed Status
gives at birth or assigned later in life
Achieved Status
acquired willfully and consciously through effort, talent, decisions, and
accomplishment
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💡 DISTINCTION BETWEEN ASCRIBED AND ACHIEVED IS NOT ALWAYS
CLEAR
Master Status
status that has an exceptional importance for social identity, often shaping a
person’s entire life
e.g. one’s occupation often comprises this position like the presidency of
Noynoy Aquino, gender, age, and race are common master statuses, even your
academic bg
ROLES
refers to patterns of expected behavior attached to a particular status
the behavior of the individual doing the role should be in conformity with the status
he/she occupies
💡 We occupy the status and play a role
Role Performance
the expected behavior of people who occupy the status
some who occupy the status do not do what is expected of them to do
sometimes there is a conflict on how they should do it and how they actually do it
Role Set
a person has many more roles than statuses, as each status typically has multiples
roles attached
Robert Merton defines a role set as a number of roles attached to a single status
the role of a mother, who happens to be also a wife and a daughter to the parents
Role Conflict
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conflicting expectations arising from multiple roles
can threaten their ability to focus on the interest of their status
e.g. the role of the president who is pressured to execute the death penalty law but
is having conflict because of his/her religious belief.
Role Strain
occurs when individuals find the expectations of a single role incompatible, so that
they have difficulty performing the role
e.g. a supervisor who is often confronted w/difficulties in mingling with his
subordinates
React to Role Strain
Conformity
Innovation
Ritualism
Retreat- stop then go back
Rebellion
Role Exit
the process by which people disengage from social roles that have been central to
their lives
Developed by Helen Rose Fuchs Ebaugh in 1988.
SOCIAL STRUCTURES
Our manner of interaction and relationship is characterized by social ordering
social structure gives us a system of organization and stability in our day to day
activities and interaction with people
designed to meet the needs and responsibilities of people
like the transport system in the ph (if it doesn’t perform properly then our day-to-
day activities will be interrupted)
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Mechanisms of Social Control
Labeling Theory
when you label someone and they start to become it
controls what other people see
Gossip
always negative
Laws
laws control the society
Conformity
when ppl are free to do as they please, they usually imitate each other
Deviance
all criminal behavior is deviant, while not all behavior is criminal
deviating from the norm
interpreted according to circumstances or
can be violation or norms that have been formally enacted into criminal law
rooted in society
SOCIOLOGIST VIEW:
exist only in relation to cultural norms
actions cant be considered deviant unless it is correlated to particular norm; and
a norm that varies from one society to another
MORES
Crucial in maintenance of a decent and orderly
socially constructed and only determined by members of society\
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Social Institutions
family, political institutions, economic system, non-state, education, religion, health
KINSHIP
The primary socialization unit in Philippine society
relations formed between members of society developed through blood or
consanguineal relationships, marriage, or affinal relationships, adoption, and other
culturally accepted rituals
TYPES OF KINSHIP
KINSHIP BY BLOOD (Consanguineal)
achieved by blood affinity or by birth
e.g. parents-children; sibligs, nieces/nephews; aunts/uncles
PRINCIPLES OF DESCENT
A. Patrilineal Form of Descent
both males and females belong the the kin grp of their Father (agnatic
succession
only males pass on their children their family identity (like the surname)
Salic law; Fur (Sudan)
B. Matrilineal Form of Descent
persons are related if they can trace their descent through females to the
same woman ancestor
only daughters can pass on the family line to their offspring
Rain Queen (province of Limpopo, South Africa) her eldest daughter is the
heir, and males are not entitled to inherit the throne at all
KINSHIP BY RITUALS
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baptism, confirmation, and marriage
knowns as compadrazgo (godparenthood or sponsorship), dates back at least to
the introduction of Christianity and perhaps earlier
Suki Relationships
(market-exchange partnerships) may develop between two people who agree to
become regular customer and supplier
Patron-client Bonds
also are very much a part of prescribed patterns of appropriate behavior
Friendship
Filipinos also extend the circle of social alliances with friendship
KINSHIP BY MARRIAGE
a socially sanctioned sexual and economic union between men and women
(Howard and Hattis, 1992)
can be economic
ASPECTS OF MATE SELECTION:
Endogamy
requires a person to marry someone from its locality, own race, own class,
own religion
Exogamy
requires mate selection outside certain grps, usually family or certain kin or
from other categories (incest is taboo)
THEORIES ON MATE SELECTION:
Homogamy
tendency to select a mate with personal’s characteristics similar to one’s
own
the idea that “like marries like”
rich marries rich (like that)
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Heterogamy
tendency to select a mate different from one’s own
“opposite attracts” best characterize this idea
FORMS OF MARRIAGE
Monogamy
one woman and one man are married only to each other
Serial Monogamy
Several spouses in her lifetime, but only one spouse at a time (still
monogamy)
Polygamy
husband or wife has more than one partner at a time. (Saudi)
a. Polygyny
Marriage of a man to several woman
b. Polyandry
Marriage of a woman to several men
FAMILY
Set of people related by blood, marriage, or agreed upon relations who share
primary responsibility for reproduction and caring for members of society
basic and most fundamental unit in any society
FUNCTIONS OF FAMILY
Reproduction of the race and rearing the young
cultural transmission or enculturation
socialization of the child
providing affection and a sense of security
providing the environment for personality development and the growth of self
concept
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providing social status
FAMILY STRUCTURES BASED ON FORM
NUCLEAR FAMILY
Usually consists of two generations of family
parents and their own or adopted children residing in the same household
EXTENDED FAMILY
also known as the three generation family
consists of grandparents, their children, and grandchildren
TRANSNATIONAL FAMILIES
Families who live apart but who create and retain a “sense of collective welfare
and unity, in short “familyhood”, even across national borders
SEPARATED FAMILIES
Husband and wife separated from each other
SINGLE PARENT FAMILY
consists of one parent and a child or children residing in one household
RECONSTITUTED FAMILY (BLENDED FAMILY)
A family where one or more parents have been married previously and they
bring with them children from their previous marriage(s)
FAMILY CLASSIFICATION
On the basis of Lineage (Kinship Pattern)
to whom we are related in terms of property, inheritance, and emotional ties
PATRILINEAL FAMILY
Tracing kinship through the male line
MATRILINEAL FAMILY
Tracing kinship through the female line
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BILATERAL DESCENT
Both sides are regarded as equally important
On the basis of Authority (Who Rules?)
PATRIARCHAL FAMILY
Father is the head
MATRIARCHAL FAMILY
Authority is held by the mother
EGALITARIAN FAMILY
family in which spouses are regarded as equals
On the basis of residence “Where do we live?”
PATRILOCAL
A married couple lives or near the husband’s family
MATRILOCAL
A couple lives with or near the mother’s family
NEO-LOCAL
A married couple sets up a home separate from either side of their families
On the basis of Affiliation (Sociology in our times Kendall, 2017)
FAMILY ORIENTATION
Family into which a person is born and in which early socialization usually
takes place
FAMILY OF PROCREATION
Family that a person forms by having, adopting, or otherwise creating
children
SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE FAMILY
FUNCTIONALIST VIEW
Family serves six functions for society
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Reproduction
Protection
Socialization
Regulation of sexual behavior
affection and companionship
provision of social status
CONFLICT VIEW
In wide range of societies, husbands exercised power and authority within the
family
View family as economic unit that contributes to social injustice as it transfer
power, property and privilege from one generations to the next.
Inheriting the privilege or the unfortunate social and economic status
INTERACTIONIST VIEW
Interested in how individuals interact with each other, whether they are
cohabiting partners or longtime married couples, conducted studies on the
parents-child relationship
on how you interact with your children, or the children interacted with their
parents, the interaction of couples greatly effect their children
FEMINIST VIEW
Interest in family as social institution because “family” is the focus of women’s
work
urge social scientists and agencies to consider single parent, lesbian, and
single women
VARIATIONS IN FAMILY LIFE AND INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS
SOCIAL CLASS DIFFERENCES:
UPPER CLASS
The emphasis is on the lineage and maintenance of family position
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LOWER CLASS
Do not worry too much with “family name”.
more on survival and oftentimes children assume adult responsibilities—
including marriage and parenthood
RACIAL AND ETHNIC DIFFERENCES:
Native-American Families draw on family ties to lessen many hardships they
face:
Machismo
Sense of virility, personal worth, and pride in one’s maleness
Familism
pride in extended family
Muslim Marriage
is governed by complex set of social rules
INFLUENCES ON FAMILY STRUCTURE
INDUSTRIALIZATION
industrialization era increased geographical and social mobility, resulting in
the break down of extended family to the privatized nuclear family.
DIVORCE
govt providing financial assistance to single parents, many families broke
up
more single parent families were formed as well as reconstituted ones
CLASS
Low Incomes
tend to have a higher divorce rate due to financial conflicts
Lower Class Families
usually matrifocal or single parent
tend to contribute to the financial and social instability of the society
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Middle Class families
tend to have less kids than lower class ones although there is more
financial stability
Higher Class Families
have an average of one or two children
most higher class families are nuclear ones
STATE BENEFITS
state granting benefits to pregnant teenagers and single mothers
4Ps
provides conditional cash grants to the poorest of the poor, to improve
the health, nutrition, and education of children aged 0-18
PATTERNS AND TRENDS
MARRIAGE AND FAMILY
PARENTHOOD AND GRANDPARENTHOOD
Most important role of parents is socialization of children
“Boomerang generation” or “full-nest syndrome”
ADOPTION
Process that “allows for the transfer of legal rights, responsibilities, and
privileges of parenthood” to a new legal parent or parents
Transracial Adoption
adoption of non-white child by white parents
DUAL INCOME FAMILIES
emerge due to opportunities given to men and women, hardships, etc
SINGLE-PARENT FAMILIES
also accepted in our society
only one parent and child(ren)
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STEPFAMILIES
self explanatory
DIVORCE/ANNULMENT
accepted in some countries (divorce is not accepted in the ph)
COHABITATION
couples who choose to live together without marrying
REMAINING SINGLE
self explanatory
MARRIAGE WITHOUT CHILDREN
self explanatory
SAME SEX MARRIAGE
self explanatory
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