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Understanding Local Networks and Influence

The document discusses four levels of social systems - household, barangay, state/country, and global networks. It explains that a local network is comprised of relationships within a household and barangay. A household consists of family members who make collective decisions, while a barangay is a village made up of interconnected households that work together and provide resources to each other. Local networks are influenced by and connected to larger social systems, with challenges shaped by relationships within families, communities, the nation, and global connections through technology and media.

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Jeff Ordinal
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2K views16 pages

Understanding Local Networks and Influence

The document discusses four levels of social systems - household, barangay, state/country, and global networks. It explains that a local network is comprised of relationships within a household and barangay. A household consists of family members who make collective decisions, while a barangay is a village made up of interconnected households that work together and provide resources to each other. Local networks are influenced by and connected to larger social systems, with challenges shaped by relationships within families, communities, the nation, and global connections through technology and media.

Uploaded by

Jeff Ordinal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

UNDERSTANDING

LOCAL
NETWORKS
RELATIONSHIPS WITHIN
A LOCAL NETWORK

NETWORK– group of two or more people who


communicate by exchanging information and
sharing resources.
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM
GLOBAL NETWORKS

STATE/COUNTRY

BARANGAY

HOUSEHOLD

BARANGAY

STATE/COUNTRY

GLOBAL NETWORKS
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

HOUSEHOLD/FAMILY
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

• HOUSEHOLD
 consists of members of a nuclear or
extended family.
 Members of the households get involve in
family affairs and family issues that require
collective decisions.
– Strong family ties– allows reciprocity, loyalty,
support, and interdependence
– Kanya-kanya Syndrome– inciting envy and
competitiveness
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

• HOUSEHOLD
 rich source of social analysis where a local
network can draw different resources
imperative in addressing issues within a
community.
 Connected to other households and to
larger social institutions.
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

BARANGAY/VILLAGE
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

• BARANGAY
 made up of interdependent household
relationships within a village.
 smallest administrative unit in the
Philippines.
 no household within a barangay is
completely self-sufficient.
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

• BARANGAY
 as a poltical unit, barangay council exerts
political authority over problems involving
barangay members.
 kinship
 sense of community– allows people to feel
obligated to help their neighbors who are
in need.
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

• BARANGAY
 mirrors the social structure of the larger
society.
 susceptible to external forces such as
changing political and economic
landscapes of larger societies and
international communities.
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

COUNTRY/STATE
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

• COUNTRY/STATE
 comprises the entire nation
 challenges and opportunities of a local
network are dependent on the kinds of
relationships that exist within a family and
a community.
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

GLOBAL NETWORKS
FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL
SYSTEM

• GLOBAL NETWORKS
It is the connections and
communications from local to
international communities
Nowadays, digital and social media
strengthens this connection.
The dynamic relationship between local
networks and larger social networks
describes what a network society is.
LOCAL KNOWLEDGE

 Body of community knowledge that


emerges organically from lives, routines,
experiences, practices, and strategies of
community people.
 Communities’ knowledge and experience
can inform policy makers and state
leaders on what policies need to be
created and how these policies should be
implemented.
FOCUS
QUESTION:
How do local
networks influence
us?

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