Examples of Fabian Society in the following topics:
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- In Britain, the democratic socialist tradition was represented historically by William Morris's Socialist League and, in the 1880s, by the Fabian Society.
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- The simplest definition of society is a group of people who share a defined territory and a culture.
- Social structure is the relatively enduring patterns of behavior and relationships within a society.
- In sociology, a distinction is made between society and culture.
- Culture is distinct from society in that it adds meanings to relationships.
- All human societies have a culture and culture can only exist where there is a society.
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- Medieval Europe was a pre-industrial feudal society.
- Pre-industrial societies are societies that existed before the Industrial Revolution, which took place in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
- Some remote societies today may share characteristics with these historical societies, and may, therefore, also be referred to as pre-industrial.
- Two specific forms of pre-industrial society are hunter-gatherer societies and feudal societies.
- Hunter-gatherer societies tend to be very mobile, following their food sources.
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- For functionalists, the family creates well-integrated members of society and teaches culture to the new members of society.
- In this way, society is like an organism and each aspect of society (institutions, social constructs, etc.) is like an organ that works together to keep the whole functioning smoothly.
- This approach looks at society through a macro-level orientation, which is a broad focus on the social structures that shape society as a whole.
- For functionalists, the family creates well-integrated members of society and instills culture into the new members of society.
- For functionalists, the family creates well-integrated members of society and teaches culture to the new members of society.
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- Mechanical solidarity is found in less structurally complex societies while organic solidarity emerges in industrialized societies.
- As part of his theory of the development of societies in, The Division of Labour in Society (1893), sociologist Emile Durkheim characterized two categories of societal solidarity: organic and mechanical.
- In a society exhibiting mechanical solidarity, its cohesion and integration comes from the homogeneity of individuals.
- Organic solidarity is social cohesion based upon the dependence individuals have on each other in more advanced societies.
- Give examples for societies held together by mechanical or organic solidarity
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- Most societies develop along a similar historical trajectory.
- Not all societies pass through every stage, and some societies remain at a particular stage for long periods of time, even while others become more complex.
- Still other societies may jump stages as a result of technological advancements from other societies .
- The majority of hunter-gatherer societies are nomadic.
- Pastoralist societies still exist.
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- The literature on relations between civil society and democratic political society have their roots in early liberal writings like those of Alexis de Tocqueville.
- Others, however, have questioned how democratic civil society actually is.
- It has also been argued that civil society is biased towards the global north.
- Partha Chatterjee has argued that, in most of the world, "civil society is demographically limited. " For Jai Sen, civil society is a neo-colonial project driven by global elites in their own interests.
- Formulate an argument which advocates for a strong civil society based on the definitions of civil society in this text
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- Durkheim believed that society exerted a powerful force on individuals.
- For Durkheim, the collective consciousness was crucial in explaining the existence of society: it produces society and holds it together.
- Durkheim worried that modernity might herald the disintegration of society.
- Also, in such societies, people have far fewer options in life.
- In traditional societies, people are self-sufficient, and therefore society has little need for cooperation and interdependence.
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- Deviance provides society the boundaries to determine acceptable and unacceptable behaviors in society.
- As traits become more mainstream, society will gradually adjust to incorporate the formerly stigmatized traits.
- On the one hand, society was divided into those marked as homosexuals and those unmarked (normative heterosexuals).
- What function does the notion of deviance play in society?
- In order to know how not to unsettle society, one must be aware of what behaviors are marked as deviant.
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- Durkheim argued that religion is, in a sense, the celebration and even (self-) worship of human society.
- He was deeply interested in the problem of what held complex modern societies together.
- Religion is very real; it is an expression of society itself, and indeed, there is no society that does not have religion.
- The more complex a particular society is, the more complex the religious system.
- As societies come in contact with other societies, there is a tendency for religious systems to emphasize universalism to a greater and greater extent.