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1.1: Chapter Introduction and Objectives

  • Page ID
    214239
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    Learning Objectives
    1. Define and Analyze Social Problems: Students will define what constitutes a social problem, distinguishing between personal troubles and public issues, and identify the key characteristics that make a problem 'social'. This includes understanding how social problems are recognized and defined within a society, and the role of cultural, political, and economic factors in this process.
    2. Explore Sociological Perspectives and Theories: Students will gain knowledge of various sociological perspectives and theories used to analyze social problems. This objective involves understanding how different sociological frameworks, such as conflict theory, functionalism, and symbolic interactionism, interpret the causes, impacts, and solutions of social problems. Students will learn to apply these theories to analyze specific social issues, providing them with a multi-faceted understanding of societal challenges.
    3. Understand the Evolution and Research of Social Problems: Students will explore the continuity and change in social problems over time, understanding how social issues evolve and why some persist while others diminish. This includes learning about the methodologies used in sociological research to study social problems, such as surveys, interviews, and case studies, and how these methods contribute to our understanding and potential solutions of social issues today and in the past.

    The following text is remixed under the CC-BY License Social Problems: Continuity and Change v. 1.0 | Chapter 1 Understanding Social Problems | OER | published by Saylor Academy | 2012 | CC BY NC SA

    Understanding Social Problems

    As we move well into the second decade of the twenty-first century, the United States and the rest of the world face many social problems: poverty and hunger, racism and sexism, drug use and violence, and climate change, to name just a few. Why do these problems exist? What are their effects? What can be done about them? This new open textbook (free online, very affordable in other formats) from a student-friendly publisher, Unnamed Publisher, tries to answer these questions with the latest theory and research from sociology and other social sciences.

    The discipline of sociology began in Western Europe during the late 1800s and soon made its way to the United States. Many of the new American sociologists focused on the various social problems facing the United States at the time. This was perhaps especially true at two institutions: Atlanta University (now known as Clark Atlanta University) and the University of Chicago. Befitting their urban locations, sociologists at both universities were very interested in poverty and racial inequality, and they sought to use sociological theory and research to address these problems and, more generally, to improve society (Calhoun, 2007).Calhoun, C. (2007). Sociology in America: An introduction. In C. Calhoun (Ed.), Sociology in America: A history (pp. 1–38). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

    A. Javier Treviño (2011, p. 1),Treviño, A. J. (2011). Program theme: Service sociology. Program of the 61st Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Social Problems, 1. Retrieved from http://www.sssp1.org/file/2011AnnualMeeting/Final%20Program.pdf. recent president of the Society for the Study of Social Problems, refers to the vision and goals of these early American sociologists as service sociology, and he emphasizes that “early American sociology was primarily a reformist endeavor.” He adds, “Service sociology is a sociology of social problems intended to ameliorate conditions of life for those in need of assistance, and to insure and promote the welfare of the community. Motivated by care and compassion, a service-oriented sociology is aimed at helping people meet their pressing social needs. As such, service sociology involves the application of sociological knowledge combined with the expression of humanitarian sentiment.”

    In the spirit of early American sociology and service sociology, this book brings sociological insights to bear on the important problems of our time. Using the latest social science evidence, it discusses the dimensions and effects of various kinds of social problems, the reasons for them, and possible solutions to them.

    This first chapter begins our journey into the world of social problems by examining how sociology understands social problems and gathers research about them.


    1.1: Chapter Introduction and Objectives is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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