These are face to face, long lasting relationships, important to us for socioemotional support.
What are primary groups?
100
A large formal organization characterized by explicit rules and impersonality, among other things.
What is a bureaucracy?
100
A position one holds in society.
What is a status?
100
Bad peers lead to bad behavior.
What does the differential association theory suggest about crime?
100
shared cultural expectations.
What are norms?
200
These exercise a strong influence over our behavior and attitudes; we compare ourselves to members.
What is a reference group?
200
Alienation, busywork, and rising to the level of incompetence.
What are some negative consequences of bureaucracies?
200
A social position a person works to earn.
What is an achieved status?
200
AKA public order crimes.
What is another term for victimless crimes?
200
Any behavior that violates norms.
What is deviance?
300
A person who consistently influence the behavior of group members and group outcomes.
What is a leader?
300
Rule by a small group of people.
What is an oligarchy?
300
This status overrides all the other statuses in your status set.
What is a master status?
300
AKA Driving While Black
What is another term meaning racial profiling?
300
The transformation of behavior from "badness" to "sickness."
What is the medicalization of deviance?
400
This kind of leader is good for group solidarity and morale.
What is an advantage of expressive leaders?
400
An increasing presence of the fast food business model in social institutions common to everyday life.
What is McDonaldization?
400
The social cohesion of preindustrial societies, in which people are united by shared experiences.
What is mechanical solidarity?
400
AKA an eye for an eye.
What is another way to describe retribution?
400
Affirming cultural values, clarifying moral boundaries, creating a sense of community, encouraging social change.
What are the four major functions of deviance?
500
This research is famous for studying how far people will go in order to show obedience to authority by ordering subjects to shock "learners" with electricity.
What is the Milgram Obedience Study famous for?
500
Monitoring, regulation, machine-like actions.
What is the "control" aspect of McDonaldization?
500
A type of study conducted by systematically violating norms in order to see how people work to restore normalcy.
What is an ethnomethodology?
500
Theft or change of property without threat of bodily harm.
What is property crime?
500
Attachment, Commitment, Involvement, Belief.
What are the four components of social bonds theory?