front 1 The sociological definition of social deviance | back 1 stresses social context, not individual behavior. |
front 2 Sociologists would consider crime to be a form of deviance | back 2 formal |
front 3 If a sociologist considered tattoos a form of deviance, they would categorize it as a type of deviance. | back 3 informal |
front 4 Which of the following is an example of informal deviance? | back 4 body piercing |
front 5 When a student violates customary norms, s/he is engaging in | back 5 informal deviance |
front 6 Which of the following statements about deviance is false? | back 6 Most deviant actions are deviant no matter what the circumstances. |
front 7 According to Durkheim deviance is functional because it | back 7 Helps members of society know what is considered normal behavior |
front 8 According to Durkheim, why do societies actually need deviance? | back 8 in order to recognize normal behavior |
front 9 In the immediate aftermath of the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, many Americans publicly demonstrated their patriotism. This is an illustration of Durkheim's belief that | back 9 deviance produces social solidarity. |
front 10 According to the text, the example of attitudes toward smoking in the U.S. demonstrates the concept that | back 10 perceptions of deviance are influenced by social change. |
front 11 Which of the following questions would a sociologist not be likely to ask about deviance? | back 11 Why do some types of people act more deviant than other types of people? |
front 12 How do sociologists define deviance? | back 12 As behavior that violates social norms |
front 13 Psychological explanations of deviance emphasize as the underlying cause of deviant behavior, unlike sociological explanations. | back 13 individual factors |
front 14 Which of the following questions about deviance is more psychological than sociological? | back 14 What is it about this person that causes them to be deviant? |
front 15 Explanations that emphasize the physical or genetic roots of deviant behavior are referred to as by sociologists. | back 15 the medicalization of deviance |
front 16 Which of the following is an example of the medicalization of deviance? | back 16 alcoholism |
front 17 The primary sociological criticism of the medicalization of deviance is that it | back 17 ignores the impact of the social structure in the creation of deviant behavior. |
front 18 Smoking as deviant emerged due to what social reality? | back 18 social movements |
front 19 Which of these statements about deviant behavior would be considered true from a sociological perspective? | back 19 Deviance may be an adaptation to the social structures in which people live. |
front 20 Functionalist theories of deviance | back 20 view deviance as necessary in order to clarify what the norms of society are. |
front 21 Durkheim's research on formed some of the framework for the functionalist understanding of deviance. | back 21 suicide |
front 22 A policy maker wants to address drug use with therapy. Which of the following is he or she advocating? | back 22 Medicalization of deviance |
front 23 Merton's structural strain theory traces the origins of deviance to | back 23 the tension between desired cultural goals and the means of achieving them |
front 24 According to Merton, members of the are most likely to experience the structural strain that produces deviance. | back 24 lower class |
front 25 Smoking as deviant emerged due to what social reality? | back 25 social movements |
front 26 Social control theory suggests that deviance occurs when: | back 26 a person's attachment to social bonds is weakened. |
front 27 Social control theory is based on the assumptions that | back 27 there is a common value system and most people feel some impulse toward deviance. |
front 28 Which of these statements about functionalist theory is false? | back 28 It explains how social norms first become established in society |
front 29 A criticism of the functional perspective of deviance is that it | back 29 does not explain why some people are able to impose their ideas judgments on others. |
front 30 When a wealthy and powerful executive engages in deviance representing his or her organization it is referred to as . | back 30 Elite |
front 31 Conflict theorists argue that | back 31 The power to define deviance is an important form of social control. |
front 32 A strength of conflict theory in terms of understanding deviance is | back 32 its insight into the significance of power relationships. |
front 33 A weakness of conflict theory in terms of understanding deviance is that it | back 33 Is less effective explaining forms of deviance other than crime. |
front 34 W. I. Thomas explained deviance as: | back 34 a normal response to social conditions. |
front 35 What is the original source of symbolic interactionist theories of deviance? | back 35 the perspective of the Chicago School |
front 36 The University of Chicago sociologist who defined deviance as a normal response to the social conditions in which people find themselves is | back 36 W. I. Thomas |
front 37 Differential association theory explains deviance by | back 37 emphasizing how deviance is culturally transmitted. |
front 38 The perspective that uses a micro approach to deviance includes | back 38 symbolic interactionism |
front 39 Which of these statements about deviant identity from a labeling perspective is false? | back 39 A deviance identity is nearly impossible to change. |
front 40 The strength of labeling theory is that it | back 40 acknowledges that the judgments people make about deviance have powerful effects. |
front 41 What is the sociological relationship between deviance and stigma? | back 41 People who are stigmatized are frequently labeled as deviant. |
front 42 A problem with differential association theory is that it | back 42 does not explain how people who are not members of deviant cultures become deviants. |
front 43 The perspective that uses a micro approach to deviance includes . | back 43 symbolic interactionism |
front 44 From a sociological standpoint, the situation of the rugby team stranded for months in the Andes demonstrates that eating human flesh | back 44 may be a rational response to a difficult situation. |
front 45 Anomie, as defined by Durkheim, is frequently referred to as a state of | back 45 relative normlessness caused by the breakdown of social influences. |
front 46 Durkheim used the term to refer to the condition existing when social regulation in a society breaks down. | back 46 anomie |
front 47 Durkheim referred to suicide associated with excessive regulation of individuals by social forces as | back 47 altruistic suicide |
front 48 According to many, the actions of the hijackers involved in the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks are an example of | back 48 altruistic suicide |
front 49 Which of the following is an example of egotistic suicide? | back 49 elder suicide |
front 50 How do sociologists explain the fact that women have lower rates of suicide than men? | back 50 Women are more embedded in relations of care and responsibility. |
front 51 The shooting of students and faculty at Virginia Tech in the spring of 2007 fits the pattern of Durkheim's Suicide. | back 51 egoistic |
front 52 Merton's structural strain theory traces the origins of deviance to | back 52 the tension between desired cultural goals and the means of achieving them |
front 53 The Ku Klux Klan and Neo-Nazis are both examples of which type of structural strain? | back 53 rebellion |
front 54 Merton's structural strain theory traces the origins of deviance to the tensions caused by the gap between cultural goals and the means people have available to achieve those goals. Merton noted that societies are characterized by both culture and social structure. | back 54 Robert Merton (1910-2003) |
front 55 A condition wherein a single role brings conflicting expectations is called role | back 55 strain |
front 56 Students are expected to spend a lot of time on their studies, | back 56 role strain |
front 57 Within a gemeinschaft society, how is social control achieved? | back 57 through an internal sense of belonging that member of society share |
front 58 In their study of groups of different sizes, sociologists have found that | back 58 primary groups are a major influence and an important source of social control. |
front 59 Social control theory suggests that deviance occurs when: | back 59 a person's attachment to social bonds is weakened. |
front 60 According to the social control theory, what is the primary reason that people internalize social norms? | back 60 they care what others think of them |
front 61 Social control theory is based on the assumptions that | back 61 there is a common value system and most people feel some impulse toward deviance. |
front 62 According to social control theory, deviant behavior occurs | back 62 when attachment to society breaks down. |
front 63 The historical persecution of witches is presented in the text as an example of | back 63 how dominant groups can exert control by marking some populations as deviant. |
front 64 Conflict theorists argue that | back 64 the power to define deviance is an important form of social control. |
front 65 Social Control | back 65 the process by which groups and individuals within those groups are brought into conformity with dominant social expectations. |
front 66 Social Control Agents | back 66 those who regulate and administer the response to deviance, such as the police or mental health workers. |
front 67 From the perspective of conflict theorists, social institutions | back 67 provide for some members of society more than for others |
front 68 Ethnic conflict is most likely within societies and between societies. | back 68 gesellschaft / gemeinschaft |
front 69 The fact that women and minorities, as well as members of lower social classes, are not treated equally within bureaucracies is focus of | back 69 conflict theory |
front 70 Which perspective is most likely to focus on the fact that individuals experience stress and alienation as a result of being subordinated within a formal organization? | back 70 conflict theory |
front 71 Conflict and functionalist theories of deviance share | back 71 an emphasis on the social structure in creating deviance. |
front 72 From a conflict perspective, all of the following at true, except, | back 72 powerless groups may be labeled deviant for small infractions |
front 73 A significant difference between functionalist and conflict theory is that | back 73 functionalism assumes the system works for the good of the whole, and conflict theory does not. |
front 74 According to the conflict perspective, when the elite in society violate norms or laws they are not considered deviant because | back 74 they have the resources to hide or mask their behavior. |
front 75 When labeling theory and conflict theory are linked they explain | back 75 why members of oppressed groups are more likely to be incarcerated or institutionalized. |
front 76 A weakness of conflict theory is its failure to recognize | back 76 that laws protect most people, not just the affluent. |
front 77 40. When teens perceive themselves as deviant because of who they are, they are using which sociological perspective? | back 77 symbolic interactionist |
front 78 Social labeling theory focuses on who in society can determine that others are deviant and are able to apply sanctions. This aspect of social labeling theory makes it most associated with . | back 78 symbolic interactionism |
front 79 Sociologists using a symbolic interaction perspective argue that a physical disability can become . In this case society devalues the status. | back 79 a stigma |
front 80 A is an attribute that is socially devalued and discredited. | back 80 stigma |
front 81 According to some sociologists, when some people are stigmatized | back 81 it reinforces "normalness" in others. |
front 82 Sociologists using a symbolic interaction perspective argue that a physical disability can become . In this case society devalues the status. | back 82 a stigma |
front 83 According to Sutherland's differential association theory, people become criminals when they | back 83 are more strongly socialized to break the law than to obey it. |
front 84 Youths raised with parents who are deviant are more likely to be deviant themselves. This is an illustration of | back 84 differential association |
front 85 John want to be a sociology major who studies the social cause of crime. He is majoring in | back 85 Criminology |
front 86 Which of the following problems are both the Uniform Crime Report and National Crime Victimization Survey subject to? | back 86 underreporting |
front 87 Studies of corporate crime find that | back 87 the deviant behavior is part of the routine activities of the corporation. |
front 88 Which of the following types of crime is the least likely to be rigorously enforced? | back 88 victimless crimes |
front 89 Studies of women's participation in crime indicate that | back 89 women's crimes tend to be extensions of their gender roles. |
front 90 crimes are those motivated by various forms of social bias. | back 90 Hate |
front 91 What is the pattern of race in prosecution and sentencing for crimes? | back 91 African American and Hispanic defendants receive longer sentences than White defendants, regardless of background. |
front 92 Labeling theorists argue that once a person is labeled deviant | back 92 it will be difficult for them to reestablish a nondeviant identity. |
front 93 Crimes are those motivated by various forms of social bias. | back 93 Hate |
front 94 The FBI views terrorism as: | back 94 a violent action to achieve political ends. |
front 95 Georg Simmel is known for his work with: | back 95 group size effects |
front 96 The sociologist who introduced the concept of primary groups is | back 96 Charles Horton Cooley |
front 97 Which of the following is an example of a primary group? | back 97 family |
front 98 Cooley's concept of primary groups | back 98 has been elaborated to include a variety of intimate relationships in groups. |
front 99 Which of these statements about primary groups is true? | back 99 a. Primary groups have a powerful influence on a person's self identity. |
front 100 are small and intimate; are larger and short-lived. | back 100 Primary groups; secondary groups |
front 101 Secondary groups are most likely to take on characteristics of primary groups | back 101 in times of high stress or crisis such as natural disasters. |
front 102 Sociologists have found that primary groups | back 102 fulfill a person's expressive needs. |
front 103 If Bobby joins a gang, he is joining a . | back 103 primary group |
front 104 Which of the following statements is true about the differences between primary and secondary groups? | back 104 Secondary groups are less intimate than primary groups. |
front 105 Primary groups provide for an individual's needsÍž secondary groups provide for an individual's | back 105 expressive; instrumental |
front 106 Which of the following situations is most likely to result in a secondary group becoming a primary group? | back 106 a neighborhood digging out after a blizzard has hit |
front 107 If a students uses musicians as a model for behavior then musicians are their . | back 107 reference group |
front 108 Which of the following is true of reference groups? | back 108 Reference groups are not "groups" in the sense that they involve interaction. |
front 109 Research on race and reference groups indicates that | back 109 positive representations of ethnic and racial groups raises the self-esteem of children of those groups. |
front 110 Which of these statements about reference groups is false? | back 110 Reference groups always provide good role models |
front 111 promote a sense of "usÍž" promote a sense of "them." | back 111 In-groups; out-groups |
front 112 Considering oneself as part of "people like us" is an example of being part of . | back 112 an in-group |
front 113 An out-group is all of these except: | back 113 is always a secondary group. |
front 114 According to attribution theory, when an outgroup member's behavior is unclear | back 114 it will be interpreted in a negative manner by in-group members. |
front 115 The sociological term for a set of links between individuals or between other social groups is | back 115 social network |
front 116 Which of the following is false about the formation of social networks? | back 116 Networks are most often formed in very conscious and formal ways. |
front 117 In his classic study of perception and group pressure, Asch found that | back 117 even rather gentle pressure was sufficient to cause an astonishing rise in the number of wrong answers. |
front 118 The results of Solomon Asch's classic study of conformity were that | back 118 individuals are likely to conform to group pressure, even if the group is objectively incorrect. |
front 119 Applied to a situation like the torture of Iraqi prisoners in American prison Abu Ghraib, Milgram's and Asch's findings would indicate that | back 119 the cause of the American soldiers' inhumane treatment of prisoners is partly the structure of the situation and group pressure. |
front 120 Which of the following is a criticism of Travers and Milgram's research? | back 120 Only one-third of the documents ever reached the targets. |
front 121 In the now famous Milgram Obedience Studies, the results demonstrated that | back 121 there is a significant difference between what people believe they will do and how they actually behave. |
front 122 The implications of Milgram's experiments on obedience to authority are that | back 122 it may be possible for any ordinary person to commit atrocities under the right conditions. |
front 123 Applying Milgram's research on conformity to the torture of prisoners by American soldiers that took place at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq demonstrates that | back 123 the reasons that prisoners were tortured by soldiers lay within the social structure and the group pressure of the situation. |
front 124 From a sociological standpoint, the most convincing explanation for the occurrence of risky shifts is | back 124 deindividuation |
front 125 Despite being warned of danger, NASA scientists proceeded with the launch of the space shuttle Challenger that exploded during launch. Sociological analysis of this situation finds it was caused by | back 125 a combination of risky shift and organizational ritualism. |
front 126 Voluntary organizations | back 126 have been organized to address a wide variety of issues. |
front 127 The overall purpose of the bureaucratic organization is | back 127 to maximize efficiency. |
front 128 Organization ritualism refers to | back 128 the way that rules in an organization are followed even if they do not serve the purpose they were originally meant to. |
front 129 The tragic cases of the Challenger and the Colombia are used to illustrate the point that | back 129 rigid conformity within an organization can be very dangerous. |
front 130 Which of the following is false in regard to patterns of discrimination within organizations? | back 130 Which of the following is false in regard to patterns of discrimination within organizations? |
front 131 The theory of organization that sees participation in an organization as a means of self-actualization is a type of | back 131 symbolic interaction theory |
front 132 Sociologists investigating social organization find that | back 132 it brings predictability to human behavior |
front 133 Sociologists use the term to describe the order established in social groups at any level. | back 133 social organization |
front 134 When a student joins an organization it will provide which of the following? | back 134 instrumental needs |
front 135 Formal organizations | back 135 are secondary groups that are organized to accomplish complex tasks efficiently. |
front 136 Which of the following is not characteristic of formal organizations? | back 136 They are independent of any other organization. |
front 137 The study of formal organizations represents an example of | back 137 macroanalysis |
front 138 AARP and the NAACP are examples of organizations. | back 138 normative |
front 139 The primary reason that people join normative organizations is | back 139 to pursue goals they believe are worthwhile. |
front 140 Voluntary organizations | back 140 have been organized to address a wide variety of issues. |
front 141 Which of the following is not an example of a coercive organization? | back 141 church |
front 142 Total institutions were described by Goffman as | back 142 coercive organizations. |
front 143 Large organizations that individuals join for specific purposes are referred to as organizations. | back 143 utilitarian |
front 144 Individuals often join organizations for monetary reasons. | back 144 utilitarian |
front 145 Sociologists have found that | back 145 all total institutions are coercive organizations. |
front 146 The overall purpose of the bureaucratic organization is | back 146 to maximize efficiency. |
front 147 Sociologists have found that the informal structure of an organization | back 147 develops largely among those most taken for granted in an organization. |
front 148 Organization ritualism refers to | back 148 the way that rules in an organization are followed even if they do not serve the purpose they were originally meant to. |
front 149 Despite being warned of danger, NASA scientists proceeded with the launch of the space shuttle Challenger that exploded during launch. Sociological analysis of this situation finds it was caused by | back 149 a combination of risky shift and organizational ritualism. |
front 150 The tragic cases of the Challenger and the Colombia are used to illustrate the point that | back 150 rigid conformity within an organization can be very dangerous. |
front 151 Alienation refers to the | back 151 psychological separation of a person from an organization |
front 152 Alienation is least common in organizations in which | back 152 leaders use democratic methods in decision making. |
front 153 Overall, the primary organizational principle that motivates McDonaldization is | back 153 control |
front 154 Which of the following is false in regard to patterns of discrimination within organizations? | back 154 In situations where minority employees have the same amount of education as Whites, promotions are given out equally. |
front 155 Rosabeth Moss Kanter's classic study of organizational structure indicated that | back 155 the stressful effects of tokenism on women and minorities can have very negative consequences. |
front 156 What are the effects of social class and race on people's roles within an organization? | back 156 People of upper and middle class backgrounds are more likely to be promoted than someone with a lower class background, even if they are of the same race. |
front 157 The central focus of is: positive functions contribute to unity and stability of the organization. | back 157 functionalist theory |
front 158 The theory of organization that sees participation in an organization as a means of self | back 158 actualization is a type of - symbolic interaction theory |
front 159 Which perspective is most likely to focus on the fact that individuals experience stress and alienation as a result of being subordinated within a formal organization? | back 159 conflict theory |
front 160 Weber analyzed the class characteristics of bureaucracy, which he referred to as the bureaucracy. | back 160 ideal type |
front 161 Which of the following is not characteristic of Weber's "ideal type" bureaucracy? | back 161 cooperative structures for accomplishing tasks |
front 162 The informal structure of a bureaucracy | back 162 follows the same rules and regulations as the formal structure. |
front 163 Which of the following statements about bureaucracy is false? | back 163 The informal culture of bureaucracy works to make all employees feel more connected and included. |
front 164 The focus on how the individual loses their sense of self and is overwhelmed by bureaucracy reflects which perspective? | back 164 symbolic interaction theory |
front 165 Sociologists who study the large patterns of social interactions that are vast, complex, and highly differentiated are using | back 165 macroanalysis |
front 166 Which of these would interest a sociologist who prefers macroanalysis of social interaction? | back 166 how laws governing family leave have affected families in the U.S. |
front 167 If a sociologist is studying groups he or she is using | back 167 macro level analysis |
front 168 The study of formal organizations represents an example of | back 168 macroanalysis |
front 169 Sociologists use the term to refer to the organized pattern of social relationships and social institutions that together comprise society. | back 169 social structure |
front 170 According to the text, social structures | back 170 are difficult to see for the untrained observer. |
front 171 Society is a network of: | back 171 social structures. |
front 172 Which of these is an example of something a sociologist would consider from the microlevel analysis of social interaction? | back 172 day to day life in a sorority house |
front 173 Sociologists distinguish six different types of societies based on | back 173 the complexity of their social structure and level of technology. |
front 174 The established position that one occupies within a social structure and that carries with it a degree of prestige is called a(n) | back 174 status |
front 175 When the goals are accepted and the means of attaining the goals are made available to the individual via the social structure, Merton called this | back 175 conformity |
front 176 Sociologists theorize that rampage shootings are best understood as | back 176 the combinations of personality and social structural variables |
front 177 Conflict and functionalist theories of deviance share | back 177 an emphasis on the social structure in creating deviance. |
front 178 In a society where mechanical solidarity exists | back 178 individuals share the same values, hold the same things sacred, and frequently play the same roles. |
front 179 When a person defines her identity as a mechanic, she is creating her | back 179 master or achieved status |
front 180 In a society marked by organic solidarity | back 180 individuals play a great variety of different roles and unity is based on role differentiation. |
front 181 The type of social solidarity that exists in the United States and other industrialized societies is solidarity. | back 181 organic |
front 182 Which of these is true about gesellschaft societies? | back 182 organic |
front 183 Those societies that are gemeinschaft are characterized by | back 183 no data |