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A level sociology theory - paper 3 - A* key names/studies summary sheet

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7,000 word document, detailing all of the key sociology paper 3 sociological theory studies you need to know to achieve top marks in your exams. This document is much more condensed than the textbook, but still is detailed enough to use to springboard essay plans, essays or flashcards. I personally used this document to consitently get full marks in my sociology paper 3 exams, with it being best used alongside the sociology paper 3 crime and deviance summary sheet.

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CONSENSUS, CONFLICT, STUCTURAL AND SOCIAL ACTION THEORIES
Functionalism
Durkheim – father of functionalism
Organic analogy:
- Society is similar to a living being that adapts to its environment + is comprised on
component parts, each providing some action that helps humans live.
- Organs perform functions to keep up alive, would not exist without this purpose.
- Institutions exist (or don’t) for their function of the maintenance of society.
Functional analysis:
- Involves explaining why institutions exist in terms of the function they perform for society.
Social order:
- Most important requirement of society to function properly is social order.
- Establishing the essential similarities which collective life demands -> provide the basis for a
collective conscience = social solidarity.
Social facts:
- Sociology is the study of social facts – shared aspects of society (norms, laws, values, beliefs,
rituals and customs)
- Exist to shape and constrain behaviour of members of society.

Parsons – structural approach in sociology
Functional prerequisites:
Adaptation (economic) –
- Each society has to provide adequate standard of life for the survival of its members.
- Human societies vary from basic hunter gatherer societies to complex industrial societies.
Goal attainment (political)-
- Societies must develop ways of making decisions, - vary from dictatorships to democracies.
Integration (social harmony)-
- Each institution develops in response to particular functions.
- No guarantee that the different institutions will not develop elements that may conflict.
- Specialist institutions, which seek to limit potential conflict, develop.
Latency (individual beliefs and values)
- Pattern maintenance -> refers to problems faced by people when conflicting demands are
made of them. – the issue of identity
- Tension management -> if a society is going to continue to exist, then it needs to motivate
people to continue and belong to society + not leave/oppose it.

Pattern Variables (Parsons) –
- As societies develop, become more effective and efficient at meeting needs of members, =
shift in pattern variables (cultural values of a society)
Pattern variables A Pattern variables B
Ascription – status is ascribed -> determined by Achievement - status achieved through own
type of family a person is born into effort
Diffuseness -people enter relationships to Specificity – People enter relationships to
satisfy large range of needs. Relationship satisfy particular needs – customer and
between mother and child shopkeeper.
Particularism – individuals act differently Universalism -individuals act on universal
towards particular people – loyalty to family principles, everyone is equal before the law.
but not strangers Female P.O would arrest husband.
Affectivity – gratification is inevitable 0 people Affective Neutrality – gratification is

, act to gratify desires ASAP determined, saving money for a housing
deposit etc.
Collective Orientation – people put interests of Self-Orientation - people pursue own interests
the social groups which they belong before own first, rather than the social group.
interests

Parsons – structural differentiation
- Cultures become more structurally complex as society evolves.
- Simple societies rely on 2 institutions to carry out most functions (religion and family)
- Modern industrial societies develop new + more efficient specialist institutions.
- Schools, colleges, and uni does education instead of family.
- Welfare state takes over caring roles of family + churches.

Marxism
Marx ->

Development of society through historical epochs:
- Primitive communism, slave economy, feudal economy, capitalism, communism.

Mode of production-
- A complete economic and social system based on a different way of organising the
production of goods.
- Primitive communism – production based on hunting/gathering because there is no surplus
to accumulate, no social classes.
- All subsequent modes of production – society + production based on exploitation of one
class by another (Historical materialism), Feudalism – the feudal lords exploit serts who have
to surrender some of their produce to their masters, in capitalism, capitalists exploit the WC.
Social class-
- Some people are able to gain ownership + control over means of production.
- Land, raw materials, machinery, labour power and capital.
- In non-communist society, one class owns MOP, while other class is forced to work for them
as no means to create wealth themselves.
Economic base-
- Means of production and the class system (Relations of production)
- Ruling class own the means of production – constructs whole set of social relationships that
benefit them and allow them to exploit all others who do not share ownership of MOP.
Inevitable end of an epoch-
- Means of production develop faster than values of RC -> within each epoch, at the beginning
– RC values help tech to move forward. Overtime, values do not move that fast and begin to
get in way, eventually impede it.
- New challenging group arises with values/ideas that help the MOP advance + after a degree
of conflict, gain control of society + construct own relations of production, new epoch
started and process begins again.

The capitalist model:

Bourgeoise, Proletariat and petit bourgeoise-
- Bourgeoise -> own industry and commerce, all others who work for a wage, no matter the
prestige are proletariat.
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