A Presentation on Associations and Institutions.pptx
NikhilDhawan7
1,961 views
22 slides
Feb 22, 2023
Slide 1 of 22
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
About This Presentation
A Presentation on Associations
Size: 147.54 KB
Language: en
Added: Feb 22, 2023
Slides: 22 pages
Slide Content
ASSOCIATIONS AND INSTITUTIONS By: Hadiya Khanam
OBJECTIVES Understand the meaning of Associations and Institutions; Distinguish Associations and Institutions; Characteristics of Associations; How the concept of association differ from interest, community and institution; Understand the importance of different kind of viz. Social, political, economic associations in our social life; Identify different types of Institutions; and Understand perspectives on Institutions.
INTRODUCTION As we know people have different needs and desires. Consequently they also adopt different means to fulfil those needs and desires. Associations were known in earlier social formations but the nature of association as a form of social group in modern industrial society is different from earlier ones. As society gets more complex people’s needs and interest also expand. Interest or utility takes supremacy in more complex societies and begin to determine every sphere of life . Therefore, sociologically speaking groups which are established in order to protect and enhance people’s interests through certain specified rules and regulations in an organised manner are called associations
Institutions are set of rules that structure social interaction (Jack Knight, 1992). Institutions can be understood as code of conduct or a set of rules and guidelines for human activity. They structure human interaction through stated or implied rules that set expectations. Some examples of institutions are law, education, marriage, and family.
MEANING AND DEFINITION OF ASSOCIATION As per R.M MacIver, “an organisation deliberately formed for the collective pursuit of some interest or a set of interests, which its members share”. According to Morris Ginsberg, an association is “a group of social beings related to one another by the fact that they possess or have instituted in common an organisation with a view to securing a specific end or specific ends”. An association is “a group organised for the pursuit of an interest or group of interest in common”. Hence, humans have different interests and they establish different associations to fulfil them. No single association can satisfy all the interests of the individual or individuals.
MAIN CHARACTERISTICS OF AN ASSOCIATION Association-a Human Group : By the term group here means collection of social being who share distinctive social relationships with one another. As group which refers to reciprocity between its members. Therefore, here association as a group expressly organized around a particular interest. The idea of expressly organized differentiates association as social group from other social groups like primary and secondary groups or class and crowd.
MAIN CHARACTERISTICS OF AN ASSOCIATION Common Interests: It is not just collection of individuals but association as a distinct social group in terms of interest aspect of association. Because the association is organized for particular purposes, for the pursuit of specific interests, we belong to it by virtue of these interests. /Thus, interests are the foundational virtue around which different forms of associations are formed. Association as an organisation : Association denotes some kind of organisation . An association is known essentially as an organised group. The character of Associations and Institutions organisation gives stability and proper shape to an association. The idea of association as an organisation also determines the way in which the status and roles are distributed among its members.
MAIN CHARACTERISTICS OF AN ASSOCIATION Regulation of Relations: Every association has its own ways and means to regulate the behaviour and relations of its members. Therefore, they frame certain rules and regulations which may be in written or unwritten forms. Co-operative Spirit: One of the characteristics of association is its co-operative pursuit to fulfil its interests. This co-operative pursuit may be spontaneous as offering a helping hand to a stranger. It may be casual or in fact may be determined or guided by the customs of a community as in case of farmers assisting their neighbours at harvest time. But indeed association is guided by common interests of group members.
MAIN CHARACTERISTICS OF AN ASSOCIATION Membership is Voluntary : Membership in association is voluntary. It depends on individual choice as per their interests. In fact individuals are at liberty to join them. One can join athletic club for purposes of physical recreation or sport, to a business for livelihood or profits, to a social club for fellowship. Therefore, membership in an association has social limited significance. Associations as Agencies: Associations are means or agencies through which their members realize their similar or share interests. Such social organizations necessarily act, not merely through leaders but through officials or representatives as agencies. In a way associations normally act through agents who are responsible for and to the association. It also give a distinctive character of association as a legal entity
MAIN CHARACTERISTICS OF AN ASSOCIATION Association has Corporate Character: Association by virtue of being a social organisation may own property or funds which are held collectively and do not belong to individual members. It possesses rights and obligations, powers and liabilities which the members can not exercise as individuals. It is in this sense, corresponding to its peculiar method of functioning that association has a corporate character. Durability of Association : The nature of association may be permanent or temporary. There are some more enduring and exist on a larger scale like the state, family, religious organisations etc. However, some associations are very temporary in nature
Association and Community An association is deliberately formed for the purpose of fulfilment of certain common needs of people. But a community is more than any specific organization. In fact organization develops within it. For example, the business or the church or the club with the village or city or nation. Thus, we can call a city or a village a community but not a church. These organisations exist in terms of fulfilment of particular interest around which they are organizations. Therefore, there can be multiple of associations within a community. On contrast community is a natural development and is guided by more general principles than specific interests. In fact community is more free and wider than even many bigger associations. Moreover, the membership in community is concerned is more open. But the membership in association has limited significance. As a result community is relatively larger and more stable than associations.
As per the MacIver there are two major social organizations which may seem to lie on the borderline between association and communities are the family and the state. According to him family has worked more as a community in primitive and extremely rural societies. In such societies family has performed larger functions than what family is today. In these cases, people toil, play, and even worship almost wholly within the orbit of the family. ccIn fact family used to define the whole lives of its members. However, in a more complex and civilized societies the family function more as an association. Its functions are getting more and more limited and defined as the social division of labour increases. But here also in a complex society in the initial days of child family performs more than associational functions but gradually it transforms into an association of, often intense, but with limited interest. As eventually adult member of family leaves it and establish a new family.
Similarly, state is also an arena which is frequently confused with the community. However, MacIver says in reality the state is one form of social organisation , not the whole community in all its aspects. While talking about the associational character of state MacIver says that the state is an agency of peculiarly wide range, but nevertheless an agency. Though at times state takes the form of ‘absolutist’ or ‘totalitarian’ and try to control and define every aspect of human lives but the state would not become a community, but an association controlling the community
Association and Institution Though it seems similar however, sociologically speaking both the concepts differs in terms of their meaning, nature and in many more ways. However, it needs to be clarified that we belong to associations but not to institutions. In a way institutions are defined as established forms or conditions of procedure characteristic of group activity. While forming association which is a deliberate formation surrounding certain common interests also create rules and procedures to deliver the objective. Thus, every association has, with respect to its particular interest, its characteristic institutions. The church, for example, has its sacraments, its modes of worship, and its rituals. The family has marriage, that is, the institution of mating relationship; it has the home, the family meal, and so forth.
The state has its own peculiar institutions, such as representative government and legislative procedures. However, we belong to associations but not institutions. It broadly refers to the idea that when we consider something as an organized group, it is an association but when we consider as a form of procedure it refers to as an institution. Association denotes membership; institution denotes a mode or means of service. When we view a college as a body of teachers and students, we are selecting its associational aspect, but when we regard it as an educational system, we are selecting its institutional features. Therefore, we cannot belong to an institution. We do not belong to marriage or property systems or solitary confinement, but we do belong to families.
DEFINING INSTITUTIONS Institutions are components of the society that help to maintain order and stability through structuring human interaction and activity. Institutions manifest themselves in terms of overt or implicit rules that structure human interactions. Associations and Institutions They function through the members of a society being socialised into them. This makes the study of institutions critical to the field of sociology. Emile Durkheim referred to sociology as the scientific study of principle institutions. Institutions such as religion, family, education et cetera are still critical to the discipline of sociology
Bronislaw Malinowski 2 argues that, “every institution centres around a fundamental need, permanently unites a group of people in a co-operational task and has its particular body of doctrines and its technique or craft. Institutions are not correlated simply and directly to new functions. One need not receive one’s satisfaction in one institution.” Jonathan Turner defines institution as “a complex of positions, roles, norms and values lodged in particular types of social structures and organising relatively stable patterns of human activity with respect to fundamental problems in producing life-sustaining resources, in reproducing individuals, and in sustaining viable societal structures within a given environment” (Turner 1997: 6)
Institutions function well in so far as they maintain stable patterns of expectation, thought and action. The consistency and synchronisation among these elements determine the stability of the institution. It is often argued that institutions have equilibrium like qualities, in that, when disturbed, institutions reinstate their stability by reinforcing order as purpose or preference. Repeated and consistent behaviour that has rule-like qualities assumes normative weight and act in ways that stabilise the equilibrium status of the institution. Sociologists consider institutions not singularly as stable static phenomena but as process. Institutions have been understood in terms of the processes of institutionalisation , de- institutionalisation , and re- institutionalisation . They are generally considered as the “more enduring features of social life” (Giddens, 1984: 24).
PURPOSE OF INSTITUTION German Sociologist Arnold Gehlen (1980) suggested that human being seek to supplement their instinctual world with a cultural world. He suggests that this feeling of incompleteness and the attempt to supplement explains the emergence Associations and Institutions of institutions. In his book ‘the social construction of reality’ (1967) Thomas Luckman elaborates this idea and suggests that human beings compensate for their biological underdevelopment through surrounding themselves with a social canopy or religion. Institutions therefore make human life meaningful through connecting human beings to their natural environment
Types of Institutions Sociologists generally classify institutions into five clusters of major institutions. They are: Economic Institutions: These are the institutions that correspond to production, consumption and distribution of goods and services. Institutions of Social Stratification: These are the institutions that regulate and control differential access to social status and prestige. Kinship, Marriage and Family: These institutions control and regulate reproduction. Political Institutions: They are concerned with regulation and distribution of power. Cultural Institutions: They regulate religious, symbolic and cultural practices
REFERENCES Giddens, Anthony. (1984). The Constitution of Society: Outline of the Theory of Structuration. Cambridge: Polity Press. Hunt, Chester L. and Horton, Paul B. (2004). Sociology. New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill. Knight, J. (1992). Institutions and Social Conflict. Cambridge, NY: Cambridge University Press. Page, Charles H. and MacIver R.M. (1986). Society: An Introductory Analysis. Madras: Macmillan India Limited. Turner, Jonathan. (1997). The Institutional Order. New York: Longman . Weber , M. (1964). The Theory of Social and Economic Organization. New York: The Free Press.