Deck 16: Social Change

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Question
Which of the following statements about social change is true?

A) It occurs exclusively during unmistakable periods in history.
B) It happens quickly.
C) It occurs rarely.
D) It is always happening.
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Question
What theory of collective behavior would suggest that when crowds come together a "mob mentality" takes over and rational thought disappears?

A) regressive action
B) relative deprivation theory
C) contagion theory
D) emergent norm theory
Question
In trying to understand the evacuation of the World Trade Center when it was first bombed in 1993,B. E. Aguirre,Dennis Wenger,and Gabriela Vigo argue that the more "the search for meaning in the milling process focuses upon defining the situation as serious,the quicker should be the mobilization of people and the initiation of collective behavior." What type of theory are they using to make this prediction?

A) technological determinism
B) emergent norm theory
C) contagion theory
D) cultural diffusion
Question
Anna's father tried a low-carb diet for a while,but stopped when he became aware of a new diet called "paleo." This is an example of:

A) a fad.
B) fashion.
C) a social dilemma.
D) contagion theory.
Question
In Lincoln,Nebraska,in the summer of 2009,two groups held rallies about health care,one supporting and one opposing legislation proposed to overhaul America's health-care system.At one point,the two groups went beyond holding signs and shouting slogans,and tempers flared.Objects were thrown,shoving matches broke out,and the police had to step in to break up the:

A) social movement.
B) riot.
C) rally.
D) march.
Question
The majority of households in the United States now have personal computers.This trend has been encouraged by the federal government for many reasons,including increased productivity,better education,and a better-informed public.At the same time,there has been an increase in acute injuries related to computers or computer tools.This is an example of:

A) the way individuals can change the world.
B) a fad, or a temporary trend.
C) the unintended consequences of social change.
D) the rapid pace of change.
Question
Today,it is not uncommon for parents to call their children because they need help performing a simple task on a computer,like ripping a CD and using an email program to mail a song to someone.Typically,parents teach children,not the other way around.What creates situations in which parents have to turn to their children for help?

A) war
B) emergent norms
C) social dilemmas
D) social change
Question
What do large numbers of people form when they come together?

A) a crowd
B) a collective behavior group
C) a riot
D) a fad
Question
In 2007 Jason fox and the Hood Presidents,a hip-hop group,uploaded a video of their song "Aunt Jackie" to YouTube,and almost instantly people started imitating the dance moves seen in the video.What is this an example of?

A) a public goods dilemma
B) mass behavior
C) a crowd
D) contagion theory
Question
You are walking across campus and see a large group of students gathered outside the student union listening to someone talk.You stop and try to listen,but you cannot get close enough.You ask another member of the crowd what is happening,and you are told that someone was proselytizing and that some students gathered to listen while others argued.What does this tell you about crowds?

A) A crowd does not have to share a geographic location.
B) In any crowd, people have many different motivations.
C) Crowds are illogical.
D) When people join a crowd, they lose their individuality and become part of something like a collective mind.
Question
The transformation of culture over time is called:

A) social revolution.
B) cultural evolution.
C) social iteration.
D) social change.
Question
"An agglomeration of men presents new characteristics very different from those of the individuals composing it.The sentiments and ideas of all the persons in the gathering take one and the same direction,and their conscious personality vanishes.A collective mind is formed,doubtless transitory,but presenting very clearly defined characteristics.The gathering has thus become what,in the absence of a better expression,I will call an organized crowd.. . .It forms a single being . . ." Which theory describes this quote?

A) public goods dilemma
B) tragedy of the commons
C) mass society theory
D) contagion theory
Question
When a large number of people either collectively or individually engage in similar behaviors,sociologists call it:

A) collective behavior.
B) riots.
C) mass behavior.
D) contagion.
Question
Around twelve thousand years ago,in what we now call the Middle East,people began to domesticate grain,a process that slowly spread around the world over the next six to seven thousand years.In 1984,8 percent of U.S.households had a computer;by 2008,that number was estimated to be above 70 percent.How do these two things relate to social change?

A) Neither is an example of social change.
B) Both are examples of social change, occurring at different rates.
C) The change in agriculture was a social change, but not the change in computer ownership.
D) The change in computer ownership was a social change, but not the change in agriculture.
Question
The relatively short-lived enthusiasm for leg warmers during the 1980s was an example of a:

A) social dilemma.
B) riot.
C) fad.
D) virtual community.
Question
What was one of the earliest theories of collective behavior?

A) contagion
B) emergent norms
C) resource mobilization
D) collective action
Question
Experts have posited that Syria's change from a stable country to an unstable country is due in part to an extensive drought.In part,then,the recent social change in Syria is due to:

A) a major physical event.
B) wide-scale demographic changes.
C) a new innovation or discovery.
D) war.
Question
Periods in which social change happens so rapidly that whole societies are dramatically redefined are called:

A) contagion theory eras.
B) mass behavioral evolutions.
C) social revolutions.
D) the tragedy of the commons.
Question
In recent years,salsa has overtaken ketchup as America's most popular condiment.This is an example of:

A) resource mobilization.
B) social change.
C) cultural leveling.
D) the political power of Hispanics.
Question
Until it was canceled due to safety concerns in 2009,thousands of UCLA students used to gather several times a year for an "undie run" as a way of relieving stress during finals.What is this an example of?

A) emergent norms
B) a public goods dilemma
C) the tragedy of the commons
D) collective behavior
Question
Many people think that nuclear proliferation can be best understood as a tragedy of the commons.If someone sees nuclear proliferation this way,which of the following might he or she propose as a solution?

A) a global grassroots movement demanding that governments destroy nuclear warheads
B) a better missile defense system that could make nuclear missiles obsolete
C) a series of technical innovations that could make nuclear inspections more effective by making illegal reactors easier to detect
D) better bomb shelters and new medical techniques to treat radiation poisoning
Question
Although it might cause a great deal of harm in the long run,individual companies have an economic interest in fossil fuels.What is it called when the pursuit of individual gain leads to loss for a larger group?

A) social change
B) a tragedy of the commons
C) a fad or fashion
D) a public goods dilemma
Question
The Shriners are a fraternity based on the Masonic principles of brotherly love,relief,and truth.They have roughly 375,000 members and 191 temples in the United States,Canada,and Mexico.The Shriners support Shriners Hospitals for Children,a system of twenty-two hospitals dedicated to improving the lives of children by providing specialty pediatric care.Why are the Shriners NOT a social movement?

A) It is very hard to imagine membership in the Shriners transforming anyone's life.
B) They are not dedicated enough to their work.
C) They do not seek to alter the status quo.
D) They do not have an ideological commitment.
Question
A public goods dilemma occurs when:

A) individual actions that may be rational by themselves lead to a collective disaster.
B) individuals must give something to a collective resource without necessarily taking anything in return.
C) an individual tries to cheat the system by getting more than his or her fair share of the commons.
D) individuals encourage others to participate in a social movement.
Question
Litter may not be the most pressing problem facing our society,but many people still wish that our streets and parks had less trash strewn about.However,it is difficult to convince people to clean these public areas,a problem that sociologists would call:

A) a public goods dilemma.
B) the tragedy of the commons.
C) resource mobilization theory.
D) community policing.
Question
Sometimes the motivations for large protests organized by college activists are criticized.Highly organized and attended protests in Washington,D.C.,are seen as "spring break" for activists,who take part more for an escape and to belong to something than for anything else.What theory would support this critique?

A) public goods theory
B) Postmodernism
C) the global village theory
D) mass society theory
Question
What do the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution,Nazism,birth control,and Protestantism all have in common?

A) They all began in the twentieth century.
B) They all are the products of social movements.
C) They all have had a negative effect on society.
D) They all are the products of a single charismatic leader.
Question
People who take advantage of a public good without contributing to it are called:

A) social dilemmas.
B) members of a virtual community.
C) free riders.
D) interest groups.
Question
A company that dumps toxic waste in a river to keep costs down will likely never get caught by environmental regulators.According to Garrett Harden,we can best understand the costs of this action in terms of a:

A) public goods dilemma.
B) relative deprivation.
C) tragedy of the commons.
D) social dilemma.
Question
When African Americans joined a protest movement because it was harder for them to vote than it was for white Americans,they were acting out of:

A) contentedness.
B) relative mobility.
C) relative deprivation.
D) deprived rationality.
Question
In 1968 Garrett Hardin described the tragedy of the commons.The classic example of the commons is a pasture where any community member can graze his or her livestock.What would be the modern equivalent of the commons?

A) mass public entertainment, such as the circus and rock concerts
B) natural resources, like water, air, forests, and plants
C) the Internet
D) shopping malls and retailers
Question
According to a study published in Conservation Letters,a research team led by biologist Brian MacKenzie ran computer models of the population dynamics of the bluefin tuna that suggest that,even if fishing were banned immediately,the population of bluefin in the Atlantic and Mediterranean oceans will most likely collapse.This is a serious issue for sushi lovers everywhere,and some sociologists call it:

A) technological diffusion.
B) ecoterrorism.
C) a tragedy of the commons.
D) a public goods dilemma.
Question
What do sociologists call behaviors that are rational for any given individual but that lead to disaster for an entire group?

A) cultural leveling
B) postmodern dilemmas
C) social dilemmas
D) fads
Question
When a recruiter for a social movement organization assumes everyone has the same reason for joining,he or she fails to understand that:

A) social movements must emerge naturally and cannot be organized by people.
B) individuals often have different understandings of themselves and their own participation in collectives.
C) people do not need a reason to join a social movement; they will join if they feel like it.
D) people cannot be convinced to support a cause that they did not support in the first place.
Question
A group is organizing to change cultural "codes" related to substance addiction.What would we call this group?

A) a crowd
B) a social movement
C) a riot
D) a protest
Question
How does a fad differ from fashion?

A) fads can mark you as belonging to a certain social group, while fashion is widespread in society.
B) fashion changes, while fads are stable, if only among a small group of people.
C) fads become very popular for short periods of time, while fashions are widespread styles of behavior that may last for longer periods of time.
D) fads and fashions are the same thing.
Question
When individual fishing boats harvest more fish each year in order to maximize profits while,as a result,threatening the fish population with extinction,it is called:

A) a public goods dilemma.
B) the tragedy of the commons.
C) relative deprivation.
D) sustainable consumption.
Question
According to Garrett Hardin,how can social dilemmas be solved?

A) with the proper application of science and technology
B) by changing the behaviors of the people involved
C) with specific technical solutions implemented by the government
D) by increasing the resources available for exploitation
Question
According to the text,when someone listens to public radio but never contributes during pledge drives,sociologists would consider that person a:

A) free rider.
B) parasite.
C) social tragedy.
D) community malcontent.
Question
An office has a "coffee fund," an old coffee can where people can toss change anytime they pour a cup of coffee.The fund can be used to buy new coffee for the office when the supply runs out.However,one individual always takes coffee and never puts any money in the fund,making him a:

A) dilemma.
B) resource mobilizer.
C) free rider.
D) prisoner.
Question
On average,participants in social movements are:

A) more marginal and more isolated than nonparticipants.
B) more socially engaged than nonparticipants.
C) less oriented toward conventional politics.
D) more alienated from society than nonparticipants.
Question
According to relative deprivation theory,why do people join social movements?

A) They are filling a psychological need to belong to something.
B) Social movements are a necessary part of a system of social stratification.
C) Joining a social movement is a rational response to inequality or oppression.
D) Social movements are good places to meet people and network.
Question
A social movement's long-term development often looks a lot like:

A) revolution.
B) failure.
C) social transformation.
D) reform.
Question
MoveOn.org was one of the first groups to successfully organize a large number of people around issues like partisan bickering and the power of corporate lobbies in Washington,in large part because it used innovative technology to locate,recruit,and organize supporters.This is exactly what ________ theory would predict.

A) mass society
B) relative deprivation
C) emergent social movement
D) resource mobilization
Question
for many years there have been efforts to organize teaching assistants on college campuses and form a union.Often these efforts fail because of practical reasons: there are limited volunteers,leaders graduate and leave,and the organizers have limited money for supplies.What theory would be interested in these reasons?

A) resource mobilization
B) relative deprivation
C) mass society
D) technological diffusion
Question
According to Armand Mauss,what happens in the second stage of a social movement's development?

A) The social movement becomes incorporated into institutions.
B) The social movement turns into a bureaucracy.
C) The social movement declines and disappears from view.
D) Like-minded individuals begin to organize.
Question
Which of the following people would be most likely to join a social movement?

A) a young woman who attends college and is involved in campus government and volunteers for local and state political campaigns
B) a disaffected loner taking lots of math classes but without a real social life or a good outlet for making friends or forming romantic relationships
C) a young man from the lower class who gets a job in a campus cafeteria and notices how well off the students he serves are
D) a single mother who works nights as a stocker at a grocery store and has relatives both in the Deep South and on the West Coast
Question
When activists begin to amass the things they need to sustain their movement-including volunteers,money,and office space-they are engaging in:

A) resource mobilization.
B) bureaucratization.
C) individual behavior.
D) coalescence.
Question
In the 1990s,many isolated individuals began to see the growth of federal prison populations as a problem.Later they would form groups to protest the policies that imprisoned so many,but first they were part of:

A) a fad or fashion.
B) cultural lag.
C) the incipient stage of a social movement.
D) the bureaucratized stage of a social movement.
Question
To what extent do the poorest members of American society participate in social movements?

A) more than any other class
B) in about equal numbers as other class groups
C) more than members of the upper class, but less than members of the middle class
D) less than any other class
Question
Why is the "decline" phase of social movements interesting?

A) After a movement declines, it always perishes.
B) After a movement declines, it is possible that the movement changes and continues.
C) The coalescence phase comes right afterward.
D) Social movements always decline very quickly after they begin.
Question
The "bureaucratization" stage of a social movement:

A) always happens at the beginning.
B) has not yet happened for the gay rights movement.
C) happened when American colonists transitioned from being revolutionaries to the official government leaders.
D) happened for the environmental rights movement with the release of the film An Inconvenient Truth.
Question
If you theorize that poor people join groups dedicated to keeping toxic waste dumps out of low-income communities because they want to enjoy the same standard of living and quality of life as the rest of society,then you are asserting:

A) structural functionalism.
B) relative deprivation theory.
C) mass society theory.
D) resource mobilization theory.
Question
People who believe that the government is not doing enough about climate change have gotten fed up and are starting to organize,which means they are starting to:

A) achieve their goals.
B) become part of the mainstream.
C) take notice of a situation but refuse to define it as a problem.
D) coalesce.
Question
When did African Americans gain the legal right to exercise their right to vote?

A) with the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act
B) shortly after the Civil War
C) with the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1919
D) with the passage of the fifteenth Amendment in 1870
Question
What is one reason the poor might participate less in social movements compared to college students with adequate financial support?

A) Social issues do not matter to the poor.
B) The poor have a different culture leading them to value different things.
C) They care more for their children.
D) They may have to work multiple jobs, leaving little energy left for activism.
Question
According to Armand Mauss,what happens in the "incipient" stage of a social movement?

A) The social movement begins to fade away.
B) The movement is absorbed by the very bureaucracies and institutions that it initially challenged.
C) The public just begins to take notice of an issue and define it as a problem.
D) Members of the social movement begin to organize and select leaders.
Question
Which historical event convinced American scholars that NOT all social movements can be explained in terms of the psychological needs of their members?

A) the Civil Rights Movement
B) Protestantism
C) McCarthyism
D) the rise of Nazi Germany
Question
A major achievement of social movements geared toward increasing employment equality for minorities and women has been the widespread adoption of equal employment officers in many large organizations.When they got to this stage,the social movements could be said to have:

A) succeeded.
B) failed.
C) coalesced.
D) bureaucratized.
Question
Sociologists who focus on how practical constraints and opportunities can help or hinder a social movement are using:

A) relative deprivation theory.
B) resource mobilization theory.
C) technological determinism.
D) activist politics.
Question
The Promise Keepers are a Christian men's organization that seeks to train men to be better fathers and husbands,while working to preserve what they call "traditional" family values in which the man is the head of the household and makes decisions for his wife and family.In this way,the Promise Keepers are:

A) secular.
B) regressive.
C) bureaucratic.
D) coalescing.
Question
Today,many young people face an unprecedented problem: what to do when their parents try to friend them on facebook or another social networking site.Technology has given us unprecedented ways to document our lives online,but some are not quite sure how to share this documentation with older generations.What is this problem called?

A) technological determinism
B) cultural imperialism
C) regressive social change
D) cultural lag
Question
If a social movement works to resist some kind of social change,or even to roll back elements of a change,it is said to be:

A) progressive.
B) cosmopolitan.
C) resistant.
D) regressive.
Question
In what sense is it now possible for a country to be "occupied" by an invisible invader that arrives through airwaves and wireless networks?

A) Spy satellites and other communications technology are increasingly advanced.
B) The U.S. government can eavesdrop on almost any form of modern communication.
C) Global positioning systems have allowed detailed mapping of previously inaccessible places.
D) It is almost impossible to block foreign countries' satellite broadcasts and Internet transmissions.
Question
"Buy Nothing Day" might best be described as a ________ social movement.

A) regressive
B) progressive
C) conservative
D) radical
Question
How did Marshall McLuhan believe that the world would turn into a "global village"?

A) Television and other media technology would link people all over the world.
B) Cultural imperialism would lead to greater homogenization.
C) Improvements in transportation technology would make tourism cheaper.
D) Mass production would ensure that people all over the world were using the same products.
Question
If you go to Indonesia on vacation and have a conversation with your cab driver about your favorite television program,this is possible because of:

A) cultural diffusion.
B) technological determinism.
C) cultural lag.
D) contagion theory.
Question
The use of in vitro fertilization solved a specific problem,but it seems to have created a wide range of ethical dilemmas and problems that were NOT anticipated when it was first invented.This is an instance of:

A) cultural leveling.
B) cultural imperialism.
C) dystopia.
D) cultural lag.
Question
The Occupy Wall Street movement demonstrates the efficacy of:

A) public protests.
B) hashtag activism and the new role technology is playing in social movement organizing.
C) tactics that led to a decline in income inequality in the United States.
D) the bureaucratization of a social movement.
Question
The English Premier League broadcasts its games to hundreds of millions of households in more than two hundred countries and is reportedly watched by more than a billion people each week.This is what Marshall McLuhan would call:

A) a social movement.
B) a global village.
C) television.
D) faith in technology.
Question
What is the process called by which societies lose their uniqueness and begin to resemble one another?

A) cultural lag
B) research mobilization
C) cultural leveling
D) cultural imperialism
Question
Bhutan's attempt to achieve Gross National Happiness,rather than a higher gross national product,reflects its attempt to:

A) adopt what it believes the "West" does correctly, while rejecting consumerism.
B) provide more material goods for all of its citizens.
C) increase foreign investment.
D) lure more tourists to the scenic mountain nation.
Question
Regressive or reactionary social movements are always:

A) the most common type of social movement.
B) motivated by prejudice or hate.
C) working to make sure things stay the same, or even to turn them back to an earlier point in history.
D) motivated by a desire to protect the environment.
Question
In what way has Bhutan resisted the forces of globalization?
A) Shopping is only allowed between 9:00

A)m. and 5:00 p.m.
B) The country has no electricity.
C) Internet merchants are banned.
D) In the capital city, there are no chain stores.
Question
What features of modern life do social movements like Critical Mass protest?

A) the crippling debt load carried by African nations
B) the way automobiles make other forms of transportation less feasible
C) the unethical and inhumane treatment of animals
D) violations of voting rights in poor and minority communities
Question
Hero of Alexander,a mathematician who lived in Rome,invented a steam engine in the first century CE.What does this say about William Ogburn's theory of technological determinism?

A) It strongly supports the theory.
B) It suggests that ancient Rome was less advanced than was previously suspected.
C) It demonstrates the ways in which technology always changes society.
D) It suggests that technological determinism cannot always explain social change.
Question
The process by which social structures and institutions become global rather than national is called:

A) globalization.
B) homogenization.
C) cultural diffusion.
D) postmodernism.
Question
What theoretical perspective argues that technology plays a defining role in shaping society?

A) technological determinism
B) symbolic interactionism
C) structural functionalism
D) idealism
Question
The spread of beliefs and practices from one cultural group to another is called:

A) cultural diffusion.
B) cultural leveling.
C) cultural lag.
D) culture shock.
Question
The World Church of the Creator,founded by Matt Hale,wants to stop both religious and racial integration of America.This makes his movement a:

A) tragedy of the commons.
B) postmodern movement.
C) voluntary simplicity movement.
D) regressive social movement.
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Deck 16: Social Change
1
Which of the following statements about social change is true?

A) It occurs exclusively during unmistakable periods in history.
B) It happens quickly.
C) It occurs rarely.
D) It is always happening.
D
2
What theory of collective behavior would suggest that when crowds come together a "mob mentality" takes over and rational thought disappears?

A) regressive action
B) relative deprivation theory
C) contagion theory
D) emergent norm theory
C
3
In trying to understand the evacuation of the World Trade Center when it was first bombed in 1993,B. E. Aguirre,Dennis Wenger,and Gabriela Vigo argue that the more "the search for meaning in the milling process focuses upon defining the situation as serious,the quicker should be the mobilization of people and the initiation of collective behavior." What type of theory are they using to make this prediction?

A) technological determinism
B) emergent norm theory
C) contagion theory
D) cultural diffusion
B
4
Anna's father tried a low-carb diet for a while,but stopped when he became aware of a new diet called "paleo." This is an example of:

A) a fad.
B) fashion.
C) a social dilemma.
D) contagion theory.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 117 flashcards in this deck.
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5
In Lincoln,Nebraska,in the summer of 2009,two groups held rallies about health care,one supporting and one opposing legislation proposed to overhaul America's health-care system.At one point,the two groups went beyond holding signs and shouting slogans,and tempers flared.Objects were thrown,shoving matches broke out,and the police had to step in to break up the:

A) social movement.
B) riot.
C) rally.
D) march.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 117 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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6
The majority of households in the United States now have personal computers.This trend has been encouraged by the federal government for many reasons,including increased productivity,better education,and a better-informed public.At the same time,there has been an increase in acute injuries related to computers or computer tools.This is an example of:

A) the way individuals can change the world.
B) a fad, or a temporary trend.
C) the unintended consequences of social change.
D) the rapid pace of change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 117 flashcards in this deck.
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7
Today,it is not uncommon for parents to call their children because they need help performing a simple task on a computer,like ripping a CD and using an email program to mail a song to someone.Typically,parents teach children,not the other way around.What creates situations in which parents have to turn to their children for help?

A) war
B) emergent norms
C) social dilemmas
D) social change
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 117 flashcards in this deck.
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8
What do large numbers of people form when they come together?

A) a crowd
B) a collective behavior group
C) a riot
D) a fad
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 117 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
In 2007 Jason fox and the Hood Presidents,a hip-hop group,uploaded a video of their song "Aunt Jackie" to YouTube,and almost instantly people started imitating the dance moves seen in the video.What is this an example of?

A) a public goods dilemma
B) mass behavior
C) a crowd
D) contagion theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 117 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
You are walking across campus and see a large group of students gathered outside the student union listening to someone talk.You stop and try to listen,but you cannot get close enough.You ask another member of the crowd what is happening,and you are told that someone was proselytizing and that some students gathered to listen while others argued.What does this tell you about crowds?

A) A crowd does not have to share a geographic location.
B) In any crowd, people have many different motivations.
C) Crowds are illogical.
D) When people join a crowd, they lose their individuality and become part of something like a collective mind.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 117 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The transformation of culture over time is called:

A) social revolution.
B) cultural evolution.
C) social iteration.
D) social change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 117 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
"An agglomeration of men presents new characteristics very different from those of the individuals composing it.The sentiments and ideas of all the persons in the gathering take one and the same direction,and their conscious personality vanishes.A collective mind is formed,doubtless transitory,but presenting very clearly defined characteristics.The gathering has thus become what,in the absence of a better expression,I will call an organized crowd.. . .It forms a single being . . ." Which theory describes this quote?

A) public goods dilemma
B) tragedy of the commons
C) mass society theory
D) contagion theory
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k this deck
13
When a large number of people either collectively or individually engage in similar behaviors,sociologists call it:

A) collective behavior.
B) riots.
C) mass behavior.
D) contagion.
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14
Around twelve thousand years ago,in what we now call the Middle East,people began to domesticate grain,a process that slowly spread around the world over the next six to seven thousand years.In 1984,8 percent of U.S.households had a computer;by 2008,that number was estimated to be above 70 percent.How do these two things relate to social change?

A) Neither is an example of social change.
B) Both are examples of social change, occurring at different rates.
C) The change in agriculture was a social change, but not the change in computer ownership.
D) The change in computer ownership was a social change, but not the change in agriculture.
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k this deck
15
The relatively short-lived enthusiasm for leg warmers during the 1980s was an example of a:

A) social dilemma.
B) riot.
C) fad.
D) virtual community.
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16
What was one of the earliest theories of collective behavior?

A) contagion
B) emergent norms
C) resource mobilization
D) collective action
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k this deck
17
Experts have posited that Syria's change from a stable country to an unstable country is due in part to an extensive drought.In part,then,the recent social change in Syria is due to:

A) a major physical event.
B) wide-scale demographic changes.
C) a new innovation or discovery.
D) war.
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k this deck
18
Periods in which social change happens so rapidly that whole societies are dramatically redefined are called:

A) contagion theory eras.
B) mass behavioral evolutions.
C) social revolutions.
D) the tragedy of the commons.
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k this deck
19
In recent years,salsa has overtaken ketchup as America's most popular condiment.This is an example of:

A) resource mobilization.
B) social change.
C) cultural leveling.
D) the political power of Hispanics.
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k this deck
20
Until it was canceled due to safety concerns in 2009,thousands of UCLA students used to gather several times a year for an "undie run" as a way of relieving stress during finals.What is this an example of?

A) emergent norms
B) a public goods dilemma
C) the tragedy of the commons
D) collective behavior
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k this deck
21
Many people think that nuclear proliferation can be best understood as a tragedy of the commons.If someone sees nuclear proliferation this way,which of the following might he or she propose as a solution?

A) a global grassroots movement demanding that governments destroy nuclear warheads
B) a better missile defense system that could make nuclear missiles obsolete
C) a series of technical innovations that could make nuclear inspections more effective by making illegal reactors easier to detect
D) better bomb shelters and new medical techniques to treat radiation poisoning
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22
Although it might cause a great deal of harm in the long run,individual companies have an economic interest in fossil fuels.What is it called when the pursuit of individual gain leads to loss for a larger group?

A) social change
B) a tragedy of the commons
C) a fad or fashion
D) a public goods dilemma
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23
The Shriners are a fraternity based on the Masonic principles of brotherly love,relief,and truth.They have roughly 375,000 members and 191 temples in the United States,Canada,and Mexico.The Shriners support Shriners Hospitals for Children,a system of twenty-two hospitals dedicated to improving the lives of children by providing specialty pediatric care.Why are the Shriners NOT a social movement?

A) It is very hard to imagine membership in the Shriners transforming anyone's life.
B) They are not dedicated enough to their work.
C) They do not seek to alter the status quo.
D) They do not have an ideological commitment.
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24
A public goods dilemma occurs when:

A) individual actions that may be rational by themselves lead to a collective disaster.
B) individuals must give something to a collective resource without necessarily taking anything in return.
C) an individual tries to cheat the system by getting more than his or her fair share of the commons.
D) individuals encourage others to participate in a social movement.
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25
Litter may not be the most pressing problem facing our society,but many people still wish that our streets and parks had less trash strewn about.However,it is difficult to convince people to clean these public areas,a problem that sociologists would call:

A) a public goods dilemma.
B) the tragedy of the commons.
C) resource mobilization theory.
D) community policing.
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26
Sometimes the motivations for large protests organized by college activists are criticized.Highly organized and attended protests in Washington,D.C.,are seen as "spring break" for activists,who take part more for an escape and to belong to something than for anything else.What theory would support this critique?

A) public goods theory
B) Postmodernism
C) the global village theory
D) mass society theory
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27
What do the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution,Nazism,birth control,and Protestantism all have in common?

A) They all began in the twentieth century.
B) They all are the products of social movements.
C) They all have had a negative effect on society.
D) They all are the products of a single charismatic leader.
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28
People who take advantage of a public good without contributing to it are called:

A) social dilemmas.
B) members of a virtual community.
C) free riders.
D) interest groups.
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29
A company that dumps toxic waste in a river to keep costs down will likely never get caught by environmental regulators.According to Garrett Harden,we can best understand the costs of this action in terms of a:

A) public goods dilemma.
B) relative deprivation.
C) tragedy of the commons.
D) social dilemma.
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30
When African Americans joined a protest movement because it was harder for them to vote than it was for white Americans,they were acting out of:

A) contentedness.
B) relative mobility.
C) relative deprivation.
D) deprived rationality.
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k this deck
31
In 1968 Garrett Hardin described the tragedy of the commons.The classic example of the commons is a pasture where any community member can graze his or her livestock.What would be the modern equivalent of the commons?

A) mass public entertainment, such as the circus and rock concerts
B) natural resources, like water, air, forests, and plants
C) the Internet
D) shopping malls and retailers
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32
According to a study published in Conservation Letters,a research team led by biologist Brian MacKenzie ran computer models of the population dynamics of the bluefin tuna that suggest that,even if fishing were banned immediately,the population of bluefin in the Atlantic and Mediterranean oceans will most likely collapse.This is a serious issue for sushi lovers everywhere,and some sociologists call it:

A) technological diffusion.
B) ecoterrorism.
C) a tragedy of the commons.
D) a public goods dilemma.
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k this deck
33
What do sociologists call behaviors that are rational for any given individual but that lead to disaster for an entire group?

A) cultural leveling
B) postmodern dilemmas
C) social dilemmas
D) fads
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k this deck
34
When a recruiter for a social movement organization assumes everyone has the same reason for joining,he or she fails to understand that:

A) social movements must emerge naturally and cannot be organized by people.
B) individuals often have different understandings of themselves and their own participation in collectives.
C) people do not need a reason to join a social movement; they will join if they feel like it.
D) people cannot be convinced to support a cause that they did not support in the first place.
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k this deck
35
A group is organizing to change cultural "codes" related to substance addiction.What would we call this group?

A) a crowd
B) a social movement
C) a riot
D) a protest
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k this deck
36
How does a fad differ from fashion?

A) fads can mark you as belonging to a certain social group, while fashion is widespread in society.
B) fashion changes, while fads are stable, if only among a small group of people.
C) fads become very popular for short periods of time, while fashions are widespread styles of behavior that may last for longer periods of time.
D) fads and fashions are the same thing.
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k this deck
37
When individual fishing boats harvest more fish each year in order to maximize profits while,as a result,threatening the fish population with extinction,it is called:

A) a public goods dilemma.
B) the tragedy of the commons.
C) relative deprivation.
D) sustainable consumption.
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k this deck
38
According to Garrett Hardin,how can social dilemmas be solved?

A) with the proper application of science and technology
B) by changing the behaviors of the people involved
C) with specific technical solutions implemented by the government
D) by increasing the resources available for exploitation
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k this deck
39
According to the text,when someone listens to public radio but never contributes during pledge drives,sociologists would consider that person a:

A) free rider.
B) parasite.
C) social tragedy.
D) community malcontent.
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k this deck
40
An office has a "coffee fund," an old coffee can where people can toss change anytime they pour a cup of coffee.The fund can be used to buy new coffee for the office when the supply runs out.However,one individual always takes coffee and never puts any money in the fund,making him a:

A) dilemma.
B) resource mobilizer.
C) free rider.
D) prisoner.
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k this deck
41
On average,participants in social movements are:

A) more marginal and more isolated than nonparticipants.
B) more socially engaged than nonparticipants.
C) less oriented toward conventional politics.
D) more alienated from society than nonparticipants.
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k this deck
42
According to relative deprivation theory,why do people join social movements?

A) They are filling a psychological need to belong to something.
B) Social movements are a necessary part of a system of social stratification.
C) Joining a social movement is a rational response to inequality or oppression.
D) Social movements are good places to meet people and network.
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k this deck
43
A social movement's long-term development often looks a lot like:

A) revolution.
B) failure.
C) social transformation.
D) reform.
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k this deck
44
MoveOn.org was one of the first groups to successfully organize a large number of people around issues like partisan bickering and the power of corporate lobbies in Washington,in large part because it used innovative technology to locate,recruit,and organize supporters.This is exactly what ________ theory would predict.

A) mass society
B) relative deprivation
C) emergent social movement
D) resource mobilization
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k this deck
45
for many years there have been efforts to organize teaching assistants on college campuses and form a union.Often these efforts fail because of practical reasons: there are limited volunteers,leaders graduate and leave,and the organizers have limited money for supplies.What theory would be interested in these reasons?

A) resource mobilization
B) relative deprivation
C) mass society
D) technological diffusion
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k this deck
46
According to Armand Mauss,what happens in the second stage of a social movement's development?

A) The social movement becomes incorporated into institutions.
B) The social movement turns into a bureaucracy.
C) The social movement declines and disappears from view.
D) Like-minded individuals begin to organize.
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k this deck
47
Which of the following people would be most likely to join a social movement?

A) a young woman who attends college and is involved in campus government and volunteers for local and state political campaigns
B) a disaffected loner taking lots of math classes but without a real social life or a good outlet for making friends or forming romantic relationships
C) a young man from the lower class who gets a job in a campus cafeteria and notices how well off the students he serves are
D) a single mother who works nights as a stocker at a grocery store and has relatives both in the Deep South and on the West Coast
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k this deck
48
When activists begin to amass the things they need to sustain their movement-including volunteers,money,and office space-they are engaging in:

A) resource mobilization.
B) bureaucratization.
C) individual behavior.
D) coalescence.
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k this deck
49
In the 1990s,many isolated individuals began to see the growth of federal prison populations as a problem.Later they would form groups to protest the policies that imprisoned so many,but first they were part of:

A) a fad or fashion.
B) cultural lag.
C) the incipient stage of a social movement.
D) the bureaucratized stage of a social movement.
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Unlock for access to all 117 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
50
To what extent do the poorest members of American society participate in social movements?

A) more than any other class
B) in about equal numbers as other class groups
C) more than members of the upper class, but less than members of the middle class
D) less than any other class
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k this deck
51
Why is the "decline" phase of social movements interesting?

A) After a movement declines, it always perishes.
B) After a movement declines, it is possible that the movement changes and continues.
C) The coalescence phase comes right afterward.
D) Social movements always decline very quickly after they begin.
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k this deck
52
The "bureaucratization" stage of a social movement:

A) always happens at the beginning.
B) has not yet happened for the gay rights movement.
C) happened when American colonists transitioned from being revolutionaries to the official government leaders.
D) happened for the environmental rights movement with the release of the film An Inconvenient Truth.
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k this deck
53
If you theorize that poor people join groups dedicated to keeping toxic waste dumps out of low-income communities because they want to enjoy the same standard of living and quality of life as the rest of society,then you are asserting:

A) structural functionalism.
B) relative deprivation theory.
C) mass society theory.
D) resource mobilization theory.
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k this deck
54
People who believe that the government is not doing enough about climate change have gotten fed up and are starting to organize,which means they are starting to:

A) achieve their goals.
B) become part of the mainstream.
C) take notice of a situation but refuse to define it as a problem.
D) coalesce.
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k this deck
55
When did African Americans gain the legal right to exercise their right to vote?

A) with the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act
B) shortly after the Civil War
C) with the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1919
D) with the passage of the fifteenth Amendment in 1870
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k this deck
56
What is one reason the poor might participate less in social movements compared to college students with adequate financial support?

A) Social issues do not matter to the poor.
B) The poor have a different culture leading them to value different things.
C) They care more for their children.
D) They may have to work multiple jobs, leaving little energy left for activism.
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k this deck
57
According to Armand Mauss,what happens in the "incipient" stage of a social movement?

A) The social movement begins to fade away.
B) The movement is absorbed by the very bureaucracies and institutions that it initially challenged.
C) The public just begins to take notice of an issue and define it as a problem.
D) Members of the social movement begin to organize and select leaders.
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k this deck
58
Which historical event convinced American scholars that NOT all social movements can be explained in terms of the psychological needs of their members?

A) the Civil Rights Movement
B) Protestantism
C) McCarthyism
D) the rise of Nazi Germany
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k this deck
59
A major achievement of social movements geared toward increasing employment equality for minorities and women has been the widespread adoption of equal employment officers in many large organizations.When they got to this stage,the social movements could be said to have:

A) succeeded.
B) failed.
C) coalesced.
D) bureaucratized.
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k this deck
60
Sociologists who focus on how practical constraints and opportunities can help or hinder a social movement are using:

A) relative deprivation theory.
B) resource mobilization theory.
C) technological determinism.
D) activist politics.
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k this deck
61
The Promise Keepers are a Christian men's organization that seeks to train men to be better fathers and husbands,while working to preserve what they call "traditional" family values in which the man is the head of the household and makes decisions for his wife and family.In this way,the Promise Keepers are:

A) secular.
B) regressive.
C) bureaucratic.
D) coalescing.
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k this deck
62
Today,many young people face an unprecedented problem: what to do when their parents try to friend them on facebook or another social networking site.Technology has given us unprecedented ways to document our lives online,but some are not quite sure how to share this documentation with older generations.What is this problem called?

A) technological determinism
B) cultural imperialism
C) regressive social change
D) cultural lag
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63
If a social movement works to resist some kind of social change,or even to roll back elements of a change,it is said to be:

A) progressive.
B) cosmopolitan.
C) resistant.
D) regressive.
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64
In what sense is it now possible for a country to be "occupied" by an invisible invader that arrives through airwaves and wireless networks?

A) Spy satellites and other communications technology are increasingly advanced.
B) The U.S. government can eavesdrop on almost any form of modern communication.
C) Global positioning systems have allowed detailed mapping of previously inaccessible places.
D) It is almost impossible to block foreign countries' satellite broadcasts and Internet transmissions.
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65
"Buy Nothing Day" might best be described as a ________ social movement.

A) regressive
B) progressive
C) conservative
D) radical
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k this deck
66
How did Marshall McLuhan believe that the world would turn into a "global village"?

A) Television and other media technology would link people all over the world.
B) Cultural imperialism would lead to greater homogenization.
C) Improvements in transportation technology would make tourism cheaper.
D) Mass production would ensure that people all over the world were using the same products.
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k this deck
67
If you go to Indonesia on vacation and have a conversation with your cab driver about your favorite television program,this is possible because of:

A) cultural diffusion.
B) technological determinism.
C) cultural lag.
D) contagion theory.
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68
The use of in vitro fertilization solved a specific problem,but it seems to have created a wide range of ethical dilemmas and problems that were NOT anticipated when it was first invented.This is an instance of:

A) cultural leveling.
B) cultural imperialism.
C) dystopia.
D) cultural lag.
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k this deck
69
The Occupy Wall Street movement demonstrates the efficacy of:

A) public protests.
B) hashtag activism and the new role technology is playing in social movement organizing.
C) tactics that led to a decline in income inequality in the United States.
D) the bureaucratization of a social movement.
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70
The English Premier League broadcasts its games to hundreds of millions of households in more than two hundred countries and is reportedly watched by more than a billion people each week.This is what Marshall McLuhan would call:

A) a social movement.
B) a global village.
C) television.
D) faith in technology.
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71
What is the process called by which societies lose their uniqueness and begin to resemble one another?

A) cultural lag
B) research mobilization
C) cultural leveling
D) cultural imperialism
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k this deck
72
Bhutan's attempt to achieve Gross National Happiness,rather than a higher gross national product,reflects its attempt to:

A) adopt what it believes the "West" does correctly, while rejecting consumerism.
B) provide more material goods for all of its citizens.
C) increase foreign investment.
D) lure more tourists to the scenic mountain nation.
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k this deck
73
Regressive or reactionary social movements are always:

A) the most common type of social movement.
B) motivated by prejudice or hate.
C) working to make sure things stay the same, or even to turn them back to an earlier point in history.
D) motivated by a desire to protect the environment.
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74
In what way has Bhutan resisted the forces of globalization?
A) Shopping is only allowed between 9:00

A)m. and 5:00 p.m.
B) The country has no electricity.
C) Internet merchants are banned.
D) In the capital city, there are no chain stores.
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k this deck
75
What features of modern life do social movements like Critical Mass protest?

A) the crippling debt load carried by African nations
B) the way automobiles make other forms of transportation less feasible
C) the unethical and inhumane treatment of animals
D) violations of voting rights in poor and minority communities
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76
Hero of Alexander,a mathematician who lived in Rome,invented a steam engine in the first century CE.What does this say about William Ogburn's theory of technological determinism?

A) It strongly supports the theory.
B) It suggests that ancient Rome was less advanced than was previously suspected.
C) It demonstrates the ways in which technology always changes society.
D) It suggests that technological determinism cannot always explain social change.
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77
The process by which social structures and institutions become global rather than national is called:

A) globalization.
B) homogenization.
C) cultural diffusion.
D) postmodernism.
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78
What theoretical perspective argues that technology plays a defining role in shaping society?

A) technological determinism
B) symbolic interactionism
C) structural functionalism
D) idealism
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79
The spread of beliefs and practices from one cultural group to another is called:

A) cultural diffusion.
B) cultural leveling.
C) cultural lag.
D) culture shock.
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80
The World Church of the Creator,founded by Matt Hale,wants to stop both religious and racial integration of America.This makes his movement a:

A) tragedy of the commons.
B) postmodern movement.
C) voluntary simplicity movement.
D) regressive social movement.
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