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  2. Structure and agency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structure_and_agency

    In his work on false necessity – or anti-necessitarian social theory – Unger recognizes the constraints of structure and its molding influence upon the individual, but at the same time finds the individual able to resist, deny, and transcend their context. The varieties of this resistance are negative capability.

  3. Structural holes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_holes

    Structural holes is a concept from social network research, originally developed by Ronald Stuart Burt. A structural hole is understood as a gap between two individuals who have complementary sources to information. The study of structural holes spans the fields of sociology, economics, and computer science.

  4. Social structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_structure

    It shares with role theory, organizational and institutional sociology, and network analysis the concern with structural properties and developments and at the same time provides detailed conceptual tools needed to generate interesting, fruitful propositions and models and analyses.

  5. Agency (sociology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agency_(sociology)

    Agency has also been defined in the American Journal of Sociology as a temporally embedded process that encompasses three different constitutive elements: iteration, projectivity and practical evaluation. [3] Each of these elements is a component of agency as a whole.

  6. Macrostructure (sociology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrostructure_(sociology)

    This distinction in sociology has given rise to the well-known macro-micro debate, in which microsociologists claim the primacy of interaction as the constituents of societal structures, and macrosociologists the primacy of given social structure as a general constraint on interaction.

  7. Structuration theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structuration_theory

    Research has not yet examined the "rational" function of group communication and decision-making (i.e., how well it achieves goals), nor structural production or constraints. Researchers must empirically demonstrate the recursivity of action and structure, examine how structures stabilize and change over time due to group communication, and may ...

  8. Structural functionalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_functionalism

    Structural functionalism, or simply functionalism, is "a framework for building theory that sees society as a complex system whose parts work together to promote solidarity and stability". [ 1 ] This approach looks at society through a macro-level orientation , which is a broad focus on the social structures that shape society as a whole, [ 1 ...

  9. Structuralism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structuralism

    A structural idealism is a class of linguistic units (lexemes, morphemes, or even constructions) that are possible in a certain position in a given syntagm, or linguistic environment (such as a given sentence).