Rational choice-WPS Office
Rational choice-WPS Office
Rational choice-WPS Office
1 MICROLEVEL APPROACHES
Rational choice theory (RCT) is a powerful tool in making sense of why people act or
behave in the way they do. Nonetheless, it is not a comprehensive theory that can fully
account for one's behavior or action. According to Elster 1989 (in Ward 2002, 65),"(t)he
essence of rational choice theory is that 'when faced with several courses of action,
people usually do what they believe is likely to have the best overall outcome.
Individuals actions are based on their preferences beliets, and teasible strategies
(Ward, 2002). But as Ward (2002, 65) observed, rational choice theory "needs other
perspectives to help explain why individuals have the interests they do, how they
perceive those interests, and the distribution of rules, powers, and social roles that
The beginnings of rational choice theory (RCT) can be traced back to the behavioral
revolution in American political science of the 1950s and the 1960s (Ward 2002)
The behavioral movement was strongly influenced by the positivist tradition in the social
sciences, in particular, by the writings of August Comte in the nineteenth century and
the logical positivism of the 'Vienna Circle in the 1920s. Behavioralists adopt the view of
positivism about the nature of empirical theory and explanation. In contrast to other
level of the individual or the social aggregate, should be the focus of analysis; and (b)
any explanation of that behavior should susceptible to empirical testing" (Sanders 2002,
45).
The RCT has become a dominant approach to political science at least in the US. But
while it traces its beginnings to the behavioral movement, "rational choice theory draws
out largely early work in rational choice theory. The most important tool used is the
game theory. Central to the game theory is strategic interdependence, a situation where
others' choice of strategy affects an individual's best choice and vice versa (Ward
1995).
Rational choice theorists' explanations of individual actions and the outcomes they lead
to are anchored on three pillars, namely, (1) strategies or courses of action open and
available to them, (2) their preferences over the end-states to which combinations of
actions chosen by the various players lead, and, (3) their beliefs about important
assumptions about the context that players find themselves in (Ward 2002).
A central feature of rational choice theories is the predominant focus on the individual
as the actor making the decisions (Lalman et al. 1993, 81). An assumption of the
mainstream variant of RCT is that "individuals have all the rational capacity, time, and
emotional detachment necessary to choose the best course of action, no matter how
complex the choice (Ward 2002; 1995). Rational choice theorists try to explain political
phenomena by using the behavioral conjecture that actors are rational, that is, they
make purposive, goal-seeking choices based on their own preferences, are able to rank
alternatives from best to worst, and choose according to what is best for them given
The quote below captures succinctly this feature of rational choice theory.
Individuals are assumed to be able to rank-order outcomes or actions. Thus, for any
pair of alternatives a and b they can say whether a is better than b, b is better than a, or
the two outcomes are indifferent Also preferences satisfy the transitivity property. This
implies that if a is better than b and b is better than c, a is better than c. To say that a is
preferred to b means no more than that a would be chosen above b, all references to
nontrivial explanations preferences are typically assumed to be stable over time. Then
benevolent or evil. RCT does not explain where preferences come from and how these
are mediated or negotiated. RCT only assumes that individuals pursue self-serving
achieve their goals. This implies a cost-benefit analysis of alternatives and strategies.
As it exemplifies the deductive-nomological approach to explanation (Ward 2002), RCT
enjoys the advantages associated with this method. Some of these advantages include:
It forces you to be explicit about assumptions that are often left implicit in verbal
arguments
action can be judged and indicates variables that might lead to departures from
Nonetheless, RCT has been the target of criticisms not only from political science but
also from other disciplines in the social sciences. Ward (1995 & 2002) grouped these
criticisms into four modes, namely (1) the heretics critique who wish to emphasize
bounded rationality, (2) the sociologists critique of RCT's tendency to play down social
structure and holistic modes of explanations; (3) the psychologists' critique of RCTs
main assumption that individuals often act rationally; and (4) critique from mainstream
political science on the basis of the implausibility of the assumptions made and the
theorists question the highly implausible assumptions of RCT about the rational capacity
heuristic device and as a shorthand guide to rational action. For Simon, an action is
procedurally rational if it is based on beliefs that are reasonable given the context the
Since individuals can not have all the rational capacity, time, and emotional detachment
necessary to choose the best course of action, individuals resort to a range of heuristics
in dealing with any problems. Individuals can copy the methods used by those who are
more successful. They can rely on communication and others' reputations for
trustworthiness and adopt norms of appropriate behavior which there are intangible
largely a function of social structures" and not based on individual choice (Ward 2002 &
1995, 74). Sociologists find it implausible that individuals are fully autonomous. For
instance, structural factors can shape decisions made by individuals. These may
structures of belief, such as ideologies. They argue that action can only be seen as
rational or irrational within the context of a particular system of meaning, hence,
symbolic and ritual action become important in human actions (Ward 2002)
Even collective actors in processes of deliberation with the end goal of achieving given
ends are influenced by structural factors. The processes that produce decisions and
actions of collective actors can be strongly influenced by rules and conventions used to
limited efforts to search for available solutions, pressures to appear consistent, even at
the cost of failures of goal attainment; the upgrading of means into ends in themselves,
and other organizational pathologies (March & Olsen 1984, Hindess 1988, in Ward
2002, 78)."
The pschologists' critique of RCT attacks the latter's assumption that individuals often
act rationally. They typically argue that individuals often do not act rationally in the
standard sense and are motivationally and psychologically complex" (Ward 2002, 72;
Ward 1995, 79). Motives of individuals do not necessarily reflect self-serving interests
Moreover, psychologists also attack RCT's claim that individuals have all the emotional
detachment necessary to choose the best course of action. Emotions and unconscious
drives make the level of detachment highly unlikely. Individuals often make decisions
based on consistency with past actions, reduction of strains within the individual's belief
and its implausible assumptions and failure in predictive terms (Ward, 1995). They
argue that many of the variables in rational choice models, notably preferences, are not
directly measurable, and that rational choice theorists, in their desire to generate a
universally applicable model of politics, evade and ignore contrart evidence (Ward 200).
SYMBOLIC INTERACTIONISM
framework that actualizes the nature of humans to make sense of their actions and
interactions through external cues from their everyday life and environment (Vejar
2015).
George Herbert Mead was an influential figure in the field of symbolic interactionism.
others, our posture, tone of voice, voice inflections, as well as hand and facial
movements convey significance. They can either accentuate or contradict that which we
Mead's central concept is the self, "the part of an individual's personality composed of
self-development is enacted by the usage of gestures threefold through the play stage,
the game stage, and through a stage called generalized other. The term "generalized
other” refers to "widespread cultural norms and values we use as a reference in
evaluating ourselves" (Macionis 2007, 126). Verja (2015, 3-4) describes each stage.
In the play stage, young children identify with key figures in their environments, such as
the mother or father, as well as occupational or gender-specific roles to which they have
been exposed (e.g., police officer, nurse) and replicate the behavioral norms that
correspond with such roles. A young boy might sit on the edge of the bathroom counter,
attentive to the way in which his father goes about shaving, and emulate this action by
During the game stage, children extrapolate from the vantage point of the roles they
have simulated by assuming the roles that their counterparts concurrently undertake.
While engaging in a team sport, for example, it behooves a child to conceptualize the
roles of his teammates and opponents in order to successfully maneuver throughout the
As people developmentally evolve, their anticipation of the generalized other helps them
construct morally sound and appropriate behavior, such as the employee who arrives
promptly to work in order to avoid scrutiny from his colleagues. Moreover, self identity
responses we have to stimuli (Lane, 1984), and the me, which is the socially refined
reactions that were instilled through the process of adopting social standards (Baldwin,
1988).
There are three overarching premises that constitute symbolic interactionism. These
that is both subjective and individualistic, and that people consequently act in
accordance with the meanings they construe. Imagine the scholar who, upon drawing
on the concept of a book (i.e., object), generates stimulating and intellectual constructs
Meanwhile, someone who struggles academically may harbor feelings of fear and
resentment toward that object. A dyadic conversation (.e., interaction) may consist of
his brow. Interpretations derived from such a nonverbal gesture can be varied, and the
speaker might either conclude that he has an attentive audience, or that he is being
critiqued. Another example shows how the role of "parent" (i.e., people) might generate
the image of a warm, nurturing, and supportive role model to one person, while eliciting
A second premise asserts that people identify and mold their unique symbolic
references through the process of socialization. This postulation suggests that people
are not inherently equipped with interpretive devices that help navigate through the
complex realms of human behavior. Through the act of establishing an intricate series
pleasant behavior that causes his parent to smile, he equates the concept of "good
the child encounters pleasurable deeds throughout the course of his life, he will be
of symbolic interactionism affirms that there is a cultural dimension that intertwines the
physical space in which we distance our bodies has culturally symbolic significance
(Rothbaum, Morelli, Pott, & Liu-Constant, 2000). Likewise, greetings in the form of
demonstrative affection, such as hugs and kisses can be warmly regarded by one
culture, and deemed as the obstruction of personal space and the crossing of
contemporary varieties of symbolic interactionism include the Chicago School, the lowa
School, the dramaturgical approach, and ethnomethodology. All these four schools of
thought or orientations share the view that human beings construct their realities in a
process of social interaction, and agree on the methodological implication of such, that
is, the necessity of “getting inside" the reality of the actor in order to understand what is
purpose and methodology. The most glaring difference exists between the Chicago
School with a positivist orientation and the lowa School with a humanistic orientation.
Chicago School aims at prediction and unity of method for all the sciences. Adopting a
humanistic orientation, the lowa school under the influence of Herbert Blumer strives for
understanding and a distinctive method for sociology, one that is based on "sympathetic
Symbolic interaction has both "insider" "and outsider" critics. Insiders' criticism focus on
the method and the central concepts of symbolic interactionism, particularly the
ambiguity of major concepts used particularly the concept of the "self." These criticisms
astructural bias in symbolic interactionism. This bias refers to the claim that symbolic
The disagreement between the Chicago School and the lowa School reflects not only
objectivist-subjectivist dichotomy and debate not only in Sociology but also in the Social
Sciences.
orientations toward human behavior and social processes is long-standing. The debate
has been between those who focus on the (humanistic) subject matter of the social
sciences and those who call for the same (scientific) method for all the sciences, both
natural and social. The debate has not only divided each of the social sciences, it has
also divided many of the subfields within these sciences, subfields such as social
STRUCTURAL FUNCTIONALISM
complex system whose parts work together to promote solidarity and stability" (Macionis
2007, 15). Such parts of the whole system may vary in terms of functions but they are
all related to each other. Interdependent as they are, they all have one goal and that is
to maintain or keep the whole system, at least in its present form. It follows therefore
that the working of one part would have effects on the other parts.
Structural functionalism was developed by Talcott Parsons in the 1930s under the
influence of the works of Max Weber and Emile Durkheim (M&Mahon 2015). It
emphasizes social structure, "any relatively stable pattern of social behavior" and social
functions, the consequences of any social pattern for the operation of society as a
whole" (Macionis 2007, 15). Examples of social structure are the family, government,
religion, education, and economy. Social structure shapes our lives in various contexts
such as the family, the workplace, classroom, and community, and all social structure
functions to keep society going, at least in its present form (Macionis 2007)
Robert Merton (1910-2003) expanded the concept of social function by arguing that any
social structure may have many functions. He distinguished between manifest functions,
the recognized and intended consequences of any social pattern" and latent functions,
the unrecognized and unintended consequences of any social pattern." (Macionis 2007,
15).
Higher education, for instance, can be seen with both manifest and latent functions. The
manifest function of higher education is to provide the youth with the information and
skills needed to enable them to perform their jobs after graduation. By keeping millions
of young people out of the labor market, where a significant number of them may not
get hired right away after graduation, serves as the latent function of higher education.
As a "marriage broker", that is, bringing together peoples of similar social backgrounds
is an equally important, yet not often recognized latent function of higher education
In his classification of social functions into manifest or latent, Merton recognized that the
effects or outcomes of social structure are not all necessarily good and not necessarily
good for everyone. He coined the term "social dysfunction." A social dysfunction is "any
social pattern that may disrupt the operation of society" (Macionis 2007, 16).
What causes social dysfunction? The lack of consensus among peoples in a given
polity or society about what is helpful or harmful to society is a key feature of every
factory owners can be seen as dysfunctional for factory workers as they receive low
2. Those functions can be small or substantial, are dynamic in nature (i.e., they can
change), and work toward the same purpose: to keep the system operational within its
environment.
3. Change is evident within any society or system; however, for the system to survive, it
must adapt to that change in order to maintain its equilibrium (McMahon 2015).
To maintain the equilibrium of the system, Parsons identified four imperatives for
societies to survive, which he called the AGIL model, the acronym stands for the first
letter of each of these four imperatives. These are:
Adaptation: acquiring and mobilizing sufficient resources so that the system can survive.
Latency: creating, preserving, and transmitting the system's distinctive culture and
values (McMahon 2015 Emphasis added).
Structural functionalism was under sustained criticisms in the late 1960s such that by
the 1970s, it has lost its credibility (McMahon 2015). A generalized criticism of structural
functionalism was aimed at the theory's lack of explanation for social conflict or social
change in addition to its "bias of political conservatism" (Smelser 1990 in McMahon
2015).
In more specific terms, structural functionalism was criticized for being unable to explain
phenomena such as social change, disagreement with social and political aims, and the
methodology, its emphasis on the general rather than the specific, and its non inclusion
of psychology in the discussion of human behavior came also under attack from social
Critics argue that structural functionalism's focus on social stability and social order
ignore inequalities of social class, race, and gender which cause tension and conflict in
women (McMahon 2015). Others find the focus on stability and order at the expense of
as it offers a valid explanation of consensus, which supports the concept of social order
(McMahon 2015). Others made a critical response. They developed the social-conflict
approach (Macionis 2017). In the social sciences, Marxism is an example of this social-
The study of political institutions was dominant within political science in Britain and the
US in the early twentieth century. Until the 1950s, institutionalism enjoyed a privileged
status within the discipline-its assumptions and practices as well as its methodological
and theoretical premises were rarely questioned, let alone subject to the behavioralist
a theory. As a subject matter, the study of political institutions is central to the identity of
To quote Rhodes (1995, 43), "If there is any subject matter at all that political scientists
can claim exclusively for their own, a subject mater that does not require acquisition of
the analytical tools of sister fields and that sustains their claim to autonomous existence,
institutions as its key characteristic. Public administration is the study of "the institutional
arrangements for the provision of public services" (Hood 1987,504, in Rhodes 1995, 52)
or "the study of public bureaucracies” (Rhodes 1979, 7, in Rhodes 1995, 52). William
Robson (1975, 195, in Rhodes 1995, 52) describes the dominant approach in public
administration as institutional:
relationships. It enquired how they worked and the degree of effectiveness they
achieved.
techniques of the historian and explores specific events, eras, people, and institutions
and inductive because inferences are drawn from repeated observations (Rhodes 1995,
43).
phenomena that have occurred in the past and explain contemporary political
phenomena with reference to past events. The goal is to explain and understand but not
The institutional approach also applies the formal-legal inquiry. Formal because it
involves the study of formal governmental organizations, and legal because it includes
the study of public law (Eckstein 1979, 2, in Rhodes 1995, 44). An example of formal-
1995).
The classic or traditional institutional approach is also comparative. Woodrow Wilson
(1989, xxxiv, in Rhodes 1995, 45) argued that one's "institutions can be understood and
appreciated only by those who know other systems of government... By the use of a
obtained."
As a theory, the classic or traditional institutional approach does not only make
statements about the causes and consequences of political institutions. It also espouses
Proponents of the approach treat the functioning and fate of democracies (dependent
variable). Moreover, the approach offers an opportunity for infusing into the empirical
study of politics the analysis of political values (Rhodes 1995). Influenced by the political
philosophy of Michael Oakeshott, Johnson (1975, 276-7, in Rhodes 1995, 47) describes
the rationale for the study of political institutions in the following manner.
political institutions express particular choices about how political relationships ought to
be shaped; they are in the nature of continuing injunctions to members of a society that
they should try to conduct themselves in specific ways when engaged in the pursuit of
element.
Critics to the classic or traditional approach attack the approach's limitation both in
terms of scope and method. Peters (1999, 6-11, in Lowndes 2002, 92) describes the
central influence of history), legalist (law plays a major role in governing) and holistic
2002, 92).
subject matter and method while focusing on the study of comparative government. He
arrangements of society and of their role in the formation of decisions and the exercise
hypotheses and their verification, and therefore, was unable to formulate a comparative
The historical methods and legal analysis of the classic institutional approach are
behaviour of governments due to its focus on the unique. The gap between the formal
statements of the law and the practice of government renders legal analysis ineffective
(Rhodes 1995).
David Easton, the most influential critic of the traditional study of politics, found the
First, the analysis of law and institutions could not explain policy or power because it did
not cover all the relevant variables (Easton 1971, ch. 6) Second, "hyperfactualism," or
"reverence for the fact" (75), meant that political scientists suffered from "theoretical
malnutrition" (77), neglecting "the general framework within which these facts could
Other critics noted that the approach was concerned with the institutions of government,
and yet operated with a restricted understanding of its subject matter. Its focus was on
formal rules and organizations rather than informal conventions and on official
By the 1980s, the traditional or classic institutional approach has declined in its
importance in political science. March and Olsen (1984,734 in Lowndes 2002, 94, and
Rhodes 1995, 53) coined the term "new institutionalism" critiquing the traditional or
classic institutional approach as having "receded in importance from the position they
held in the earlier theories of political scientists." Asserting that political institutions
played a more autonomous role in shaping political outcome, they make claims that:
The bureaucratic agency, the legislative committee, and the appellate court are arenas
for contending social forces, but they are also collections of standard operating
procedures and structures that define and defend interests. They are political actors in
their own right (March and Olsen 1984, 738, in Lowndes 2002, 94, and Rhodes 1995,
53).
In contrast to the traditional or classic institutional approach, now referred to as the "old
1996, 22). The new institutionalists are concerned with the informal conventions of
political life as well as with formal constitutional and organizational structures. New
attention is paid to the way in which institutions embody values and power relationships,
and to the obstacles as well as the opportunities that confront institutional design.
Crucially, new institutionalists concern themselves not just with the impact of institutions
upon individuals, but with the interaction between institutions and individuals (Lowndes
2002, 91).
New institutionalists argue that institutions do matter. In their seminal article on new
institutionalism, March and Olsen (1984) emphasized the central value of institutions
vis-a-vis individual choices in explaining political phenomena. They argue that political
traditions that several limited the free play of individual will and calculation" (March and
Olsen 1984, 736). Burnham et al., (2004, 18) captures it succintly: "political phenomena
rather, "the choices that people make are to a significant extent shaped by the
There are several variants of new institutionalism reflecting the divide between
shaping their "values, norms, interests, identities and beliefs" (March and Olsen 1989,
17). Hence "normative” refers to a concern with norms and values as explanatory
affecting the structure of a situation" in which individuals select strategies for the pursuit
of their preferences (Ostrom 1982, 5-7). Institutions provide information about others
likely future behaviour, and about incentives (and disincentives) attached to different
Human-environment interactions existed since time immemorial, but the scope and
intensity of these interactions have increased significantly since the Industrial
Revolution. Whereas most of the early human-environment interactions have taken
place at a local/national scale, contemporary interactions between human and natural
systems have not only reached regional, subregional, continental, and global scales but
have also become special concerns (Liu J et al., 2007).
The science of CHANS builds on but moves beyond previous work such as human
ecology, ecological anthropology, and environmental geography (Liu. et. a., 2007). The
following are three central features of HES or CHANS.
First, CHANS research focuses on the patterns and processes that link human and
natural systems. Second, CHANS research, such as integrated assessment of climate
change, emphasizes reciprocaj interactions and feedbacks-both the effects of humans
on the environment and the effects of the environment on humans. Third understanding
within-scale and cross-scale interactions between human and natural components (e.g.,
how large-scale phenomena emerge from local interactions of multiple agents and in
turn influence local systems) is a major challenge for the science of CHANS. Although
each of these three aspects has been addressed in some studies on human-
environment interactions, the science of CHANS promotes the integration of all these
aspects (Liu J. et al., 2007, 639).
Liu, J. et al. (2007) made a clear articulation of the reason why an integration of the
three aspects is necessary. They argued that "such integration is needed to tackle the
increased complexity and to help prevent the dreadful consequences that may occur
due to the fundamentally new and rapid changes, because the magnitude, extent, and
rate of changes in human-natural couplings have been unprecedented in the past
several decades, and the accelerating human impacts on natural systems may lead to
degradation and collapse of natural systems which in turn compromise the adaptive
capacity of human systems."
One is the study of the human causes of environmental change—not only proximate
causes, such as burning coal, releasing heavy metals into rivers, and clearing forests,
that immediately change a part of the environment-but especially indirect causes or
driving forces, such as population growth, economic development, technological
change, and alterations in social institutions and human values, that must be
understood to forecast trends in environmentally destructive human activity and, if
necessary, to change those trends.
A second field of inquiry concerns the effects of environmental change on things people
value-both proximate effects, such as on growing seasons and rainfall in agricultural
areas, soil fertility, endangered species, and so on, and indirect effects, such as on
population migrations, international conflict, agricultural markets, and government
policies.
The third field is the study of the feedbacks between humanity and the environment-the
ways individuals, organizations, and governments act on the basis of experienced or
anticipated environmental change to manage human activity and preserve
environmental values. These feedbacks provide the greatest challenge for scientists
and policy-makers, partly because there are so many ways people can intervene in the
system (Stern 1993, 1897).
It has all the scientific problems of other interdisciplinary fields, but more intensely
because it involves all the disciplines of environmental science and those of social
science as well. It is difficult in such a field to do high-quality interdisciplinary work,
integrate separate disciplinary projects, and set productive research agendas, and
some are tempted to proceed without the requisite background knowledge.