Social Psy Notes
Social Psy Notes
Social Psy Notes
One of the most exciting aspects of community psychology is that the field is
still developing and defining itself.
(1) Promote individual growth and prevent social and mental health
problems before they start;
(3) Enable those who have been labeled as “deviant” to live as dignified,
supported, and empowered lives as possible, preferably as contributing
members of the community.
(1) Create and evaluate an array of programs and policies which help people
control the stressful aspects of community and organizational environments;
(2) assess the needs of a community and teach its members how to
recognize an incipient problem and deal with it before it becomes
intractable; or
(3) Study and implement more humane and effective ways for formerly
institutionalized populations to live productively in society’s mainstream.
A good example is the way legal and cultural barriers to resources were
eliminated as a result of antidiscrimination and voting rights legislation
starting in the 1950s. The increased number of African Americans in
professional, managerial, and technical occupations, the increase in
income among middle- and upper-class African Americans, and the
increased number of African American students in colleges and
professional schools can be attributed to the civil rights movement. The
increasing number of young, unemployed African American males, the
correlated increase in single-mother families, and the concentration of
social problems such as crime in certain urban areas can be attributed at
least in part to a changing job market and the loss of access to jobs, a
critical resource for favourable adaptation. From this perspective, solutions
to problems in living do not require more professional therapists; instead
community psychologists try to work through a variety of institutions and
with people who may not have advanced training in the mental health
professions to improve and develop resources.
The public health model leads us to seek out the causes of pathology and
to act to prevent them by either modifying environmental conditions or
strengthening the person. It is not clear that the public health model can be
adopted wholly when we deal with social and mental health problems.
However, it does provide a set of goals and a way of thinking that direct
our attention to issues other than individual psychopathology and its
treatment.
SOCIAL ISSUES
SOCIAL INTEGRATION
... the process of fostering societies that are stable, safe and just and that
are based on the promotion and protection of all human rights, as well as
on non-discrimination, tolerance, respect for diversity, equality of oppor
tunity, solidarity, security and participation of all people, including
disadvantaged and vulnerable groups and persons.
What matters is how ethnicity will be treated in the future, how it will
affect social mobility and participation in majority society. On the other
hand, social integration is related to an individual’s position in the social
topography and an individual’s capabilities and opportunities to apply
those capabilities.
Social participation
This acceptance of the system is not, however, based on the belief in pre-
existing ‘rules’ or ‘truths’; it depends on a process of incorporation of
characteristics that determines how one acts, thinks, understands, and
evaluates one’s own and others’ actions.
Social exclusion
On the other hand, the term also covers the denial and non-realisation
of the civic, political, and social rights of citizenship, i.e. it can be treated
as an expression of the unequal distribution of various rights. In this way
social exclusion is a universal category that includes economic, political,
cultural, religious, and social aspects and discusses multidimensional
mechanisms that exclude individuals or groups from participation in
social exchanges and rights for social integration.
Once again, exclusion prompts several kinds of reactions. The first one
is of powerlessness and alienation in which the individual internalises
the failure and descends into apathy because she/he feels that it has
been pre-ordained by fate.
In the academic world, in the field of international and even intra- national
conflicts, we operate with a definition that includes, invariably, the existence
of two or more parts that want, at the same time, an element of power—
authority, resources, or prestige/status, that have the resources and are
willing to spend them and even decide to spend them with a view to obtain
the element that they want.
Ethnic appeals may lead to violent escalation only if a group fears that its
existence threatened. What matters is the ability to evoke vertical escalation
“our group is in danger”. The next condition, which has to be present in
order for ethnic conflict to occur, is political opportunity. This consist of
two elements, first, there must be sufficient political space (weakening or
state breakdown, or support from external power) and secondly, a territorial
base (for successful mobilization, ethnic groups are either territorially
concentrated in some region or they have a territorial base in neighbouring
country).
CASTE
Rise of low castes, religious identities, linguistic groups and ethnic conflicts
have contributed to the significance of identity politics. Craig Calhoun aptly
describes the situation when he argues that it is in the modern times we
encounter intensified efforts at consolidating individual and categorical
identities and reinforce self-sameness. This is primarily a modern
phenomenon because some scholars feel that emphasis on identity based on
a central organising principle of ethnicity, religion, language, gender, sexual
preferences, or caste positions, etc, are a sort of “compelling remedy for
anonymity” in an otherwise impersonal modern world. It is thus said to be a
“pattern of belonging, a search for comfort, an approach to community.”
"Caste" is the term used to describe the complex system of social divisions
that pervades life in India. Caste is an ancient hereditary system that
developed alongside and became intertwined with Hinduism. Caste
determines whom a person can marry, specifies what kind of work he can
do, and even controls what he can eat or touch.
Since the great majority of Indians are Hindu, the caste system has played
an enormous role in the history of India, and it continues to exert
tremendous influence on modern Indian culture and politics.
The most widely accepted theory is that the four basic divisions of the
Hindu caste system—the varna—developed in the period 1500-1000 B.C.
The earliest known mention of caste is found in the Aryan’s Vedic hymns,
perhaps dating from about 1000 B.C.E. In a famous passage, the metaphor
of the human body was used to describe Indian society.
and the sudra caste—the servants of the other three—are the feet.
Untouchables
Inevitably, there were certain people who failed to live up to their caste
dharma. Such people and their children were considered outcasts from
Hindu society. They had to live apart from other castes and were given the
jobs that no one else wanted to perform. Because of their contact with
things considered unclean or polluted, the outcasts were believed to be
deeply tainted. They came to be thought of as "untouchable" because people
believed that their touch—or even the sight of them—would compromise a
brahman’s purity. The untouchables were not admitted into Hindu temples
and instead formed religious sects of their own.
The caste system, which is based on the notions of purity and pollution,
hierarchy and difference, has despite social mobility, been oppressive
towards the Shudras and the outcastes who suffered the stigma of ritual
impurity and lived in abject poverty, illiteracy and denial of political power.
The origin of confrontational identity politics based on caste may be said to
have its origin on the issue of providing the oppressed caste groups with
state support in the form of protective discrimination. This group-identity
based on caste that has been reinforced by the emergence of political
consciousness around caste identities is institutionalised by the caste-based
political parties that profess to uphold and protect the interests of specific
identities including the castes.
The caste system also returns certain practical benefits to the individual.
Being a member of a jati gives each person a sense of identity and of
belonging to a well-defined group within society. The members of a jati have
much in common. They share a job specialty and abide by the same rules
concerning diet and religion. Because of the rules of endogamy, each jati is
also an extended family, for most members are related by blood.
CLASS
The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.
Freeman and slave, patrician and plebeian, lord and serf, guild-master
and journeyman, in a word, oppressor and oppressed, stood in constant
opposition to one another...
RELIGION
LANGUAGE
Conflict is a normal, and even healthy, part of relationships. After all, two
people can’t be expected to agree on everything at all times. Since
relationship conflicts are inevitable, learning to deal with them in a healthy
way is crucial. When conflict is mismanaged, it can harm the relationship.
But when handled in a respectful and positive way, conflict provides an
opportunity for growth, ultimately strengthening the bond between two
people.
3. Conflict involves beliefs, by each side, that the other will thwart (or has
already thwarted) its interests;
5. Actions by one or both sides do, in fact, produce thwarting of others’ goals
.
The key to defusing conflict is to form a bond, or to re-bond, with the other
party. We do not have to like someone to form a bond with him or her. We
only need a common goal. Treat the person as a friend, not an enemy, and
base the relationship on mutual respect, positive regard and co-operation.
Leaders must learn to separate the person from the problem, genuinely want
to help the other party and avoid negative responses to attacks or intense
emotions.
At all times it’s important to keep the conversation relevant, stay focused on
a positive outcome and remain aware of the common goal. It is imperative to
avoid being hostile or aggressive. The next stage is negotiation, in which we
add bargaining to the dialogue. Talking, dialogue and negotiation create
genuine, engaging and productive two-way transactions. We need to use
energy from the body, emotions, intellect and the spirit.
The important thing to remember is that we should not slap the other party
in the face with the fish! We should be direct, engaging and respectful,
always helping the other person to ‘save face. ’In addition, timing is
important. It would not be beneficial to raise a difficult topic just as a senior
colleague is leaving to the airport. We can decide not to put the fish on the
table as a tactic, but not because we wish to avoid the conflict. Choosing the
right time and the right circumstances are part of an effective conflict
management strategy.
Once a bond has been established, we must nurture the relationship as well
as pursue our goals. We need to balance reason and emotion, because
emotions such as fear, anger, frustration and even love may disrupt
otherwise thoughtful actions. We need to understand each other’s point of
view, regardless of whether we agree with it or not. The more effectively we
communicate our differences and our areas of agreement, the better we will
understand each other’s concerns and improve our chances of reaching a
mutually acceptable agreement. The deepest bonds are founded on what the
eminent psychologist Carl Rogers called ‘unconditional positive regard’.
We can all learn to communicate acceptance of the other person while
saying no or disagreeing with a specific point or behavior. Feeling accepted,
worthy and valued are basic psychological needs. And, as hostage
negotiation demonstrates, it is more productive to persuade than to coerce.
SOCIAL CHANGE
For example, the United States would experience faster change, than a third
world country that has limited access to technology and information.
For example, when the airplane was invented people knew that this would
increase and speed travel. However, it was probably not realised how this
invention would affect society in the future. Families are spread through
out the country, because it is easier to return for visits. Companies are able
to expand worldwide thanks to air travel. The numerous crashes and
deaths related to airplanes was not predicted either.
For example, the move over the recent years to accept homosexual rights
has caused controversy involving the military, religion, and society overall.
For example, the invention of personal computers was more important than
Cabbage Patch dolls.
wo more general strategies for social change sit at opposite ends of the
spectrum. Legal Strategies employ legal actions, in the litigious sense, to
counter social problems. Violent Strategies are self explanatory, using
violence to bring about change.
PSYCHOLOGY OF TERRORISM
Terrorism has surely existed since before the dawn of recorded history.
Human nature has not changed. However, three interlocking trends have
significantly changed the nature and degree of the threat: the globalization
of commerce, travel, and information transfer, which puts economic
disparities and ideological competition in sharp relief and facilitates
cooperative aggression by far-flung but like-minded conspirators; the ascent
of religious fundamentalism as an aggrieved competitor with the market-
economic, democratic, and secular trends of modernity; and the
privatization of weapons of mass destruction, putting the potential of macro-
terrorist acts into the hands of small groups or even individuals
(2) that the terrorist action in itself is not expected by its perpetrator to
accomplish a political goal but instead to influence a target audience and
change that audience’s behavior in a way that will serve the interests of the
terrorist.
(5) single issue (e.g., animal rights) terrorism, proposing that each type
tends to be associated with its own social-psychological dynamics.
psychological inquiry into the “mind of the terrorist” reveals that terrorist
groups typically exhibit hierarchical organization, with various roles
assumed within each level of that hierarchy .
Each position on such a matrix may attract individuals with different pred-
ispositions who perhaps play their roles because of profoundly different
psychological factors. One might postulate, for example, that some leaders
are more likely to be self-imagined idealists or altruists, others are driven by
messianic delusions, others by eth-nic or religious animus, and others by
entrepreneurial ambitions—a point that seems clear when we intuit.
FIVE TRAITS
TYPICAL CHARECTERISTICS
(7) destructiveness,