Social problems are aspects of society that a majority of the population might be concerned about enough to want it changed, or to at least try and do something about it. In order for something to hold the definition of a social problem, however, it must have two key components. First, the condition of the social problem must be objective, that is, needing to be able to be measured or experienced by a particular group. Second, the concern of the social problem must be subjective. This simply means that a large number of people need to actually objective concern of the problem. These social problems are dynamic, and naturally change with time. A briefe example of that is that activist movement of pot in the 60’s and 70’s verse the activist movement on pot now. Marijuana is much more excepted, it is pretty much legal in most places. This has shifted the dynamic completely from people protesting in the streets getting high and tear gassed by police, to scientist actually explaining the medically and biological uses for marijuana and posing that as an …show more content…
The first stage always has to do with defining the problem itself, people actually have to be upset about an objective condition to try and do something about it. This is when leaders of these movements emerge, the can often crystalize an issue and bring out its relevance. Organizing around the issue also happens in the first stage, where influential people in the media or politics or other important figures also get involved. The second stage often overlaps with the first stage, where a response has to be crafted on both sides of the social problem. No official response is made yet, but information and observations must be made in full before the third stage can proceed. Once an official response has been crafted, the third stage of reacting to the official response proceeds. The response is hardly the end of a social problem, for some, it is the very beginning. The response and the reaction to is is what sparks the stimulation of change among the population or group that becomes concerned about the objective issue at hand. Finally, the last stage is developing the alternative strategies for the problem. These strategies however or of each side, the moderates and the radicals. Both sides make mutual accusations such as blame or self defense in one way or another, but by doing so, the social problem either carries on, becomes diminished, or changes over time. One briefe social problem I would bring up is the recidivism rates in