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    Family is considered to be one of various sociological institutions of society. Amoungst education‚ government‚ and healthcare. Family is seen to be a very important factor in society. According to comtemporary sociologists use the word family to mean a social group whose members are bound by some type of tie legal‚ biologoical emotiional or a combination of all three. In sociology‚ functionalist‚ conflict theorist‚ and symbolic interactionists have different view points on families. Family involves

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    Are the three sociological perspectives evident in daily life? The three sociological perspectives are evident in daily life‚ as a result a symbolic interaction is seen when humans interact with each other face to face. For example‚ anyone who owns a home pays property taxes which in turn help fund their communities and functionally become interdependent. However since the humans began interacting inequalities developed causing a positive and negative changes in society. To begin with traffic

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    tattoo. This unique perspective offered by the discipline of sociology can be described as the sociological imagination‚ a term coined by C. Wright Mills in his 1959 work entitled‚ The Sociological Imagination. Ferrante defines Mills’ sociological imagination as “a quality of mind that allows people to grasp how remote and impersonal social forces shape their life story or biography.” Essentially‚ the sociological imagination is a fresh perspective which allows one to look beyond the scope of their personal

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    Htet A. Lin SOCI 1100 Instructor: Kelley Harris Final Draft: My Sociological Imaginations December 12th‚ 2013.              “The sociological Imagination is defined as the ability to understand the one’s own issues are not caused simply by one’s own beliefs or thoughts but by society and how it is structured.” (Mills‚ The Sociological Imagination‚ 1959). Therefore‚ one can never solve their problems until they understand that they cannot be solved simply on an individual level but must be

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    one of the most important thing to understand is the sociological imagination. (Mills‚ 2014‚ pg. 3) To fully understand how society works and why things happen we need to look at the bigger picture. To do this‚ sociologist approach things with what is called the sociological eye. (McIntyre‚ 2014 pg. 29) Both the sociological eye‚ and the sociological imagination needs to be used in order to understand why people do what they do. The sociological imagination can also be used to understand todays families

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    the time‚ desire‚ or in some cases‚ the capacity to understand where their place is in the sociological hierarchy. Only by taking this approach‚ can one start to realize that their path in life‚ no matter how minute it may seem‚ affects everything around them. Stepping back and looking at history and their current biography‚ and being able to clearly see the relations between the two is the sociological imagination. It is what allows the greatest minds to conjure up the most profound questions

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    Democracy has always been an ambiguous concept especially in the United States of America. The origin of the word is very ancient‚ it goes back to 461 BC (Athens) and derives from two Greek words: demos and kratos. The first one meaning people‚ and the second one power‚ together they form the power of the bourgeoisie people. Nevertheless‚ the power has mostly been in hands of the elite class in the U.S.‚ that is why it is ambiguous‚ if the power is in the hands of the most privileged in the American

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    as well as the unemployed.  From a sociological perspective‚ unemployment can be studied through both the Functionalist Theory and Conflict Theory.  It also touches upon the results of unemployment in societies and institutions such as family‚ education‚ government‚ and health. Unemployment affects almost everyone to some extent in their lives‚ and the need to understand how to deal with the issue is becoming more and more important to society. One sociological perspective on unemployment can be

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    Sociological perspectives have contributed to the deepening of my understanding through giving me more and different perspectives to view the world‚ societies‚ cultures‚ and individuals. These sociological perspectives have given me more insight into how society functions and is connected‚ how conflict engineers social change‚ and how people interact and why they interact in this particular way. In my last essay for this semester‚ I will first discuss the structural-functionalist perspective‚ which

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    Hollinsworth‚ D (1998) Racism: conceptstheories and approaches‚ Race and Racism in Australia‚ 2nd edition‚ Social Science Press‚ Katoomba‚ NSW. In this reading‚ Hollinsworth provides a very detailed analysis of the concept of racism. He explains how theorists have constructed different ideas about racism in relation to ethnicity‚ social history‚ class and gender. The theorists have made a very important point in that although social culture rejects the idea of racism‚ it does still exist‚ sometimes

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