- Source: Outline of society
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to society:
Society – group of people sharing the same geographical or virtual territory and therefore subject to the same political authority and dominant cultural expectations. Such people share a distinctive culture and institutions, which characterize the patterns of social relations between them. Large societies typically develop social stratification and dominance patterns among its subgroups. A given society may be described as the sum total of social relationships among its members. The branch of science that studies society is sociology.
What type of thing is a society?
A society can be described as all of the following:
System
Social system
People
Social group
Community
Types of societies
Humanity – the entire human race. As a whole, it can be viewed as one great big society.
= In anthropology: by methods of subsistence
=Pre-industrial society
Hunter-gatherer society
Pastoral society
Horticultural society
Agrarian society
Feudal society
Industrial society
Post-industrial society
= In sociology and political science
=by political structure:
Band society
Tribe
Chiefdom
Civilization
State
International community
World community
by modernity:
Pre-modern
Modern
Post-modern
Aspects or features of societies
Communities (outline) – while a society is a type of community, it can itself comprise smaller communities.
Structure and agency
Socialization
Sense of community
Communitarianism
Social capital
Community development
Culture (outline) – Shared culture can create sub communities of people within a society due to their shared attitudes, values, goals and practices (ref: Woodward, K., (2004) Questioning Identity: gender, class, ethnicity, Milton Keynes, The Open University).
Cultural heritage
Economy (outline)
Economic system
Education (outline)
Government
Identity – Interaction with others within our society helps shape our identity (along with our gender, class & cultural origins), and a shared society can promote a sense of shared identity (ref: Woodward, K., (2004) Questioning Identity: gender, class, ethnicity, Milton Keynes, The Open University).
Infrastructure – see Infrastructure section, below
Institutions – see Social institutions section, below
Land
Natural resources
People
Politics (outline)
Social control
Guilt society
Shame society
Social structure
Social order
Social stratification
Technology and society (outline)
Wealth
= Infrastructure
=Infrastructure
Public infrastructure
Transportation systems
Road systems
Roads
Highways
Streets
Bridges
Tunnels
Mass transit
Airports and Airways
Water supply and Water resources
Wastewater management
Solid-waste treatment and disposal
Electric power
Private infrastructure
Personal property
Automobiles
Personal computers
Real estate
Homes
= Social institutions
=Social institution – Any persistent structure or mechanism of social order governing the behaviour of a set of individuals within a given community. The term "institution" is commonly applied to customs and behavior patterns important to a society, as well as to particular formal organizations of government and public services.
Family
Family members – families are composed of:
Offspring
Daughter
Son
Parent
Father
Mother
Grandparent
Types of families
Nuclear family
Extended family
Family related topics
Home
Human bonding
Sociology of the family
Government
Marriage and the family
Religion (outline) and religious institutions – see sociology of religion; civil religion
Educational institutions – schools (preschool, primary/elementary, secondary, and post-secondary/higher – see Sociology of education)
Research community – Academia and universities; research institutes – see sociology of science
Medicine – hospitals and other health care institutions – see sociology of health and illness, medical sociology
Psychiatric hospitals (history)
Law (outline) and legal system – courts; judges; the legal profession (bar) – see jurisprudence, philosophy of law, sociology of law
Law enforcement and society
Criminal justice or penal systems – prisons – see sociology of punishment
Military (outline) – (See also military sociology).
Paramilitary
Police forces
Mass media – including the news media (television, newspapers) and the popular media – see media studies
Industry – businesses, including corporations – see financial institution, factory, capitalism, division of labour, social class, industrial sociology
Civil society or NGOs – Charitable organizations; advocacy groups; political parties; think tanks; virtual communities
Societal change
Social change
Decadence
Social development
Social progress
Technological evolution
Sociocultural evolution
= Stages of sociocultural evolution
=Sociocultural evolution – below are listed some typical and some potential stages of progression in the evolution of cultures and societies:
Pre-civilization
Hunter-gatherer bands
Social rank
Tribes
Social stratification
Chiefdoms
Neolithic Revolution
Civilization
Pre-industrial society
Agrarian society
Agrarian villages
Towns
Cities
City-states
Nation-states
Industrial Revolution
Modernity
Industrial society
Postmodernity
Post-industrial society
Informational Revolution
Information society
Digital Revolution
Knowledge society
Globalization – process by which the world is becoming more interconnected, being integrated into a unified global community, through the interchange — of world views, products, ideas and other aspects of culture — made possible by technological advancements in communication and transportation and the dissemination of knowledge those bring.
World government? – notion of a single common political authority (global state) for all of humanity. Currently there is no worldwide executive, legislature, judiciary, military, or constitution with jurisdiction over the entire planet. The United Nations is limited to a mostly advisory role, and its stated purpose is to foster cooperation between existing national governments rather than exert authority over them.
Space colonization? – hypothetical expansion of the human race into outer space: to the moon, to other planets or moons, or in space stations.
Technological singularity? (TS) – hypothetical result that may occur if and when strong AI (artificial intelligence at least as smart as a human) is developed. Such AIs would be recursive, and therefore able to improve themselves (or each other) at an increasingly rapid rate to super intelligence. Technological advancements implemented by such entities would probably be so profound and come so quickly that it seems unlikely anyone could reliably forecast what such a future would be like — like a black hole, a singularity we cannot see.
= Forces of societal change
=Connections – James Burke presented in this TV series his hypothesis that the entire gestalt of the modern world is the result of a web of interconnected events, each one consisting of a person or group acting for reasons of their own motivations (e.g., profit, curiosity, religious) with no concept of the final, modern result to which the actions of either them or their contemporaries would lead. The interplay of the results of these isolated events is what drives history and innovation.
Conquest
Cooperation
Deviance
Disaster
Economic forces
Economic growth
Exploration
Human migration – Migration can impact on our identity since it may be difficult to feel a sense of belonging in a new society. Human migration can also introduce new cultural values to a society (ref: Held, D., (2004) A globalizing world? Culture, economics and politics, London Routeledge/The Open University).
Population change
Population decline
Population growth
Revolution
Social conflict
Social disintegration
Social movement
Societal collapse
Technological change
Urbanization
Trade
War
History of society
History of civilization
Society-related history
Rural history
Social history
Urban history
Sociocultural evolution
Study of society: sociology
Outline of sociology
Sociology – Scientific study of society. This social science directs methods of empirical investigation and critical analysis upon human social activity, focusing on the influence of relationships and how they affect attitudes and behaviours. Sociologists conduct research to refine the theoretical understanding of social processes, or for application to social policy and welfare.
Branches of sociology
History of sociology
See also
Outline of community
Place these
Ethnic groups •
Social institutions – Organization
Social network – Communication • Journalism • Social capital
References
External links
Definition of Society from the Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
Lecture notes on "Defining Society" from East Carolina University.
Cliff Notes on Types of Societies
Industrial revolution
Internet Modern History Sourcebook: Industrial Revolution
"The Day the World Took Off" Six part video series from the University of Cambridge tracing the question "Why did the Industrial Revolution begin when and where it did."
BBC History Home Page: Industrial Revolution
National Museum of Science and Industry website: machines and personalities
Industrial Revolution and the Standard of Living by Clark Nardinelli - the debate over whether standards of living rose or fell.
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