SOCIAL NORMS
Social norms grow out of social
value and both serve to differentiate human social behavior from that of other
species. The significance of learning in behavior varies from species to
species and is closely linked to processes of communication. Only human beings
are capable of elaborate symbolic communication and of structuring their
behavior in terms of abstract preferences that we have called values. Norms are
the means through which values are expressed in behavior.
Norms generally are the rules and
regulations that groups live by. Or perhaps because the words, rules and
regulations, call to mind some kind of formal listing, we might refer to norms
as the standards of behavior of a group. For while some of the appropriate
standards of behavior in most societies are written down, many of them are not
that formal. Many are learned, informally, in interaction with other people and
are passed "that way from generation to generation.
The term "norms" covers an
exceedingly wide range of behaviour. So that the whole range of that behaviour
may be included. Sociologists have offered the following definition. Social
norms are rules developed by a group of people that specify how people must,
should, may, should not, and must not behave in various situations.
Some norms are defined by individual
and societies as crucial to the society. For example, all members of the group
are required to wear clothing and to bury their dead. Such "musts"
are often labeled "mores", a term coined by the American sociologist
William Graham Sumner.
Many social norms are concerned with
"should "; that is, there is some pressure on the individual to
conform but there is some leeway permitted also. The 'should behaviors' are
what Sumner called "folk-ways"; that is, conventional ways of doing
things that are not defined as crucial to the survival of either the individual
or the society. The 'should behaviors' in our own society include the
prescriptions that people's clothes should be clean, and that death should be
recognized with public funerals. A complete list of the should behaviors
in a complex society would be virtually without end.
The word "May" in the
definition of norms indicates that, in most groups, there is a wide range of
behaviors in which the individual is given considerable choice. To continue the
illustration, in Western countries girls may select to wear dresses or halters
and jeans. Diets may be done through trainers at the gym or through the benefit
of Medifast coupons, some
people may even prefer diets advertised on tv. Funerals may be held with or
without flowers, with the casket open or closed, with or without religious
participation, and so on. We have confined our examples to just three areas,
but students should be able to construct their own examples from all areas of
life.
The remainder of the definition,
including the 'should-not' and the 'must-not' behaviours, probably does not
require lengthy illustration because such examples are implicit in what has
already been said. One should not belch in public, dump garbage in the street,
run stop signs, or tell lies. One must not kill another person or have sexual
intercourse with one's sister or brother.
Social norms cover almost every
conceivable situation, and they vary from standards where almost complete
conformity is demanded to those where there is great freedom of choice. Norms
also vary in the kinds of sanctions that are attached to violation of the
norms. Since norms derive from values, and since complex societies have
multiple and conflicting value systems, it follows that norms frequently are in
conflict also.
Taking the illustration of American
sex norms, two proscriptive norms prohibit premarital intercourse and
extramarital intercourse. But many boys also have been taught that sex is good
and that they should seek to "score" with girls whenever possible.
Somewhat similarly, girls have been taught that promiscuous intercourse before
marriage is bad; but they have also been taught that sex is acceptable within
true love relationships. Members of both sexes, then, find themselves faced
with conflicting demands for participation in sex and for abstinence from it.
They also discover that there are sanctions associated with either course of
action.
Normative conflict is also deeply
involved in social change. As statistical norms come to differ too blatantly
from existing prescriptive norms, new prescriptive norms give sanction to
formerly prohibited behaviour and even extend it. Recent changes in the sex
norms of teenage and young adult groups provide examples. The change is more
apparent in communal living groups where sometimes there is an explicit
ideology of sexual freedom and the assumption that sexual activities will be
shared with all members of the group. In less dramatic fashion, the change is
evident among couples who simply begin to live together without the formality
of a marriage ceremony.
http://www.sociologyguide.com/basic-concepts/Social-Norms.php
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