unit 5. human social nature and community
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Unit 5. Human Social Nature and CommunityTRANSCRIPT
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Unit 5. Human Social Nature & Community
Nadia Dresscher
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Objectives for Unit 5:
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1. Explore the concept of communitya) its propertiesb) its changing nature in timec) focus on conditions that favor communities
2. Introduce 2 modes of human social behavior
3. Refine the concept of community by relating community to the concepts of:a) reciprocity b) social capital
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Class Assignment: The meaning of community
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Form groups of 4 or 5 students Brainstorm on the meaning of
the concept community for you all, answer these questions:
How would you describe a community in your own words?
What are the properties of a community?
What does the unique individual mean to the communities he/she belongs too
To which communities you consider yourself belonging to? Each student in the group can
belong to a different community Identify these communities
Write this all down in order to share this with the whole class
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Approaching Community
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As a value:Solidarity, commitment, mutuality, trust,
fellowship, communal, communication
As a descriptive category or set of variables :1. In terms of Place: territorial, people have
something in common, this shared element is geographically/ ‘locality’
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Approaching Community
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2. In terms of interest: ‘elective’ communities, people share a common characteristic other than place.
They are ‘linked’ together by factors (share some common binding ground) such as religion, occupation, culture, socio-economic status, hobbies, ideologies, ethnic origin, cybergroups, sexual-orientation etc.
We talk about Aruban community, religious community, neighborhood, childhood friends,etc.
To study of identity/selfhood plays an important role for the understanding of the approach of non-place community
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Approaching Community
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3. Communion: sense of attachment to a place, group or idea
----- Communities have meaning to its members:
how? It plays a important role in generating
people’s sense of belonging A Community suggests that members of a
group have something in common with each other and the thing held in common distinguishes them in a significant way from the members of other groups
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There is some kind of boundary
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Similarity and difference
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A question of boundary
What marks the beginning and the end of a community?
Some might suggest, boundaries may be marked On a map?In law?By physical features like a road, river, sea?Religion?Linguistic?
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However, not all boundaries are so obvious…
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They may be thought; existing in the minds of the member (beholders of the thought) : meaning is given to a community in order of it to become a community
As such they may be seen in in very different ways, not only by the people on either side, but also by people on the same side
This symbolic aspect of community boundary is important if we want to understand how humans experience communities
The defining of a boundary places some people within and some beyond the line (inclusion/exclusion)
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Community as network and local social system
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The fact that people live close to each other does not necessarily mean that they have much to do with each other (e.g. they may be little interaction between neighbors)
It is the nature of the relationships between people and the social networks of which they belong to are seen as one of the most important aspects of community
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Community, norms and habits:
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Whether individuals are disposed to engage with one another is dependent upon the norms of a particular society or community and to the extent to which individuals make these norms and habits as theirs
Assignment: Identify these norms/habits for the communities you named in your class assignment
to judge to quality of life within a particular community, we need to explore what shared expectations there are about the way people should behave and whether different individuals take these on!
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3 types of qualities that are common when approaching communal life:
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Tolerance: an openness to others, curiosity, perhaps even respect, a willingness to listen and learn
Reciprocity: a definition for now: “I’ll do this for you now, without expecting anything immediately in return and perhaps without even knowing you, confident that down the road you or someone else will return the favor” (Putman 2000).
Trust: the confident expectation that people, institutions and things will act in a consistent, honest and appropriate way (trustworthiness/reliability).social trust
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A brief history of communities
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Gather & Hunter period: Communities were much prevalent compared to now:
Reason for this: humans did not produce food, but gathered on a day-to-day basis
So it was important to have an effective division of tasks and sharing resources.
Community then meant SURVIVALReciprocity relations, egalitarianism ( idea
that everybody is equal), empathy, bonding, paternal care, ‘it takes a whole village to raise a child’, large group size etc.
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Gather & Hunter period
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Humans start producing food (agriculture)
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Humans started to produce their own food by means of domestication of plants and animals had effect on communal life
Birth of (economic) markets: transactions (I give you 20 corns, you give me a fat cow)
The communal structure disappearedCommunities: at the level of kinship, familyImpersonal relationships: scattered
communities (small scale)
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Agrarian societies:Domestication of plants & animals
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Industrial Revolution
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Humans went from a traditional agriculture to urbanization (to work in the industry)
Impersonal relationships, the introduction of the concept of time measured in labor hours….
Can you visualize how this happened in Aruba?
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Year Inhabitants
1817 1.732
1863 3.258
1900 9.702
1920 8.265
1930 15.697
1940 30.614
1950 51.000
1960 56.905
1972 57.905
1981 60.321
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Industrial revolution
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Contemporary communities
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Nowadays people are born in a social environment that does not resemblance the communal life of the past:
Urbanization (cities), strangers (we don’t always talk to our neighbors'):
But: reciprocity is learnedIn general children’s potential to learn
reciprocity behavior is realized step by step from early childhood to adolescence, within the confines of family and friends (nurture and nature debate: both nature (altruistic gene & socialization)
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Modes of interpersonal behavior (Vos, 2004)
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Human social natureSocial; implying in relation to othersHuman nature: biological genes (nature)You will see that nurture (socialization) is
also important: human beings learn! Learn to be social, learn to compete
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2 modes: Status Competition
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1. Status Competition: refers to the selection for those motivations and abilities that help individuals in competing with other individuals for resources (food, territory, mates).
It implies that there is a competition: there is a winner and a loser.
Dominance, hierarchical relations: the winner acts dominating and the loser submissively
Egoistic gene survival of the fittist
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2 modes: Reciprocity
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2. Reciprocity:the mechanism whereby the evolution of
cooperative or altruistic behavior may be favored by the probability of future mutual interactions
To help without the expectation of immediate help back. Purely based on the need of the other: feelings of care and attachment (biological).
And when learned: moral obligation (artificial)
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The reciprocity relation is the building block of the social system of community
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To help without the expectation of immediate help back. Purely based on the need of the other: feelings of care and attachment“I’ll do this for you now, without expecting anything immediately in return and perhaps without even knowing you, confident that down the road you or someone else will return the favor” (Putman 2000).
Drawing courtesy of Stephanie Croes
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Movie Pay it Forward illustrates the concept of (generalized) reciprocity
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KEwRXCalF9g
Reciprocity: I’ll do this for you now, without expecting anything immediately in return and perhaps without even knowing you, confident that down the road you or someone else will return the favor” (Putman 2000).
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Influence of the environment
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Human social environments (contexts) (in terms of concentration of modes: number of humans behaving in a status competition or communal (reciprocity) mode) triggers a the switch in a particular mode:
The more communal behavior, the more reciprocity relations between individuals or
The more status-competition behavior , the more competing between individuals on multiple levels.
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Definition of Community !!!!!!(Vos, 2004)
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This will be the one definition we will use for this course:
“ A group of individuals with an internal structure of reciprocity relations.”
This implies:A community consists of communals, that
is, of individuals who act in the communal mode. BUT:
At the same time it should be realized that a precondition for people enacting this mode is the existence of the community
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The egg – chicken dilemma:
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The community needs the communal individual and the individual needs the community in order to be communal
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‘Social Capital’
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We will explore the concept of Social Capital in order to understand the internal structures of the communities
relationships matter: social networks are a valuable asset
Interaction is important:COMMUNICATION IS THE BINDING GLUE IN
A COMMUNITY:it enables people to build communities, to
commit themselves to each other and to knit the social fabric
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Relationship between concepts:Modes of interpersonal behavior, social environment, community & social capital
31Drawing courtesy of Stephanie Croes
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Community (Vos, 2004)
A community is a group of individuals with an internal structure of reciprocity relations
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Contemporary SocietyPeople in contemporary societies have 2 non-exclusive (niet elkaar uitsluitend) options for contributing to communal living:
1. They can try to maintain and enrich the remains of community life that are transmitted from the past or that are based on existing long-term relationships
2. There may be occasions for building community more or less from scratch
In the second option the expectation of a long-term relationship is intentionally generated
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Which conditions favor the existing of communities?1. The interdependency condition
2. The condition of expected long-term relationships
3. The multiplexity condition
4. The accessibility condition
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Conditions favoring communities (Vos, 2004)
The more people are interdependent, the more they have and/or expect to have long-term relationships, the more they have multiplex relationships and the easier they are mutually accessible, the more they will develop mutual reciprocity relationsWhich means: the more they are a community
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Social Capital
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Social Capital: “Relationship matters”Relationships are a valuable assetHumans are social being: we have
relationships with othersSociety is composed of multiple
communities (formal and informal) that are connected to each other. Internal structure
Interaction (communication) is the binding glue of society and of communities and between communities
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Social CapitalWhat is capital?SC has a lot of different definitions:SC is the aggregate of the actual potential
resources which are linked to possession of a durable network of more or less institutionalized relationships of mutual acquaintance and recognition (Bourdieu)
SC consists of social connections, who you know and who you are friendly with, who you can call on for help or favors
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Putman:
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“Whereas physical capital refers to psychical objects and human capital refers to the properties of individuals, social capital refers to connections among individuals, the social networks and the norms of reciprocity and trustworthiness that arise from them”.
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SCRefers to the connections between people
When approaching SC we look at the nature of these connections
E.g. of types of assets:TrustNormsReciprocityInformation CooperationMobilizationidentification
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Types of SC Bonding: ties between people in similar
situations (are alike) , such as immediate family, close friends, neighbors
Bridging: more distant ties of persons: workmates, loose friendships and workmates
Linking: reaches out to unlike people in dissimilar situations, such as those who are entirely outside of the community.
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Social Capital visualized in terms of social networks
•What value do I give the relationships I have with others? •If I could indentify this value, and break it down in concrete ‘things’, what would these be? In other words: What are the social assets I get from these relationships?
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Positive Outcomes linked to SCIndividual level:Well-beingSelf-esteemSatisfaction with lifeUseful information
Community level:Mobilize community efforts: e.g. public health,
schoolsLow crime ratesMore efficiency on level of organizations
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Negative outcomes linked to SCExclusion of others not in the social
networkBenefits to the ones in a social network
alone. E.g. Nepotism
Can you think of other negative outcomes?
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Decline SC (Putman) due toChanges in family structureSuburban sprawl (travel a lot to work,
leisure etc): less time available to connect with each other
Electronic entertainment (tv, internet)The last one will be the topic of our next
meeting: the influence of internet on SC, communities: emerging of new types of communities?
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Assignment:How does the Internet affect the
formation, development and
maintenance of relationships?