Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Boycott
To
refuse to buy items from a particular country.
Boomerang
flat, bent wooden tool of the Australian Aborigines that
is thrown to stun prey when it strikes them and that sails back to the hunter
if it misses its target.
Bonds
a uniting or binding force or influence.
Blizzard
severe
winter storm that lasts several hours and combines high winds with heavy snow.
Birthrate
number
of children born each year for every 1,000 people.
Biotechnology
study
of cells to find ways of improving health.
Biome
Area that includes particular kinds of plants and animals
adapted to conditions there.
Biodiversity
variety
of Plants and animals living on the planet.
Monday, December 1, 2014
Clan
large group of people who have a common ancestor in the far
past.
Civil War
Fight
between opposing groups for control of a country’s government.
Civilization
highly
developed culture.
Civil Disobedience
use
of nonviolent protests to challenge a government or its laws.
City-State
independent
political unit that includes a city and the surrounding area.
Census
a count of the number of people living in an
area in the country.
Celadon
highly
prized style of pottery that has a greenish tint.
Caudillo
Latin America ruler, often a military officer
or wealthy individual ruling as a dictator.
Category
division or grouping.
Caste
Social Class a person is born into and cannot
change.
Cash Crop
farm
product grown for export.
Cash Crop
farm
product grown for export.
Casbah
older
section of Algerian cities.
Carnival
large festival held each spring in countries in Latin
America on the last day before the Christian holy period called lent.
Capable
able to do one’s job well
Canopy
umbrella-like covering formed by the tops of trees in a
rainforest.
Calligraphy
art
of beautiful writing.
Cacao
tropical
tree whose seeds are used to make chocolate and cocoa.
Brownfield
sites that have been abandoned and may contain dangerous
chemicals.
Breadfruit
fruit from a tree of the same name that is a basic food in
Oceania.
Boycott
To refuse to buy items from a particular country.
Boomerang
flat, bent wooden tool of the Australian Aborigines that is
thrown to stun prey when it strikes them and that sails back to the hunter if
it misses its target.
Bonds
a
uniting or binding force or influence.
Blizzard
severe winter storm that lasts several hours and combines
high winds with heavy snow.
Birthrate
number of children born each year for every 1,000 people.
Biotechnology
study of cells to find ways of improving health.
Biome
Area that includes particular kinds of plants and animals
adapted to conditions there.
Biodiversity
variety of Plants and animals living on the planet.
Bilingual
accepting
two official languages; able to speak two languages.
Boston Tea Party
December 16, 1773 protest against British taxes in which
Bostonians disguised as Native Americans dumped tea into the harbor.
Boston Tea Party
December 16, 1773 protest against British taxes in which
Bostonians disguised as Native Americans dumped tea into the harbor.
Benefit
something
that does good to a person or thing.
Bedouin
Nomadic
desert people of Southwest Asia who follow a traditional way of life.
Bazaar
Local
marketplace in North Africa and southwest Asia.
Axis
imaginary
line that passes through the center of Earth from the North Pole to the South
Pole.
Availability
state
of being easy or possible to get or use.
Autonomy
having
the independence from another country.
Authority
power
of influence over others.
Attitudes
a particular feeling or way of thinking about something.
Atoll
circular shaped islands made of coral.
Archipelago
group
of islands.
Aquifer
underground layer of rock through which water flows.
Apartheid
System of laws in South Africa aimed at separating the
races.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Annex
declare
ownership of an area.
Anime
Japanese style of animation that arose in the late 1900s and
appears in comic books and cartoons.
Amendment
an addition to a legal document or law.
Altitude
height above sea level.
Alluvial Plain
Area built by rich fertile soil left by river and floods.
Affect
to
influence, or produce an effect upon.
Administrator
a person who manages or directs.
Adequate
enough to satisfy a particular requirement.
Action Song
art
form that arose in New Zealand in the 1900s and blends traditional dance with
modern music.
Acid rain
Chemicals from air pollution that combine with
precipitation.
Accumulate
to
increase in amount.
Absolute location
exact
spot where a place is found.
Zero tolerance
a
set of strict policies to prevent school violence.
Young-old
a
term used to refer to people aged 65 to 74.
World-System theory
A theory of modernization proposed by Immanuel Wallerstein,
in which the spread of capitalism is seen as producing an international
division of labor between more developed and less developed nations. According
to this view, the more developed nations control the factors of production and
the less developed nations serve as sources of cheap labor and raw materials.
Work
all of the tasks necessary for producing goods and services
that meet human needs.
White ethnics
the collective reference to immigrants from the
predominantly Catholic countries of Ireland, Italy, France, Poland, and Greece.
White-Collar Crime
a
crime that is committed by people of high social status in the course of their
professional lives.
Wealth
a
combination of an individual’s assests – the value of everything the person
owns – and income- money earned through salaries and investments.
Wage gap
the level of women’s income relative to that of men.
Voluntary Childlessness
the
conscious choice to remain childless.
Voluntary association
a nonprofit association formed to pursue some common
interest.
Vertical mobility
a
type of social mobility in which an individual moves from one social class to
the next.
Variable
a
characteristic that can differ from one individual, group, or situation to
another in a measurable way.
Values
shared
beliefs about what is good or bad, right or wrong, desirable or undesirable.
Urbanization
the
concentration of the population in cities.
Urban Sprawl
a
phenomenon characterized by poorly planned development on the edge of cities
and towns.
Urban ecology
an approach that examines the relationship between people
and the urban environment.
Urban anomie theory
a theory of city life in which the city is
seen to be anonymous and unfriendly place that carries serious negative
consequences for those who live there.
Unemployment rate
a percentage of the civilian labor force that
is unemployed but actively seeking employment.
Unemployment
a
situation that occurs when people do not
have jobs but are actively seeking employment.
Transfer Payments
a method used by the government to attempt to reduce social
inequality by redistributing money among various segments of society.
Traditional Authority
the power that is legitimated by long standing customs.
Tracking
the assignment of student s to different types of
educational programs.
Totalitarianism
the most extreme form of authoritarian government.
Under totalitarianism, government
leaders accept few limits on their authority.
Title IX
A section of the Education Amendment Act of 1972 that bars
discrimination on the basis of gender in any program – including athletics – at
any educational institution receiving federal funds.
Total institution
a setting in which people are isolated from the rest of
society for a specific period of time and subjected to tight control.
Total institution
a setting in which people are isolated from the rest of
society for a specific period of time and subjected to tight control.
Theory
a systematic explanation of the relationship among
phenomena.
Theoretical Perspective
a general set of assumptions about the nature of phenomena.
Theism
the
belief in a God or Gods.
Tertiary Sector
A
sector of the economy that concentrates on the provision of services.
Technology
the
knowledge and tools that people use to manipulate their environment.
Symbolic interaction
interaction among people that takes place
through the use of symbols.
Symbol
anything that stands for something else and has a shared
meaning attached to it, such as language, gestures, images, sounds, physical
objects, events, and elements of the natural world that convey a particular
meaning.
Survey
a research method that allows data on attitudes and opinions
to be collected from large numbers of people.
Subsistence Strategies
ways in which a society uses technology to provide for the
needs of its members.
Subjugation
the maintaining of control over a group through force.
Subjective Method
a technique used to rank individuals according to social
class in which the individuals themselves are asked to determine their own
social rank.
Subculture
a group with its own unique values, norms, and behaviors
that exists within a larger culture.
Subcultural Theory
a theory of city life in which the characteristics of the
are said to encourage rather than discourage the formation of primary group
relationships.
Strain Theory
a theory of deviant behavior that views deviance as the
natural outgrowth of the values, norms, and structure of society.
Stigma
a mark of social disgrace that sets a deviant individual
apart from the rest of society.
Stereotype
an oversimplified , exaggerated, or unfavorable
generalization about a category of people.
Status
a socially defined position in a group or in a society.
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
Statistical Analysis
a
research method that entails analyzing data that have already been collected to
determine the strength of the relationship
that may exist between two or more variables.
Statistical Analysis
a
research method that entails analyzing data that have already been collected to
determine the strength of the relationship
that may exist between two or more variables.
Statistical Analysis
a
research method that entails analyzing data that have already been collected to
determine the strength of the relationship
that may exist between two or more variables.
Statistical Analysis
a
research method that entails analyzing data that have already been collected to
determine the strength of the relationship
that may exist between two or more variables.
Stacking
the
practice of assigning people to central or noncentral athletic positions on the
basis of race or ethnicity.
Sport
competitive games that are won or lost on the basis of
physical skills and played according to specific rules.
Spiral of Silence
a
belief that as more people accept common opinions the people who disagree are
less likely to voice their views.
Sociology
the
social science that studies human society and social behavior.
Sociological perspective
a viewing of the behavior of groups is a systematic way.
Socioeconomic status
a rating that combines social factors such as level of
education, occupational prestige, and place of residence with the economic
factor of income in order to determine an individual’s relative position in a
stratification system.
Sociobiology
the
systematic study of the biological basis of all social behavior.
Society
a group of interdependent people who have organized in such
a way as to share a common culture and have a feeling of unity.
Social Structure
a
network of interrelated statuses and roles that guides human interaction.
Social Stratification
the process of dividing societies into categories, ranks, or
classes based on certain characteristics.
Social sciences
related disciplines that study various aspects of human
social behavior.
Social Psychology
the study of how the social environment affects an
individual’s behavior and personality.
Social Phenomena
Observable facts or events that involve human society.
Social Network
the
web of relationships that is formed by the sum total of an individual’s
interactions with other people.
Social Movement
a long-term conscious effort to promote or prevent social
change.
Social mobility
The movement between or within social classes.
Socialization
the interactive process through which people learn the basic
skills, values, beliefs, and behavior patterns of society.
Socialism
an economic model in which the factors of production are
owned by the government, which regulates all economic activity.
Social interaction
how
people relate to one another and influence each other’s behavior.
Social Integration
the
degree of attachment people have to social groups or to society as a whole.
Social Institution
a
system of statuses, roles, values, and norms that is organized to satisfy one
or more of the basic needs of society.
Social Inequality
the
unequal sharing of scarce resources and social rewards.
Social Gerontology
a
subfield of gerontology that studies the nonphysical aspects of aging.
Social Darwinism
the perspective that holds that societies evolve toward
stability and perfection and only the fittest societies survive over time.
Social Control
enforcing
of norms through either internal or external means.
Social Class
a
grouping of people with similar levels of wealth, power, and prestige.
:: Social Change
alterations in various aspects of a society over time.
Social Capital
the
social networks and the reciprocal norms associated with these networks that
encourage people to do things for each other.
Significant others
specific people, such as parents, siblings, relatives, and
others, who directly influence our socialization.
Sexism
the belief that one sex is by nature superior to the other.
Self-fulfilment
a commitment to the full development of one’s personality,
talents, and potential.
Self-fulfilling prophecy
a
prediction that results in behavior that makes the prediction come true.
Self
the
conscious awareness of possessing a distinct identity that separates one
from other members of society.
Monday, November 24, 2014
Segregation
the physical separation of a minority group from the
dominant group.
Secularization
the
process of moving from the realm of the sacred to that of the profane.
Sector Model
A
model of urban structure proposed by Homer Hoyt in which the growth of a city
is said to occur in wedge-shaped sectors that extend outward from the center to
the edge of the city.
Sect
a
relatively small religious organization that typically has a split off from a denomination
because of doctrinal differences.
Secondary Sector
the
sector of the economy that concentrates on the use of raw materials to
manufacture goods.
Secondary Group
a group in which interaction is impersonal and temporary in
nature.
Scientific Method
an
objective, logical, and systematic way of collecting empirical data and
arriving at reasoned conclusion.
Schooling
Instruction by specially trained teachers who follow
officially recognized policies.
School Choice
a
system of schooling offering alternatives to local public schools, to which
parents can choose to send their children.
Scapegoating
the practice of placing blame for one’s troubles on an
innocent individual group.
Sandwich Generation
a group of Americans caught between the needs of their
children and their aging parents.
Sanctions
the rewards or punishments used to enforce conformity to
norms.
Sample
a
small but representative selection of people studied in a survey or other
research project.
Sacred
anything
that is considered to be part of the supernatural world and that inspires awe,
respect and reverence.
Role Strain
A situation that occurs when a person has difficulty meeting
the expectations of a single status.
Role Set
different roles attached to a single status.
Role Exit
the process that people go through to detach from a role
that has been central to their self identity.
Role
the behavior expected of someone occupying a particular
status.
Ritual
an established pattern of behavior through which a group of
believers experiences the sacred.
Riot
a crowd that erupts in generalized destructive behavior,
the purpose of which is social disorder.
Revolutionary movement
a type of social movement, the goal of which is a total and
radical change of the existing social structure.
Revisionary Movement
a
social movement that tries to improve or revise some part of society through
social change.
Resource mobilization
the organization and effective use of resources essential to
social movements.
Resocialization
a
break with past experiences and the learning of new values and norms.
Reputational method
a technique used to rank individuals according to social
class in which individuals in the community rank other community members based
on what they know of their characters and lifestyles.
Religiosty
the
importance of religion in a person’s life.
Reformulation
the process of adapting borrowed cultural traits.
Reference group
any group with whom individuals identify and whose attitudes
and values they often adopt.
Reciprocity
the
idea that if you do something for someone, that person owes you something in
return.
Recidivism
repeated
criminal behavior.
Reactionary movement
a social movement with a goal to reverse current social
trends.
Rational-legal authority
power that is legitimated by formal rules and regulations.
Rationalization
the processes by which every feature of human behavior
becomes subject to calculation, measurement, and control.
Rationality
the process of subjecting every feature of human behavior to
calculation, measurement, and control.
Racism
the belief that one’s own race or ethnic group is naturally
superior to other races or ethnic groups.
Racial profiling
a practice of assuming that nonwhite Americans are more
likely to commit crimes than white Americans.
Race
the category of people who share inherited physical
characteristics and who are perceived by others as being a distinct group.
Public opinion
a collection of differing attitudes that members of a public
have about a particular issues.
Puberty
the physical maturing that makes an individual capable of
sexual reproduction.
Psychology
the social science that studies the behavior and mental
processes of individuals.
Protectionism
the
use of trade barriers to protect domestic manufacturers from foreign
competition.
Proportional representation
A
system in which a party receives a number of seats in government related to the
popular votes they receive.
Proletariat
workers who sell their labor in exchange for wages in a
capitalist society.
Profession
a
high-status occupation that requires specialized skills obtained through formal
education.
Profane
anything considered to be part of the ordinary world and
thus commonplace and familiar; not sacred.
Primary sector
a sector of the economy that deals with the extraction of
raw materials from the environment.
Primary Group
a small group of people who interact over a relatively long period of time on a direct and personal basis.
Primary deviance
the occasional violation of norms: the individuals who commit
it do not see themselves as deviant and neither does society.
Prestige
the respect, honor, recognition, or courtesy an individual
receives from other members of society.
Prejudice
an unsupported generalization about a category of people.
Friday, November 21, 2014
Preindustrial Society
a
type of society in which food production – carried out through the use of human
and animal labor – is the main economic activity.
Preindustrial Society
a
type of society in which food production – carried out through the use of human
and animal labor – is the main economic activity.
Power-Elite model
a model in which political power in the United States is
said to be exercised by and for the privileged few in society.
Power
the
ability to control the behavior of others, with or without their consent.
Poverty Level
the minimum annual income needed by a family to survive as
defined by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Poverty Level
the minimum annual income needed by a family to survive as
defined by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Poverty
a
standard of living that is below the minimum level considered adequate by
society.
Postindustrial Society
A
type of society in which economic activity centers on the production of
information and the provision of services.
Postindustrial Society
A
type of society in which economic activity centers on the production of
information and the provision of services.
Positive Sanction
an
action that rewards a particular kind of behavior.
Population
the number of people living in an area at a particular time.
Polytheism
the belief in more than one God.
Polygamy
a marriage with multiple partners.
Political Science
the
study of the principles, organization and operation of government.
Political Party
an
organization that seeks to gain power in the government through political
means.
Political institution
a system of roles and norms that governs the distribution
and exercise of power on society.
Police discretion
the power held by police officers to decide who is actually
arrested.
Pluralist Model
a model in which the political process in the United States
is said to be controlled by interest groups that compete with one another for
power.
Plea bargaining
the
process of legal negotiation that allows an accused person to plead guilty to a
lesser charge in return for a lighter sentence.
Personality
the sum total of behaviors, attitudes, beliefs, and values
that are charateritics of an individual.
Peer Group
a
primary group composed of individuals of roughly equal age and similar social
characteristics.
Participant Observation
a
research method in which researchers become directly involved in the situation
under investigation.
Panic
A spontaneous and uncoordinated group action to escape some
perceived threat.
Pan-indianism
a social and political movement that unites culturally
distinct tribes to work together on issues that affect all Native Americans.
Overurbanization
A situation in which more people live in the city than the
city can support in terms of jobs and facilities.
Outsourcing
a
practice that involves moving business units and jobs across national
boundaries, where operating and labor costs are less expensive.
Out-group
Any group that an individual does not belong to or identify
with.
Organic Solidarity
Impersonal
social relationships common in industrial societies, that arise with increased
job specialization.
Opinion Leaders
respected individuals in the community.
Oligopoly
A situation that exists when a few people control an
industry.
OLD-OLD
a
term used to refer to people 85 and older.
Objective Method
a
technique used to rank individuals according to social class in which
sociologists define social class in terms of factors such as income,
occupation, and education.
Nuclear Family
A family form that consists of one or both parents and their
children.
Novice Phase
a term proposed by Daniel Levinson and his colleagues for
the first three stages of the early adulthood era, during which a person
prepares for entry into the adult world.
Norms
Shared rules of conduct that tell people how to act in
specific situations.
Nonmaterial culture
abstract human creations, such as language, ideas, beliefs,
rules, skills, family patterns, work practices, and political economic systems.
Negative Sanction
a
punishment or the threat of punishment used to enforce conformity.
Narcissism
the feeling of extreme self-centeredness.
Multiple-Nuclei Model
a
model of urban structure proposed by Chauncey Harris and Edward Ullman in which
the city is said to have a number of specialized centers devoted to different
types of land use.
Multinational
a
corporation that has factories and offices in several countries.
Mores
Norms
that have great moral significance attached to them.
Monotheism
The belief that there is only one God.
Monogamy
the
marriage of one man to one woman.
Modernization Theory
A
theory of modernization that argues that the more-developed nations of the
world were the first to modernize because they were the first to industrialize.
Modernization
the process by which a society’s social institutions become
increasingly complex as the society moves toward industrialization.
Mob
an
emotionally charged collectivity whose members are united by a specific, and
often destructive or violent, goal.
Minority Group
a group of people who are singled out and unequally treated
because of their physical characteristics or cultural practices.
Migration
the movement of people from one specified area to another.
Thursday, November 20, 2014
Middle-Old
A
term used to refer to people aged 75 to 84.
Middle Adulthood
the second era of adulthood, spanning the ages 40 through
59.
Microsociology
the level of analysis that involves looking at small-scale
settings and everyday interaction among group members: employed by the
interactionist perspective.
Mentor
Someone who fosters an individual’s development by believing
in the person, sharing the person’s dreams, and helping the person achieve
those dreams.
Medicare
the government-sponsored health insurance plan for elderly
Americans and Americans with disabilities.
Medicaid
the
state and federally funded health insurance program for low income individuals.
Media Convergence
the idea that mass media are merging and are no longer separate
entities.
Mechanical Solidarity
the close-knit social relationships common in preindustrial societies that
result when a small group of people share the same values and perform the same
tasks.
Material Culture
Physical
objects created by human groups.
Master Status
the status that plays the greatest role in shaping a person’s
life and determining his or her social identity.
Mass Media
The
instruments of communication that reach large audiences with no personal contact
between the individuals sending the information and those receiving it, such as
newspapers, magazines, books, television, radio, films, and the Internet.
Mass Hysteria
an unfounded anxiety shared by people who are scattered over
a wide geographic area.
Mass Hysteria
an unfounded anxiety shared by people who are scattered over
a wide geographic area.
Manifest Function
an
intended and recognized consequence of some element of society.
Managed care
alternative health-insurance plans used to help control
health care costs.
Malthusian Theory
A theory of population proposed by Thomas Malthus, in which
population increases geometrically and the food supply increases
arithmetically. Because the food supply cannot keep up with the expanding population,
Malthus predicted widespread starvation would result.
Macrosociology
A level of analysis that involves the study of large-scale
systems or society as a whole: employed by the functionalist and conflict
perspectives.
Looking-Glass Self
the interactive process by which we develop an image of
ourselves based on how we imagine we appear to others.
Life Structure
the combination of statuses, roles, activities, goals,
values, beliefs, and life circumstances that characterize and individual.
Life Chances
the
likelihood that individuals have a sharing in the opportunities and benefits of
society.
Legitimacy
the
right of those people in power to control, or govern, others.
Legal Discrimination
Discrimination
that is upheld by law.
Leaders
People who influence the attitudes and opinions of others.
Law of Supply
A principle that states that producers will supply more
products when they can charge higher prices and fewer products when they must
charge lower prices.
Law of demand
A
principle that states that the demand for a product increases as the price of
the product decreases and demand decreases as price increases
Latent function
an
unintended and unrecognized consequence of some element of society.
Life Expectancy
the avaerage number of years a person born in a particular year can be expected to live.
Latent function
an unintended and unrecognized consequence of some element
of society.
Laissez-faire Capitalism
a pure form of capitalism in which government does not
interfere in the economy.
Labor Force
All
individuals 16 and older who are employed in paid positions or who are seeking
paid employment.
Knowledge-gap hypothesis
a theory that states as new information enters society,
wealthy and better educated members acquire it at a faster rate than poor and
less educated people.
Kinship
A
network of people who are related by marriage, birth, or adoption.
Iron Law of oligarchy
A
tendency of organizations to become increasingly dominated by small groups of
people.
Intergenerational Mobility
a
form of vertical mobility in which social status differs between generations in
the same family.
Interest group
An
organization that attempts to influence the political decision-making process.
Interactionist perspective
A theoretical perspective that focuses on how
individuals interact with one another in society.
Institutionalized Discrimination
Discrimination
that is an outgrowth of the structure of society.
Instinct
An
unchanging, biologically inherited behavior pattern.
In-Group
A
group that an individual belongs to and identifies with.
Infrastructure
A
system of roads, ports, and other facilities needed by a modern economy.
Industrial Society
A society in which the exchange of information is the main
social and economic activity.
Impression Management
An
effort to present the self well and manage the impressions that the audience
receives.
Ideology
A
system of beliefs or ideas that justifies some social, moral, religious,
political, or economic interests held by a social group or by society.
Ideal type
A
description comprised of the essential
characteristics of some aspect of society.
Hypothesis
A
statement that predicts the relationship between two or more variables.
Horizontal Mobility
A
type of social mobility in which an individual moves within a social class.
Homogamy
The
tendency of individuals to marry people with social characteristics similar to
their own.
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
History
the study of the people and events of the past.
Historical Method
a research method that involves the examination of any materials from the past that contain information of sociological interest.
Hidden Curriculum
transmission by schools of cultural goals that are not openly acknowledged.
Heterogamy
The tendency for individuals to marry people who have social characteristics different from their own.
Heredity
the transmission of genetic characteristics from parents to children.
Growth Rate
the birthrate minus the death rate, or the rate at which a country's population is increasing.
Group
a set of two or more people who interact on the basis of shared expectations and who possess some degree of common identity.
graying of America
a phenomenon of the growin percentage of elderly Americans as part of the total U.S. population.
Globalization
the development of economic, political and social relationships that stretch worldwide.
Glass Ceiling
the invisible barrier that prevents women from gaining upper-level positions in businesses.
Genocide
Extermination aimed at intentionally destroying an entire targeted population.
Generalized other
the internalized attitudes, expectations, and viewpoints of society that guide our behavior and reinforce our sense of self.
Gender
the behavioral and psycological traits considered appropriate for men and women.
Gemeinshaft
Societies in which most members know one another, relationships are close, and activities center on the family and the community.
Gatekeepers
Media executives, editors, or reporters who can open or close the gate on a particular issue.
Functionalist Perspective
A theoretical perspective that views society as a set of interrelated parts that work together to produce a stable social system.
Function
a positive consequence that an element of society produces for the maintenance of the social system.
Free Trade
trade between nations that is unrestricted by trade barriers.
Free Enterprise System
an economic system with limited government control of business operations.
Formal Sanction
A reward or punishment that is given by some formal organization or regulatory body.
Formal Organization
a large, complex secondary group that has been established to achieve specific goals.
Formal group
a group in which the structure, goals, and activities of the group are clearly defined.
Folkways
norms that do not have great moral significane attached to them - the common customs of everyday life.
Fertility
the actual number of births per 1,000 women of childbearing age in a population.
Feminist Perspective
A theoretical perspective that involves viewing society as a system of gender inequality in which men dominate women.
Fecundity
the biological potential for reproduction.
Family of procreation
a nuclear family consisting of an individual, his or her spouse, and their children.
Family of Orientation
a nuclear family into which a person is born or adopted.
Family
a group of people who are related by marriage, blood, or adoption and who live together and share economic resources.
Factors of production
the resources that can be used to produce and distribute goods and services.
Extended Family
a family form that consists of three or more generations of a family sharing the same residence.
Experiment
a research method in which data is gathered under controlled conditions set by the researcher.
Exogamy
Marriage outside of one's own social category.
Exchange Theory
a theory that holds that people are motivated by self-interests in their interactions withbothers.
Exchange
an indivuidual, group, or cocietal interaction undertaken in effort to recieve a reward in return for actions.
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