social system
Noun: A social system refers to the network of patterned, interdependent relationships and interactions between individuals, groups, and institutions that form the structure of a society. It encompasses the organized arrangements, roles, norms, and values that govern social behavior and collective life.
The term is used to analyze and describe the complex, structured organization of a society or a significant subsystem within it (e.g., the family system, the economic system). It focuses on the interconnections and functional relationships between its constituent parts. - Sociologists study the social system to understand how order and stability are maintained. - The introduction of new technology can disrupt an existing social system.
- "To analyze/study the social system": To examine the structure and function of societal relationships.
- Her research aims to analyze the social system of ancient civilizations.
- As part of a larger theoretical framework: Often used in structural-functional analysis in sociology.
- In his theory, each institution fulfills a necessary function for the stability of the overall social system.
- Social structure (n): A closely related term often used interchangeably to refer to the enduring, patterned arrangements in society.
- Social organization (n): The specific way a society or group is structured and coordinated.
- Social order
- Social structure
- Societal system
- Function of the social system: The role a particular part plays in maintaining the whole.
- Education serves an important function of the social system by transmitting culture.
- Within the social system: Referring to something operating inside the established societal framework.
- Changes within the social system often happen gradually.
- the people in a society considered as a system organized by a characteristic pattern of relationships
- the social organization of England and America is very different
- sociologists have studied the changing structure of the family