Contrast collective behavior with other forms of organizational behavior

What will be an ideal response?


Collective behavior is voluntary, often spontaneous activity that is engaged in by a large

number of people and typically violates dominant-group norms and values. Unlike

organizational behavior found in corporations and voluntary associations, collective

behavior lacks an official division of labor, hierarchy of authority, and established rules

and procedures. Unlike institutional behavior, collective behavior lacks institutional

norms to govern behavior. Collective behavior can take various forms, including

crowds, mobs, riots, panics, fads, fashions, and public opinion.

Sociology

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Marx argued that industrial-capitalist societies had two main divisions:

capitalists and proletarians. Indicate whether the statement is true or false

Sociology

Which is not a result from the impact of divorce on children?

a. a greater risk of divorce as adults themselves. b. a higher rate of school dropout. c. a higher suicide rate. d. a greater tendency to have children out of wedlock.

Sociology

Urbanization is the process by which societies are transformed from dependence on agriculture and handmade products to an emphasis on manufacturing and related industries

a. True b. False Indicate whether the statement is true or false

Sociology

Answer the following statement(s) true (T) or false (F)

1. Intersectionality allows feminists to recognize differences among women yet still note all women share a distinctive standpoint because of similar experiences of oppression. 2. Intersectional feminists use the concept of othering to unite groups who have been marginalized. 3. Standpoint theory points out that knowledge is always affected by power relations regardless of one’s membership in dominant or subordinate groups. 4. A bifurcated consciousness is one divided by the contradictions of one’s actual lived experience and the reality of social typifications. 5. Feminist sociological theory links structure and agency.

Sociology