1 / 24

Social-Psychological

Social-Psychological. Banuazizi. Two approaches. social-structural factors cultural values, beliefs, orientations Modernization theory united the two elements Soc processes marked by modern attitudes empathy, personal efficacy, rationality, flexibility.

callum-gill
Download Presentation

Social-Psychological

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social-Psychological Banuazizi

  2. Two approaches • social-structural factors • cultural values, beliefs, orientations • Modernization theory united the two elements • Soc processes marked by modern attitudes • empathy, personal efficacy, rationality, flexibility

  3. Interest in soc psych (and religion) • Iran revolution • persistence of "primordial" groups” • achievement of Confucian economies

  4. 3 roots • Psych-analytic theory and "modal personality" idea • Mainstream behaviourism • attitudes clue to social action • concerns in failed development

  5. Soc-psych CAUSAL theory • McClelland's "achieving society” • Soc-psych intervening variable • Nat identity > personal insecurity > pol development "failure" (PYE) • Mod pressures > lack of empathy > pol dev insts failure (LERNER)

  6. Soc-Psych dependent variable • Lack of studies despite behaviourism claim that environment shapes action • Inkeles & Smith argued • Dispositions arise from ‘modern' experiences. These in turn mediate continuing success of modernization

  7. Inkeles • [294] Exposure to large scale modernizing institutions lead to “syndrome of psych modernity” • Individuals prone to this influence beyond childhood • underlying dimensions transcend ethnic, cultural and national differences.

  8. Inkeles and Overall modernity scale • 159 items tested in 6 countries • 1. Openness • 2. Independence from trad auth • 3. Belief in efficacy of science • 4. Ambition • 5. Punctuality/planning • 6. Interest in civic affairs • 7. Interest in international news

  9. Modernity? • Factor analysis found all bearing on a single point: • Could be "modernity” • Could be that definitions are tautological • ten background factors accounted for variance in OM scores

  10. OM Score factors • Top three were • Formal education • Exposure to media • Occupational experience • Is modernity a state of mind or behaviour congruent with demands of modern society?

  11. Inductive reason • Induce from these three propositions: • Exposure to modern insts creates modernity • Individuals can "modernize" after puberty • Ethnicity, nationalism, culture transcended • In other words: modernity can be manipulated and thus lead to pol dev

  12. Problem • traditional Socio Economic Status variables could explain all but 1% of the variance in behaviour studied by Inkeles • we still need an explanation at the national level for differences in overall political development • religion?

  13. Further research • Need to do “cross-national” and longitudinal studies • Still stuck with difficulty of confirming influence of a mediating factor

  14. Tradition-Modernity • Original assumption was that traditions were temporary impediments • Modernity derived from theory • Tradition derived from residual negative attributes • See Talcott Parson’s pattern variables

  15. Parsons

  16. Tradition • Conservative • Impetus for change from outside • [typically the west] • Resilience and meaning of trad got more attention in 1970s • But psychology slower to change • Inkeles talking about passivity etc.

  17. Corrective reaction • Traditional ideologies (expressed in ethnic or religious movements) seen as more of a challenge to incumbent regimes than secular ideology • Tradition demands activity too • Islamic codes of personal conduct • fundamentalist regimes • Islamicizing public policies [Taliban?]

  18. Resurgence of Islam • Extremist anachronisms? • Appeal to disoriented losers?! • But too much diversity under the “fundamentalist” umbrella • Iran a puzzle for modernization theory • large army and security forces toppled • growth rates too high? • Reactionary backlash?

  19. Iranian politics • Fuelled by • uneven growth • urban-rural tensions • labour aristocracy • perceived dependence on US • Shah’s contempt for Islamic culture • autocratic/repressive rule

  20. Iranian politics • Anti-Shah forces • Shiite ulama • involved in opposition movements • tied to bazaari community • financial & pol independence from the state • control of network of mosques -- allowed criticism • But others rode the theocratic coattails

  21. Islamic factions • Radical • young intelligentsia • Militant • ulama, petty-b, dispossessed • Liberal • “contest” appealed to non-violent middle class • Traditionalist • protest from old middle class strata

  22. Analysis • Islam adapted by group interests • Leadership • Ideological mobilization tool

  23. Conclusions • Economic structural change not necessarily linked to secularism in • political insts • attitudes & values • Islam appeal linked to dislocations & inequalities • Traditional actors are powerful not passive • cf ultra right in Israel • Catholic Church in Poland

  24. Conclusions • Absolutist politics after Iranian revolution • explained in terms of desire for power • not necessarily an aspect of Islam • Dialogue between tradition and modernity silenced in Iran, this time by tradition!

More Related