Note the similiarity to Durkheim’s view of how the division of labour develops.Ģ. Societies become more complex, with new institutions and subsystems developing that perform the new functions required to make the society operate smoothly. As change occurs, the various parts of societies become more differentiated, with these parts adapting to new needs and problems. Conflicts or external factors stimulate adjustment of the parts to move toward a new equilibrium.
Change tends to be orderly and evolutionary, rather than revolutionary or with dramatic structural breaks. While equilibrium, consensus, and static rather than dynamic analysis is most common, there is some discussion of change. The different parts are usually in equilibrium, or moving toward equilibrium, with consensus rather than conflict governing the inter-relationships of the various parts.ĭ. These parts are usually work together in an orderly manner, without great conflict. Functionalism attempts to explain the relationship of different parts of the system to each other, and to the whole. This is the functional part of the structural functional approach.Ĭ. The different parts of each society contribute positively to the operation or functioning of the system as a whole. This is the origin of the structure part of the structural functional approach.ī. The focus is macro-sociological, with institutions and structures existing in the society as a whole.
Many aspects of the functionalist approach to sociology are similar to those of other sociological approaches, but with a particular emphasis on function, interdependence, consensus, equilibrium, and evolutionary change. In addition, some of the ideas of Parsons have proved to be useful to the study of the contemporary social world.ġ. As a result, functionalist theory and the sociology of Talcott Parsons must be studied in order to understand the development of sociological thought. At the same time, some of the alternative approaches that were developed have functionalist aspects to them. More recently, some sociologists have attempted to revive functionalism, the most notable of these being Jeffrey Alexander (Wallace and Wolf, pp. Conflict approaches also developed, partly in reaction to the consensus view of functionalists, and partly because functionalism was not able to explain the new social movements and developments in North America and the rest of the world.īy the late 1980s, functionalism and Parsons were more or less discredited and abandoned, replaced with a variety of sociological models that attempted to develop a variety of non-functionalist approaches to the study of sociology. Microsociological approaches such as symbolic interactionism and the study of individual and small group interaction began, perhaps because these had not been emphasized by earlier sociologists. 17).īeginning around the time that functionalism became dominant, there were many new developments in sociology.
This meant that sociology studied the roles of institutions and social behaviour in society, the way these are related to other social features, and developed explanations of society in social terms (Wallace and Wolf, p. But Parsons and the functional approach to sociology became so dominant that by the late 1950s, sociology and functionalism became more or less identical (Wallace and Wolf, p. Some new sociological approaches were developed in North America before Parsons. Parsons and the functionalist approach to sociology occupy an intermediate position between classical and contemporary sociology. Still others reject many of the classical approaches, but even here the ideas of classical sociology serve as a point of debate and departure. Some develop and update the ideas of classical sociology, while others combine ideas from several classical sociologists. Contemporary sociologists have taken several lines of development. While they were not as comprehensive in their analysis of the social world as is contemporary sociology, these classical writers defined the discipline of sociology and developed models and methods which contemporary sociologists must consider. In Europe, Marx, Weber, and Durkheim developed the major theoretical approaches to an analysis of the social world. Notes on Structural Functionalism and Parsonsīeginning with Parsons and the functionalist approach to sociology we leave the classical sociologists – Marx, Weber, and Durkheim – and examine more recent sociological approaches.