What is the proper task of the sociologist?
Is it merely to observe human
action with the calm, detached curiosity of the ecologist who counts
the lemmings as they dive into the ea? Or should the sociologist rush
into social action? Should the professor of sociology encourage students to
develop a detached understanding of social phenomena or inspire them to man the
barricades for social reform? What is the proper role for the sociologist in
a changing society?
The Sociologist as
Research Scientist
Like all scientists, sociologists
are concerned with both collecting and using knowledge. They share in these
tasks in various ways.
Conducting Scientific Research:
As
a scientist, the sociologist’s foremost task is to discover and organize
knowledge about social life. A number of full-time research sociologists are
employed by universities, government agencies, foundations, or corporations,
and many sociologists divide their time between teaching and research. Many university sociologists
are engaged in “funded” research, with all or part of their salaries and
their research expenses paid from research grants made by government
agencies, foundations, or corporations. These grants are made to sociologists
who submit an acceptable proposal for research on a particular topic.
Since little research can be conducted without research funds, this gives the
funding agencies great power to influence the direction of sociological
research.
Radical critics of sociology
(including some sociologists) claim that, behind a façade of ethical neutrality
and objective, sociologists have prostituted their research talents to the
support of the interests of the funding agencies, and have thus supported
militarism, racism, and other forms of oppression [Gouldner, 1962, 1970;
Frederichs, 1970 pp. 823 – 85; any issue of The Insurgent Sociologist].
Whether sociological research has
been widely corrupted in this manner may be debated [Horton and Bouma, 1971].
What is indisputable is that problems of bias and partisanship are present in
all research, and that research findings are often helpful to the interests of
some people and damaging to the interests of other people [Becker, 1967]. Even
the definition of a research problem may carry an implicit bias. For example if
we state a research problem as, “What characteristics of poor people contribute
to their poverty?” we imply that the responsibility rests mainly on the poor
people themselves; but if we define the problem as, “What social arrangements
produce poverty?” then the responsibility is placed upon “society”.
Throughout most of the history of
sociology, sociologists were often accused of being radical subversives whose
research and teaching were a threat to established institutions and vested
interests. Many older sociologists today, still bearing the scars of the
anticommunist witch hunts of the 1950s, are puzzled and hurt when students and
younger sociologists accuse them of having been lackeys of capitalistic
oppression all their lives! But the question to society is as old as science
itself, and will not soon be settled.
Correcting Popular Nonsense:
Another
task of the sociologist as a scientist is to clear away the
intellectual rubbish of misinformation and superstition which clutters so much
of our social thinking. Sociologists have helped to bury a great deal of
nonsense about heredity, race, class, sex differences, deviation, and nearly
every other aspect of behaviour. It is due partly to the findings of sociology
that today we rarely hear an educated person argue that the white race is
innately superior, that women are intellectually inferiorto men, that
behaviour traits are inherited, or that rural people are less “immoral” than
urbanities – ideas which nearly every educated person accepted a half century
ago. By helping replace superstition and misinformation with accurate knowledge
about human behaviour, sociologists are perhaps performing their most important
function.
Making Sociological Predictions:
Although
the track record of sociologists in making social predictions is not
impressive, someone must make social predictions. Every policy decision is
based upon certain assumptions about the present and future state of the
society. A legislator who says “We need more severe penalties to curb drug pushing”
is predicting that more severe penalties actually will curb the narcotics
business without creating even greater problems. Another legislator who says
“Legalize marijuana” is making a set of predictions about the consequences of
this action. Thus every policy recommendation inevitably implies a set of
assumptions and predictions. What sort of predictions do sociologists offer?
Here are a few samples, offered without explanation or documentation at this
point, as examples of the kind of predictions sociologists can make:
The trend toward employment of
women will continue until most women are working for most of their married
lives.
Birth rates will fall to approach
death rates, or death rates will rise to approach birth rates.
Despite some experimentation with
alternatives, the monogamous nuclear family will continue to be the basic
family type in the United States.
The present popularity of jeans
and casual clothing among young people will be followed by a return to
high-style clothing.
The recent trend onward early retirement will
soon be replaced by efforts to lengthen the work career.
Most social science prediction
consists not of predicting specific developments, as the astronomer predicts
an eclipse, but of forecasting the general pattern of trends and changes which
seem most probable [e.g., Bell, The Coming of Post-Industrial Society: A
Venture in Social Forecasting, 1973]. All such predictions or forecasts should
be offered with certain humility, for no certainty attends them. Instead,
social scientists offer them as the best, most informed guesses available upon
which to base our policy decisions and expectations for the future.
The Sociologist as
Policy Consultant:
Sociological prediction can also
help to estimate the probable effects of a social policy. Every social policy
decision is a prediction. A policy (e.g. federal grants for Head Start) is
begun in the hope that it will produce a desired effect (e.g. narrow he
educational gap between poorer and more prosperous children).
Policies have often failed because they embodied unsound assumptions and
predictions. Sociologists can help to predict the effects of a policy, and thus
contribute to the selection of policies which achieve the intended purposes.
For example:
What effect does dropping out of
high school have upon a youth’s future earnings? (Little or none, when other
factors are equal).
What would be the effect of
intensified law enforcementupon campus marijuana use? (Little or no
reduction, with aggravation of other student-police problems).
Would low birth rates and a
small-family norm increase marital happiness? (Yes; there is research evidence
that smaller families are better off in every way).
Would publishing the names of
juvenile delinquents help to reduce delinquency? (No; it would more likely
increase it).
Would the suppression of obscene
literature help to reduce sex crimes and sex immorality? (Our limited evidence
suggests that it would not).
Would legal barriers to abortion
strengthen family life? (No; most sociologists believe this would increase
illegitimate births, unwanted children, child abuse, and family discord).
These are a few of the many
social policy questions which sociologists could help to settle. One of the
greatest services any scholarly group can offer is to show the society what
policies are most likely to work in achieving its objectives. This is a service
which sociologists are qualified to perform.
The Sociologist as
Technician:
Some sociologists are engaged in
planning and conducting community action programs; advising on public
relations, employee relations, problems of morale or of “inter-group relations”
within the organization; working on human relations problems of many sorts.
Often these sociologists have specialized in social psychology, industrial
sociology, urban or rural sociology, or the sociology of complex organizations.
Recently the term clinical
sociologist has appeared to describe the work of the sociologist as technician [Gardner,
1978]. To some extent, this is a new name for what sociologists have been doing
for a long time, but it also includes a considerable broadening of the range of
sociologists’ efforts to be useful in society.
In such positions the sociologist
is working as an applied scientist. He or she has been engaged to use
scientific knowledge in pursuing certain values – a harmonious and efficient
working force, an attractive public image of the industry, or an effective
community action program. This role raises a question of ethics. When a
sociologist accepts employment as a technician, pursuing values chosen by an
employer, has scientific integrity been compromised? To make an extreme
example, there is evidence [Monroe, 1962] that gambling operators engaged
social scientists to find out why people do or do not gamble, so that the
operators could learn how to attract more customers. (We do not know whether
any sociologists were included). Would this be a form of scientific
prostitution?
The radical critics of
“establishment sociology” charge that sociologists have “sold out” whenever
they serve as technicians or research scholars in any kind of effort to
maintain or improve the efficiency of government, military, capitalistic, or
welfare establishments. Thus, not only are sociologists (if any) working in
war-related activities condemned, but even sociologists working in programs to
improve the health of poor children in Mississippi, to increase agricultural
output in Peru, or to teach birth control in village India are sometimes
accused of supporting “oppression”. This is the classic view of the
revolutionist – any attempt to make the present system work better, or to help
people find better lives within the system is “oppressive” because it helps to
perpetuate the system.
There is no simple answer to the
question of what clinical appointments it is proper for the sociologist to
accept. Each sociologist’s answer will be found partly in the prevailing views
of the academic world at that moment and partly in his or her own conscience.
The Sociologist as Teacher:
Teaching is the major career of
many sociologists. In addition to the concerns and problems of teaching in any
field, the problem of value neutrality versus value commitment is a
particularly acute question. For example, in a course on “poverty”, should the
sociologist supervise an objective study of facts, theories, and policies –
possibly sympathetic but as objective as possible? Or should the course be
designed to produce dedicated advocates of a particular action program? Should
the sociologist seek to convert students to conservatism, liberal reformism, or
revolutionary activism? For some decades the ethics of university teaching have
demanded that the teacher refrain from all conscious “indoctrination,” but this
question is now under spirited debate.
The Sociologist and Social Action:
Scientists seek to discover
knowledge. Should scientists also tell the society how this knowledge should be
used? For example, the geneticists already know something about human heredity,
and before very long it may be possible to control the genetic makeup of
babies, and “order” babies according to a specifications list. Who should
dedicate what sort of baby should go to whom? The scientists? The parents? The
Government?
The basic question is whether
science – specifically sociology – should be value-free. For example,
sociologists know some things about population growth, race relations, urban
development, and many other matters involving questions of public policy. Should
sociologists become public advocates of birth control programs, legalized
abortion, women’s liberation, legalized marijuana, racial integration, and many
other programs which they may consider socially desirable?
Early sociologists gave an
emphatic “yes” to this question. Without an adequate foundation of scientific
knowledge, they rushed to support all sorts of public policies they believed
wise. Between 1920 and 1940, many sociologists shifted to the view that
sociology should be a more nearly “pure” science, discovering knowledge but not
attempting to decree how it should be used. They sought to build sociology on
the model of physics or chemistry, as a value-free science. As such, it should
be committed to no values except those of free scientific inquiry. Sociologists
generally avoided involvement in controversial issues and sought the status of
“pure” social scientists.
More recently, this view has been
challenged in both physical and social science. The Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists carries many articles by scientists urging their fellows to claim a
larger role in deciding the uses of nuclear science discoveries. Many
sociologists today believe that sociologists should claim a major role in
making decision about public policy and should involve themselves in the major
issues of our society [Lindesmith, 1960; Horowitz, 1964; Stein and Vidich,
1964; A. Lee, 1966, 1973, 1978; Becker 1967]. They charge that sociologists
have buried themselves in “safe” research topics, leaving the really important
questions to non-sociologists – questions such as “How can poverty be reduced?”
“How can schools be integrated?” “How can communities be organized for more
civilized social living?” “Should the goals and values of American society be
altered to promote human welfare?” They feel that not only do sociologists have
a duty to say what society might do about problems of race conflict, population
growth, birth control, drug addiction, divorce, sex deviation, medical care,
etc. but that sociologists have a duty to say what our society should do about
such problems. Books like Shostak’s Putting Sociology to Work [1947] provide
concrete examples of how sociologists are involving themselves in social issues
and constructive social action and show what they have learned from these
experiences.
Sociology today, in common with
all the other social sciences, has some members who insist that, both
individually and as an academic discipline, sociologists should openly and
publicly support the “radical reconstruction of society” [Szymanski, 1970;
Colfax and Roach, 1971; D. Horowitz, 1971; Sternberg, 1977]. This question is
receiving much attention in sociological literature [Douglas, 1970; Lee, 1978;
Harris, 1980]. Whether sociology should be value-free is an unsettled question,
but sociologists are agreed upon the following propositions.
The Study of Sociology:
Students are sometimes delighted
to find in sociology (or another social science) evidence that some of their
parents fondest beliefs are outmoded superstitions. But when they find evidence
that their own beliefs are scientifically unfounded, their reaction to this
correction may not differ greatly from that of their parents. To separate sense
from nonsense is one of the objectives of sociology. Only those who are willing
and able to subject their beliefs, assumptions, and practices to objective
scientific scrutiny will gain much from the study of any of the social
sciences.
Posted by Faizan Bhatti
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