Deck 18: Social Movements and Social Change

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Question
During the trial deliberation period of the Oklahoma bombing trial of Terry Nichols, many people gathered outside the courthouse and waited for the verdict. Some of the people gathered outside were selling T-shirts to mark the event. Which type of participant would Turner and Killian consider these people to be?

A) Curious spectators
B) Exploiters
C) Concerned participants
D) Ego-involved participants
E) Insecure participants
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Question
According to Herbert Blumer, at the root of collective behaviour is a[n] .

A) background of tension or unrest
B) revolutionary social movement
C) common object of attention
D) herd mentality
E) irrational crowd
Question
Because crowds take deliberate steps to reach some goals, sociologists believe that crowds are composed of .

A) people vulnerable to suggestion
B) people who are oppressed
C) organized mobs
D) irrational individuals
E) rational individuals
Question
Rumours thrive in what kinds of conditions?

A) The information is not important to the person hearing the rumour.
B) The rumour has no discernible source.
C) The rumour cannot affect someone personally.
D) The rumour is not easy to verify.
E) There is an ambiguous situation.
Question
Beth is a participant in a crowd that is protesting the reductions in student financial aid. She is presently a first-year university student and is protesting because she feels a personal stake in what happens. Based on Turner and Killian's identification of the types of people who participate in collective behaviour, which type of participant is Beth?

A) A curious spectator
B) A concerned participant
C) An exploiter of the situation
D) An insecure participant
E) An ego-involved participant
Question
An urban legend is a story with an ironic twist that sounds realistic, but is false. According to folklorist Jan Brunvand, urban legends can be considered .

A) "modern morality stories"
B) humorous stories created to entertain people
C) short-lived fads
D) grown-up versions of childhood fairytale stories
E) to be based on known facts
Question
What was Herbert Blumer's term for an excited group that collectively moves toward a goal?

A) An irrational crowd
B) An acting crowd
C) A collective mind
D) A revolutionary social movement
E) A rational acting group
Question
When a large group of people organize to promote or resist social change, they are involved in a .

A) social revolution
B) moral panic
C) minimax strategy
D) social movement
E) riot
Question
When we believe that others will approve an act, the likelihood that we will do the behaviour increases; this principle is based on what Richard Berk terms .

A) the collective mind
B) ego-involved behaviour
C) emergent norms
D) a minimax strategy
E) common impulses
Question
Sociologists who studied the panic following a fire on January 7, 1995 at a 30-storey apartment building in suburban North York, Ontario, found that not everyone panicked. Many continued to act responsibly. Sociologists use the term to describe these types of actions.

A) norm of reciprocity
B) role exclusion
C) rational crowd
D) role extension
E) norm of crowd behaviour
Question
When people become so fearful that they cannot function normally, the result may be .

A) a panic
B) a noisy disturbance
C) a protest
D) a riot
E) a mob
Question
What do sociologists call extraordinary activities (such as lynchings, rumours, panics, etc.) carried out by groups of people?

A) The collective mind
B) Collective behaviour
C) Deviant subculture
D) An acting primary group
E) A mob
Question
What is an example of an "idea fad"?

A) Getting a tattoo
B) Collecting hockey cards
C) Horoscopes in the newspapers
D) Body piercing
E) Going to coffee houses and drinking espresso
Question
occur when large numbers of people become intensely concerned, even fearful, about some behaviour, and the fear is out of proportion to any supposed danger.

A) Riots
B) Moral panics
C) Social movements
D) Mobs
E) Revolts
Question
According to Mackay, ordinary people sometimes act in violent ways when they get in a crowd because these individuals have .

A) engaged in riots before
B) a past of being abusive
C) serious mental problems
D) been oppressed and needed to rebel
E) a herd mentality
Question
In geographical areas where social ties are supposedly weaker, such as , one would expect to find more social movements than in areas where traditional ties are supposedly stronger, such as in .

A) Quebec; Prairies
B) Maritimes; Quebec
C) Canadian Shield; Ontario
D) western Canada; Atlantic Canada
E) western Canada; PEI
Question
What term do Turner and Killian use to express the idea that something new has happened?

A) Emergent norms
B) Herd mentality
C) Minimax strategy
D) Collective mind
E) Milling
Question
Which term is used to describe violent crowd behaviour aimed against people and property?

A) Moral panic
B) Demonstration
C) Riot
D) Mob
E) Panic
Question
According to Gustave LeBon, people develop feelings of invincibility when they are in a crowd, and come to think that they can do almost anything. A[n] develops and people are swept up thinking that they can do anything they want.

A) collective mind
B) antagonistic mind
C) divided opinion
D) deviant subculture
E) oppressive mind
Question
The use of words, such as "awesome," "bad," and "cool" are examples of a[n] .

A) fashion
B) personality fad
C) old language
D) activity fad
E) idea fad
Question
Laurie is a member of MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving). Based on Aberle's typology of social movements, Laurie would be considered a member of a[n] movement.

A) reformative
B) goal-oriented
C) redemptive
D) transformative
E) alternative
Question
The hypothesis that people join social movements to feel a sense of belonging is proposed by theory.

A) mass society
B) resource mobilization
C) isolation
D) estrangement
E) deprivation
Question
The first large-scale rally in Canada against the Multilateral Agreement on Investment is an example of what it takes to build a community-based social movement. What contributed to this rally taking place?

A) No media involvement
B) No previous preparation before the rally
C) Prior involvement of people from other organizations
D) Unrest and agitation
E) Prior negative press coverage
Question
Ralph and Alice are the leaders of a social movement. In choosing the tactics to use in calling attention to their goal, they will have to consider not only the intentions and background of the core members, but also:

A) the main goal they wish to achieve.
B) whether it is a new social movement.
C) the proportion of male and female members.
D) the number of committed members.
E) how many young people are in the movement.
Question
According to relative deprivation theory, why do people join social movements?

A) Because they are motivated to challenge current living conditions
B) Because they want what they do not have and feel deprived of it
C) Because they want to make wrongs right
D) Because of their poor living conditions
E) Because they want to feel a sense of belonging
Question
To better understand the types of social movements that emerge in a society, how has sociologist David Aberle classified social movements?

A) By the source of change and their target of change
B) By the target of change and the types of tactics
C) By the source of change and the amount of change
D) By who is involved and how much they accomplish
E) By their target and the amount of change they seek
Question
Originally, the purpose of propaganda was to influence people with persuasive information. Today, it usually refers to the presentation of information that is .

A) a series of "catchy slogans"
B) one-sided and clarifies the issue
C) completely unbiased and presents all pertinent data
D) is used mainly by the Roman Catholic church
E) one-sided and distorts reality
Question
If people organize to promote social change, they are engaged in a social movement.

A) proactive
B) millenarian
C) retaliation
D) reactive
E) resistant
Question
The mass media play a crucial role in social movements because they act as the social movements.

A) revolutionaries of
B) indifferent public to
C) instigators of
D) gatekeepers to
E) resistant medium to
Question
The American and Cuban Revolutions are examples of social movements.

A) goal-oriented
B) alternative
C) redemptive
D) reformative
E) transformative
Question
What happens during the institutionalization stage of a social movement?

A) The group may turn to outsiders to provide leadership.
B) The group may decline.
C) The movement's resources are mobilized to achieve the goals of the movement.
D) The leadership may waste their energy on managing day-to-day affairs.
E) The leadership may be more concerned about their own position rather than the goals of the movement.
Question
Who is an agent provocateur?

A) A leader
B) A committed member
C) A spy
D) A media agent
E) A social movement specialist
Question
According to sociologists, social movements go through stages as they grow and mature. What happens to most social movements in the first stage?

A) They become organized
B) They fail
C) They mobilize resources
D) They make a division of labour
E) They focus on day-to-day affairs
Question
During the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s, many of the demonstrators who risked their lives in marches and protests were white, middle-class university students from the North. Their motivation for participating in these demonstrations points out that many join movements .

A) to feel a sense of community
B) as a way to achieve their own selfish goals
C) as a form of rebellion because of relative deprivation
D) because people want to make wrongs right
E) because of an ideological commitment to the movement
Question
Which factor accounts for why some social movements never get off the ground, while others enjoy great success?

A) Social alienation
B) Dedicated membership
C) Estrangement
D) Resource mobilization
E) Movement evaluation
Question
Which term is given to the group of people just outside the third circle of members?

A) The less committed
B) The sympathetic public
C) The indifferent and unaware public
D) The hostile public
E) The committed
Question
A social movement that seeks to change particular aspects of a society is a[n] social movement.

A) goal-oriented
B) alternative
C) redemptive
D) reformative
E) transformative
Question
What has been a new twist in social movements?

A) They are only the alternative type
B) A focus on goals rather than means
C) Disregard of economic factors
D) A global orientation
E) The majority of participants are women
Question
What is the goal of a redemptive social movement?

A) To change a particular behaviour
B) To be more gender conscious
C) To transform the social order
D) To change specific aspects of society
E) To change the entire person
Question
Why do some anti-union people see unions as harmful to society?

A) Because they often use violent tactics
B) Because they tend to have radical political beliefs, such as communism
C) Because union leaders fight for their own members' interests at the expense of everyone else
D) Because the role of trade unions has never been clear in Canadian society
E) Because they are undemocratic
Question
Which theory of social change assumes that all societies follow the same path through identical sequences?

A) Dialectical
B) Cyclical
C) Postmodern
D) Multilinear evolutionary
E) Unilinear evolutionary
Question
The information superhighway allows instant global communication. What is one of the pressing issues of this new technology?

A) Whether it will be beneficial only to the least industrialized nations
B) Whether it will build or destroy human relationships
C) Whether it will decrease national and global inequalities
D) Whether it will increase national and global inequalities
E) Whether it will lessen national, but not global inequality
Question
What type of social control is typical of modern societies?

A) Informal
B) Formal
C) Absolute
D) Relative
E) Partial
Question
When missionaries introduced steel axes to the Aborigines of Australia, they changed power relations between men and women. This is an example of .

A) diffusion
B) cultural lag
C) an invention
D) innovation
E) a discovery
Question
As the proportion of the elderly has increased in society, their needs have stimulated the development of medical technologies to treat Alzheimer's disease. This example illustrates how:

A) social change inhibits technological development.
B) technology reinvents society.
C) technology can transform existing technologies.
D) technology leads to social change.
E) social change results in the development of new technology.
Question
The alteration of culture and societies over time is referred to as social .

A) change
B) revolution
C) modernization
D) restructuring
E) transformation
Question
What has been one dramatic effect of the automobile on social life in Canada?

A) An increase of pollution and environmental issues
B) An increase in telework
C) A decrease in face-to-face interaction with others
D) A change in the role of women
E) A shift to the use of mass transportation
Question
Which term refers to a combining of existing elements and materials to form new ones?

A) Cultural lag
B) Discovery
C) Diffusion
D) Insight
E) Invention
Question
The examples in the text of the changes that occurred with the invention of the automobile and the computer clearly demonstrate that technology:

A) exerts a limited influence on some areas of social life.
B) brings families closer together.
C) is always beneficial with few negative effects on people.
D) exerts a powerful influence on social life.
E) is merely an important tool for people.
Question
Which term refers to a new way of seeing reality?

A) Diffusion
B) Discovery
C) Insight
D) Innovation
E) Invention
Question
When does a discovery bring extensive change?

A) When people are unsatisfied with the current conditions
B) When the discovery is a dramatic one
C) When it comes at the right time
D) When people adapt to the discovery
E) When it is well publicized in the society
Question
Which term is used to describe the sweeping changes ushered in by the Industrial Revolution?

A) Postmodernism
B) Technology
C) Metamorphosis
D) Revolution
E) Modernization
Question
Which theory attempts to explain the rise of entire civilizations, not a particular society?

A) Multilinear
B) Feminist
C) Cyclical
D) Unilinear
E) Conflict
Question
According to the text, the increasing use of computers in schools:

A) increases the likelihood that students will study.
B) will not affect social inequalities in education.
C) helps to perpetuate social inequalities in education.
D) has improved teacher-student relationships.
E) will lessen the social inequalities in education.
Question
What is a reasonable response to the guesstimates of futurists about new technology?

A) Do not believe them
B) Wait and see
C) Ignore them
D) Believe them
E) Get a second opinion
Question
Although the computer has resulted in many benefits in the workplace, what has been one of the negative impacts?

A) A decrease in the social efficiency of the workplace
B) An increase in the need for education and continuous upgrading
C) Decreased supervision and lessened routine work
D) Increased surveillance of workers and depersonalization
E) An increase in the cost of equipment and salaries
Question
Alice, who has heart disease, lives in a rural area in Canada. Every week she has her blood pressure and heart rate checked by a physician who practices medicine in a large city 300 km away, via a fibre-optic cable. What does this illustrate about new technology?

A) It may cause a social revolution.
B) It may change social relationships in medicine.
C) It decreases the number of nurses needed.
D) It can be detrimental to people's health.
E) It results in fewer doctors practicing medicine.
Question
All societies use technology, but what is the chief characteristic of technology in postmodern societies?

A) Workers can be used in the secondary sector of the economy.
B) It employs more people in the primary economic sector.
C) It uses fossil fuels efficiently.
D) It allows us to analyze information, communicate, and travel.
E) It gives us better manufacturing tools.
Question
The new birth technologies have raised a number of legal questions in Canada about rights of natural and adoptive parents. These unresolved questions are an example of .

A) culture contact
B) cultural hesitation
C) cultural lag
D) moral questioning
E) a discovery
Question
Sociologists are most interested in how new technology .

A) results in further technology
B) is distributed from country to country
C) contributes to economic growth
D) is developed in each country
E) affects people's lives
Question
Home decorating, including the design and colours of buildings, is an example of a fad.
Question
Acting crowds aren't always serious-even "food fights" are acting crowds!
Question
There is no way to predict the likelihood of when collective behaviour will occur because it usually happens when there is no tension or unrest in the society.
Question
Psychologist Hadley Cantril, who examined the panic caused by the dramatization of
H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds, attributed the panic to widespread anxiety about world conditions.
Question
Sociologists treat collective behaviour the same as other forms of social behaviour.
Question
The goal of a reformative social movement is to change a specific behaviour of people.
Question
Moral shock and ideological commitment may motivate some people to join a social movement.
Question
Rumours, even when unfounded, serve to fill in missing information during periods of ambiguity.
Question
Proactive social movements are organized to resist social change.
Question
Middle-class people will participate in demonstrations if they feel frustration and anger.
Question
According to Turner and Killian, when the usual norms are inadequate in a situation, new norms will emerge to deal with the situation.
Question
The crucial factor that enables social movements to make it past the first stage is resource mobilization.
Question
Fashions, riots, panics, and rumours are forms of collective behaviour.
Question
Gustav LeBon wrote about the collective mind.
Question
Acting crowds are always negative and destructive.
Question
Sociology can be helpful in resisting propaganda because it sensitizes people to the existence of multiple realities.
Question
Relative deprivation theory is based on the idea that people join social movements because they want to feel a sense of belonging.
Question
Herbert Blumer's model of the acting crowd is the dominant model used in police manuals on crowd behaviour in North America today.
Question
The use of the word "cool" in the early 1990s is an example of a fashion.
Question
When a moral panic occurs in a society, the mass media are often used to eliminate the rumours that would sustain it.
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Deck 18: Social Movements and Social Change
1
During the trial deliberation period of the Oklahoma bombing trial of Terry Nichols, many people gathered outside the courthouse and waited for the verdict. Some of the people gathered outside were selling T-shirts to mark the event. Which type of participant would Turner and Killian consider these people to be?

A) Curious spectators
B) Exploiters
C) Concerned participants
D) Ego-involved participants
E) Insecure participants
B
2
According to Herbert Blumer, at the root of collective behaviour is a[n] .

A) background of tension or unrest
B) revolutionary social movement
C) common object of attention
D) herd mentality
E) irrational crowd
A
3
Because crowds take deliberate steps to reach some goals, sociologists believe that crowds are composed of .

A) people vulnerable to suggestion
B) people who are oppressed
C) organized mobs
D) irrational individuals
E) rational individuals
E
4
Rumours thrive in what kinds of conditions?

A) The information is not important to the person hearing the rumour.
B) The rumour has no discernible source.
C) The rumour cannot affect someone personally.
D) The rumour is not easy to verify.
E) There is an ambiguous situation.
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5
Beth is a participant in a crowd that is protesting the reductions in student financial aid. She is presently a first-year university student and is protesting because she feels a personal stake in what happens. Based on Turner and Killian's identification of the types of people who participate in collective behaviour, which type of participant is Beth?

A) A curious spectator
B) A concerned participant
C) An exploiter of the situation
D) An insecure participant
E) An ego-involved participant
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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6
An urban legend is a story with an ironic twist that sounds realistic, but is false. According to folklorist Jan Brunvand, urban legends can be considered .

A) "modern morality stories"
B) humorous stories created to entertain people
C) short-lived fads
D) grown-up versions of childhood fairytale stories
E) to be based on known facts
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Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
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7
What was Herbert Blumer's term for an excited group that collectively moves toward a goal?

A) An irrational crowd
B) An acting crowd
C) A collective mind
D) A revolutionary social movement
E) A rational acting group
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8
When a large group of people organize to promote or resist social change, they are involved in a .

A) social revolution
B) moral panic
C) minimax strategy
D) social movement
E) riot
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9
When we believe that others will approve an act, the likelihood that we will do the behaviour increases; this principle is based on what Richard Berk terms .

A) the collective mind
B) ego-involved behaviour
C) emergent norms
D) a minimax strategy
E) common impulses
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Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Sociologists who studied the panic following a fire on January 7, 1995 at a 30-storey apartment building in suburban North York, Ontario, found that not everyone panicked. Many continued to act responsibly. Sociologists use the term to describe these types of actions.

A) norm of reciprocity
B) role exclusion
C) rational crowd
D) role extension
E) norm of crowd behaviour
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11
When people become so fearful that they cannot function normally, the result may be .

A) a panic
B) a noisy disturbance
C) a protest
D) a riot
E) a mob
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12
What do sociologists call extraordinary activities (such as lynchings, rumours, panics, etc.) carried out by groups of people?

A) The collective mind
B) Collective behaviour
C) Deviant subculture
D) An acting primary group
E) A mob
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13
What is an example of an "idea fad"?

A) Getting a tattoo
B) Collecting hockey cards
C) Horoscopes in the newspapers
D) Body piercing
E) Going to coffee houses and drinking espresso
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14
occur when large numbers of people become intensely concerned, even fearful, about some behaviour, and the fear is out of proportion to any supposed danger.

A) Riots
B) Moral panics
C) Social movements
D) Mobs
E) Revolts
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15
According to Mackay, ordinary people sometimes act in violent ways when they get in a crowd because these individuals have .

A) engaged in riots before
B) a past of being abusive
C) serious mental problems
D) been oppressed and needed to rebel
E) a herd mentality
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Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
In geographical areas where social ties are supposedly weaker, such as , one would expect to find more social movements than in areas where traditional ties are supposedly stronger, such as in .

A) Quebec; Prairies
B) Maritimes; Quebec
C) Canadian Shield; Ontario
D) western Canada; Atlantic Canada
E) western Canada; PEI
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
What term do Turner and Killian use to express the idea that something new has happened?

A) Emergent norms
B) Herd mentality
C) Minimax strategy
D) Collective mind
E) Milling
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which term is used to describe violent crowd behaviour aimed against people and property?

A) Moral panic
B) Demonstration
C) Riot
D) Mob
E) Panic
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
According to Gustave LeBon, people develop feelings of invincibility when they are in a crowd, and come to think that they can do almost anything. A[n] develops and people are swept up thinking that they can do anything they want.

A) collective mind
B) antagonistic mind
C) divided opinion
D) deviant subculture
E) oppressive mind
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The use of words, such as "awesome," "bad," and "cool" are examples of a[n] .

A) fashion
B) personality fad
C) old language
D) activity fad
E) idea fad
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Laurie is a member of MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving). Based on Aberle's typology of social movements, Laurie would be considered a member of a[n] movement.

A) reformative
B) goal-oriented
C) redemptive
D) transformative
E) alternative
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The hypothesis that people join social movements to feel a sense of belonging is proposed by theory.

A) mass society
B) resource mobilization
C) isolation
D) estrangement
E) deprivation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The first large-scale rally in Canada against the Multilateral Agreement on Investment is an example of what it takes to build a community-based social movement. What contributed to this rally taking place?

A) No media involvement
B) No previous preparation before the rally
C) Prior involvement of people from other organizations
D) Unrest and agitation
E) Prior negative press coverage
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Ralph and Alice are the leaders of a social movement. In choosing the tactics to use in calling attention to their goal, they will have to consider not only the intentions and background of the core members, but also:

A) the main goal they wish to achieve.
B) whether it is a new social movement.
C) the proportion of male and female members.
D) the number of committed members.
E) how many young people are in the movement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
According to relative deprivation theory, why do people join social movements?

A) Because they are motivated to challenge current living conditions
B) Because they want what they do not have and feel deprived of it
C) Because they want to make wrongs right
D) Because of their poor living conditions
E) Because they want to feel a sense of belonging
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
To better understand the types of social movements that emerge in a society, how has sociologist David Aberle classified social movements?

A) By the source of change and their target of change
B) By the target of change and the types of tactics
C) By the source of change and the amount of change
D) By who is involved and how much they accomplish
E) By their target and the amount of change they seek
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Originally, the purpose of propaganda was to influence people with persuasive information. Today, it usually refers to the presentation of information that is .

A) a series of "catchy slogans"
B) one-sided and clarifies the issue
C) completely unbiased and presents all pertinent data
D) is used mainly by the Roman Catholic church
E) one-sided and distorts reality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
If people organize to promote social change, they are engaged in a social movement.

A) proactive
B) millenarian
C) retaliation
D) reactive
E) resistant
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The mass media play a crucial role in social movements because they act as the social movements.

A) revolutionaries of
B) indifferent public to
C) instigators of
D) gatekeepers to
E) resistant medium to
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The American and Cuban Revolutions are examples of social movements.

A) goal-oriented
B) alternative
C) redemptive
D) reformative
E) transformative
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
What happens during the institutionalization stage of a social movement?

A) The group may turn to outsiders to provide leadership.
B) The group may decline.
C) The movement's resources are mobilized to achieve the goals of the movement.
D) The leadership may waste their energy on managing day-to-day affairs.
E) The leadership may be more concerned about their own position rather than the goals of the movement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Who is an agent provocateur?

A) A leader
B) A committed member
C) A spy
D) A media agent
E) A social movement specialist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 92 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
According to sociologists, social movements go through stages as they grow and mature. What happens to most social movements in the first stage?

A) They become organized
B) They fail
C) They mobilize resources
D) They make a division of labour
E) They focus on day-to-day affairs
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34
During the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s, many of the demonstrators who risked their lives in marches and protests were white, middle-class university students from the North. Their motivation for participating in these demonstrations points out that many join movements .

A) to feel a sense of community
B) as a way to achieve their own selfish goals
C) as a form of rebellion because of relative deprivation
D) because people want to make wrongs right
E) because of an ideological commitment to the movement
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35
Which factor accounts for why some social movements never get off the ground, while others enjoy great success?

A) Social alienation
B) Dedicated membership
C) Estrangement
D) Resource mobilization
E) Movement evaluation
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36
Which term is given to the group of people just outside the third circle of members?

A) The less committed
B) The sympathetic public
C) The indifferent and unaware public
D) The hostile public
E) The committed
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37
A social movement that seeks to change particular aspects of a society is a[n] social movement.

A) goal-oriented
B) alternative
C) redemptive
D) reformative
E) transformative
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38
What has been a new twist in social movements?

A) They are only the alternative type
B) A focus on goals rather than means
C) Disregard of economic factors
D) A global orientation
E) The majority of participants are women
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39
What is the goal of a redemptive social movement?

A) To change a particular behaviour
B) To be more gender conscious
C) To transform the social order
D) To change specific aspects of society
E) To change the entire person
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40
Why do some anti-union people see unions as harmful to society?

A) Because they often use violent tactics
B) Because they tend to have radical political beliefs, such as communism
C) Because union leaders fight for their own members' interests at the expense of everyone else
D) Because the role of trade unions has never been clear in Canadian society
E) Because they are undemocratic
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41
Which theory of social change assumes that all societies follow the same path through identical sequences?

A) Dialectical
B) Cyclical
C) Postmodern
D) Multilinear evolutionary
E) Unilinear evolutionary
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42
The information superhighway allows instant global communication. What is one of the pressing issues of this new technology?

A) Whether it will be beneficial only to the least industrialized nations
B) Whether it will build or destroy human relationships
C) Whether it will decrease national and global inequalities
D) Whether it will increase national and global inequalities
E) Whether it will lessen national, but not global inequality
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43
What type of social control is typical of modern societies?

A) Informal
B) Formal
C) Absolute
D) Relative
E) Partial
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44
When missionaries introduced steel axes to the Aborigines of Australia, they changed power relations between men and women. This is an example of .

A) diffusion
B) cultural lag
C) an invention
D) innovation
E) a discovery
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45
As the proportion of the elderly has increased in society, their needs have stimulated the development of medical technologies to treat Alzheimer's disease. This example illustrates how:

A) social change inhibits technological development.
B) technology reinvents society.
C) technology can transform existing technologies.
D) technology leads to social change.
E) social change results in the development of new technology.
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46
The alteration of culture and societies over time is referred to as social .

A) change
B) revolution
C) modernization
D) restructuring
E) transformation
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47
What has been one dramatic effect of the automobile on social life in Canada?

A) An increase of pollution and environmental issues
B) An increase in telework
C) A decrease in face-to-face interaction with others
D) A change in the role of women
E) A shift to the use of mass transportation
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48
Which term refers to a combining of existing elements and materials to form new ones?

A) Cultural lag
B) Discovery
C) Diffusion
D) Insight
E) Invention
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49
The examples in the text of the changes that occurred with the invention of the automobile and the computer clearly demonstrate that technology:

A) exerts a limited influence on some areas of social life.
B) brings families closer together.
C) is always beneficial with few negative effects on people.
D) exerts a powerful influence on social life.
E) is merely an important tool for people.
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50
Which term refers to a new way of seeing reality?

A) Diffusion
B) Discovery
C) Insight
D) Innovation
E) Invention
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51
When does a discovery bring extensive change?

A) When people are unsatisfied with the current conditions
B) When the discovery is a dramatic one
C) When it comes at the right time
D) When people adapt to the discovery
E) When it is well publicized in the society
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52
Which term is used to describe the sweeping changes ushered in by the Industrial Revolution?

A) Postmodernism
B) Technology
C) Metamorphosis
D) Revolution
E) Modernization
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53
Which theory attempts to explain the rise of entire civilizations, not a particular society?

A) Multilinear
B) Feminist
C) Cyclical
D) Unilinear
E) Conflict
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54
According to the text, the increasing use of computers in schools:

A) increases the likelihood that students will study.
B) will not affect social inequalities in education.
C) helps to perpetuate social inequalities in education.
D) has improved teacher-student relationships.
E) will lessen the social inequalities in education.
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55
What is a reasonable response to the guesstimates of futurists about new technology?

A) Do not believe them
B) Wait and see
C) Ignore them
D) Believe them
E) Get a second opinion
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56
Although the computer has resulted in many benefits in the workplace, what has been one of the negative impacts?

A) A decrease in the social efficiency of the workplace
B) An increase in the need for education and continuous upgrading
C) Decreased supervision and lessened routine work
D) Increased surveillance of workers and depersonalization
E) An increase in the cost of equipment and salaries
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57
Alice, who has heart disease, lives in a rural area in Canada. Every week she has her blood pressure and heart rate checked by a physician who practices medicine in a large city 300 km away, via a fibre-optic cable. What does this illustrate about new technology?

A) It may cause a social revolution.
B) It may change social relationships in medicine.
C) It decreases the number of nurses needed.
D) It can be detrimental to people's health.
E) It results in fewer doctors practicing medicine.
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58
All societies use technology, but what is the chief characteristic of technology in postmodern societies?

A) Workers can be used in the secondary sector of the economy.
B) It employs more people in the primary economic sector.
C) It uses fossil fuels efficiently.
D) It allows us to analyze information, communicate, and travel.
E) It gives us better manufacturing tools.
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59
The new birth technologies have raised a number of legal questions in Canada about rights of natural and adoptive parents. These unresolved questions are an example of .

A) culture contact
B) cultural hesitation
C) cultural lag
D) moral questioning
E) a discovery
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60
Sociologists are most interested in how new technology .

A) results in further technology
B) is distributed from country to country
C) contributes to economic growth
D) is developed in each country
E) affects people's lives
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61
Home decorating, including the design and colours of buildings, is an example of a fad.
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62
Acting crowds aren't always serious-even "food fights" are acting crowds!
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63
There is no way to predict the likelihood of when collective behaviour will occur because it usually happens when there is no tension or unrest in the society.
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64
Psychologist Hadley Cantril, who examined the panic caused by the dramatization of
H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds, attributed the panic to widespread anxiety about world conditions.
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65
Sociologists treat collective behaviour the same as other forms of social behaviour.
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66
The goal of a reformative social movement is to change a specific behaviour of people.
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67
Moral shock and ideological commitment may motivate some people to join a social movement.
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68
Rumours, even when unfounded, serve to fill in missing information during periods of ambiguity.
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69
Proactive social movements are organized to resist social change.
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70
Middle-class people will participate in demonstrations if they feel frustration and anger.
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71
According to Turner and Killian, when the usual norms are inadequate in a situation, new norms will emerge to deal with the situation.
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72
The crucial factor that enables social movements to make it past the first stage is resource mobilization.
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73
Fashions, riots, panics, and rumours are forms of collective behaviour.
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74
Gustav LeBon wrote about the collective mind.
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75
Acting crowds are always negative and destructive.
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76
Sociology can be helpful in resisting propaganda because it sensitizes people to the existence of multiple realities.
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77
Relative deprivation theory is based on the idea that people join social movements because they want to feel a sense of belonging.
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78
Herbert Blumer's model of the acting crowd is the dominant model used in police manuals on crowd behaviour in North America today.
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79
The use of the word "cool" in the early 1990s is an example of a fashion.
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80
When a moral panic occurs in a society, the mass media are often used to eliminate the rumours that would sustain it.
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