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Science and sociology

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The issues that concern sociologists are often those that worry other people. After all, sociologists are members of society too. Good research should help us to understand social life better and, quite often, to view it in new ways. Tearoom Trade provdes good examples of the kind of questions that sociologists ask. In looking at the activities that occur in public toilets, Humphreys found that something we take to be obvious – a public toilet – is actually socially constructed, depending on how people use it. Social constructionism is a perspective which begins from the premise that social reality is the product of interactions between individuals and groups, not something to be taken as ‘natural’ (see chapter 12, ‘Social Interaction and Daily Life’, and chapter 5, ‘The Environment’). In this case, what most people believed to be a public building with an obvious function was, for a particular group, primarily a venue for the pursuit of sexual activity.

Studying society often brings surprising results and frequently runs counter to ‘common-sense’ beliefs. What do teenagers actually use their smartphones for? Have the circumstances of ethnic and sexual minorities in Canada improved over time? Why does large-scale poverty still exist in the USA alongside the immense personal wealth of a small minority? Why have many people across the European Union lost faith in conventional party politics? Sociologists try to provide answers to these and many other questions, but their determinations are by no means final, as society is always in a process of change and later research makes new findings. Nevertheless, it is the aim of theorizing and research to break away from speculation and to base our understanding on evidence. Good sociology makes its research questions as precise as possible and seeks to gather factual evidence before reaching general conclusions. To achieve these aims, we must select the most useful research methods to use for a given study and know how best to analyse the results.

Sociologists often ask empirical or factual questions. For example, what kinds of occupation and domestic arrangements are most common among MSM in public parks and toilets in China? What proportion of the participants do the police arrest? Even factual questions of this kind can be difficult to answer. There are no official statistics on sexual activity in tearooms, saunas and parks, for example. Similarly, official crime statistics have been found to be of dubious value in revealing the ‘real’ level of criminal activity in a society. Researchers who study crime say that police-recorded crime figures are just the visible tip of a much larger ‘iceberg’ of crime (Simmons and Dodds 2003). Indeed, some criminal actions may be seen by victims as purely private matters that are not ‘crimes’ at all (see chapter 22, ‘Crime and Deviance’, for a discussion of crime statistics).

Factual information about one national society will not tell us whether we are dealing with an unusual case or a more general set of social influences. Hence, sociologists often ask comparative questions, relating findings from one society to another social context or using contrasting examples drawn from different societies across the world. There are significant differences, for example, between the social and legal systems of Russia, Italy and South Korea. A typical comparative question might be: how much do patterns of criminal behaviour and law enforcement vary between these three countries? Answering this question might lead us to other questions, such as how did systems of law enforcement develop over time and how similar or different are the penal regimes in these countries?

In sociology, we need to compare not only contemporary societies but also the present and the past to gain a better understanding of social development. In this case we ask historical or developmental questions: how did we get from there to here? To understand the nature of the modern world, we have to look at previous forms of society and processes of social change. Thus we can investigate how the first prisons originated and what they are like today, tracing key periods or phases of change in this development. Doing so provides us with a good part of an explanation.

Sociological research is not just the collection of facts, however important and interesting they may be. It is a truism in sociology that ‘the facts don’t speak for themselves’; they always need to be interpreted. This means we must learn how to ask theoretical questions concerned with why things happen the way they do. Some sociologists work primarily on empirical questions, but unless their research is guided by some knowledge of theory their findings are unlikely to be particularly illuminating (see table 2.1). At the same time, sociologists do not pursue theoretical knowledge for its own sake, as this runs the risk of falling into pure speculation far removed from the evidence. Reliable sociological knowledge is essentially theoretical-empirical in character. The combination of empirical research alongside theorizing is a key defining characteristic of all scientific disciplines, and sociology is no exception.

Sociology

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