Department of Sociology
Welcome from the Chair
Dr. Curtis T. Langley |
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What is Sociology?
Sociology is the study of social
life, social change, and the
social
causes and
consequences of human behavior.
Sociologists investigate
the structure of groups, organizations, and societies,
and how people interact within these contexts. Since all
human behavior is social, the subject matter of
sociology ranges from the intimate family to the hostile
mob; from organized crime to religious cults; from the
divisions of race, gender and social class to the shared
beliefs of a common culture; and from the sociology of
work to the sociology of sports.
In fact, few fields
have such broad scope and relevance for research,
theory, and application of knowledge. Sociology provides
many distinctive perspectives on the world, generating
new ideas and critiquing the old.
The field also offers
a range of research techniques that can be applied to
virtually any aspect of social life: street crime and
delinquency, corporate downsizing, how people express
emotions, welfare or education reform, how families
differ and flourish, or problems of peace and war.
Because sociology addresses the most challenging issues
of our time, it is a rapidly expanding field whose
potential is increasingly tapped by those who craft
policies and create programs. Sociologists understand
social inequality, patterns of behavior, forces for
social change and resistance, and how social systems
work.