Sunday, April 28, 2013

Conclusion

This blog experience was different than I thought it would be. I actually learned more about the subjects I picked when looking them up. I enjoyed expressing myself by researching topics I found interesting and connecting a bigger part of the world together. I also learned that sociology is a lot like psychology in ways. Both try to find answers about individuals or groups of people and the way they interact. I might add on to this blog once the class is over with, just because it is easier than I thought and is a great way of communication.

I chose this image because it represents the way people are growing through knowledge, the way I did by learning in order to write about a topic. 

Current Event


As a current event, I went with the bombing in Boston, April 15, 2013. I chose this event because crime and deviance was a chapter we covered in our book. I believe sociologist would look at this event and try to find the motives of the deviant. When I had first heard the horrifying news about the bombs in Boston, I immediately thought “Who and why are would someone ever do that? It’s so terrible. They have to be messed up in the head.” I can’t say that I have any idea to date on what the motives where but I can look into what sociologists have researched on crime and motives.

“Methods Not Motives: Implications of the Convergence of International Organized Crime and Terrorism” is an article that theorized the connection between organized crime with terrorism. While crime is economically driven, they state that terrorism is politically related. This article related to the bombing because it discusses different motives of bigger scale deviance as it examines the similar methods used by both organized crime and terrorism.  


Photograph of the bombing in Boston

Besides all the conspiracy theories found on Youtube, this video is an actual interview. The video clip is about the mother of the suspects' view on the bombing. She claims her sons are innocent and that they are being set up. This raises more conspiracy theories, and makes it harder to come up with the motive. 

The article “Does Religion Really Reduce Crime?” provides useful information on a research project conducted to find whether there is a link between crime and religion. As I looked into the news, the media portrays the act may have been involved with Jihad, which is attached to the Muslim culture. In the abstract of the article, the researcher states that “most previous studies have found a negative effect of religion on crime”, but that the researcher had found “negligible effect of religion on crime and a negative effect of crime on religion.”


“Feelings of Revenge, Retaliation Motive, and Posttraumatic Stress Reactions in Crime Victims” is an article that provides information on how feelings of revenge arise from crime victims. The reaction is explained by a “maladaptive coping reaction to experienced injustice”. Could it be possible that the bombing was based off of revenge? There is no way to know until more information comes out.
or


Transgender


For the second blog post, I chose to elaborate on a very briefly covered topic found in chapter 11; Transgender. The book defines transgender as “those who live as a gender different from that to which they were assigned at birth.”(pg.254, ) Other than the definition, there is a short paragraph describing the struggles arising among transgender individual regarding their identity. Our society is based off labeling things and putting them into categories. A coworker explained how she sometimes still had trouble classifying her son, who identified as a girl until the age of 18. I wanted to learn more about transgender because I find it interesting and because it isn't brought up often. 

As an article that explains concepts and theories on transgenderism, I found the “Encyclopedia of Sex and Gender” to be most relevant. The encyclopedia itself has many sections, including a 15 page chapter on transgender and transexuality. Because transgender is classified in the DSM as Gender Identity Disorder, the chapter starts out by discussing the biological and environmental etiology of transgenderism. There was not much information given about those matters because there has been no indication of a causation of transgenderism. Many are currently in works of trying to remove it from the DSM because they do not believe it should be considered a disorder. The encyclopedia also gives useful information on hormonal therapy.

The image I found is of two “Lady Boys”, as termed in Thailand.


This video clip really shows the conflicting body challenges a transgender child deals with. The parents are very accepting and willing to do anything how their child.   


By working at the campus’s Women’s Center, I have been exposed to more of the LGBTQA community than I had originally been exposed to. In the office, we are a safe zone, an ally, but not everyone is as accepting. I picked the “The 2003 National School Climate Survey” article because, by use of statistics from the survey, it shows how unsafe and even dangerous the schools can be for transsexual and transgender individuals.  


The second informative article was called “Transgender and Gender Non-Conforming Youth Recommendations for Schools”. This article also is about how schools are an unsafe place. “Transgender students face severe discrimination and harassment in schools. 89.5% of transgender students report feeling unsafe in schools. Transgender students are at higher risk of dropping out of school and of suicide.” But the majority of the article is about the ways to make schools and public places a safe zone. They cover the overall recommendations, how to avoid disrespectful pronouns, toilet accessibility (lack of neutral restrooms) and other.


 “People changed lots of other personal things all the time. They dyed their hair and dieted themselves to near death. They took steroids to build muscles and got breast implants and nose jobs so they'd resemble their favorite movie stars. They changed names and majors and jobs and husbands and wives. They changed religions and political parties. They moved across the country or the world -- even changed nationalities. Why was gender the one sacred thing we weren’t supposed to change? Who made that rule?”
― Ellen Wittlinger, Parrotfish


Sunday, March 3, 2013

References


De Dreu, C. K., Greer, L. L., Van Kleef, G. A., Shalvi, S., & Handgraaf, M. J. (2011). Oxytocin promotes human ethnocentrism. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences108(4), 1262-1266.

Ember, Carol R., and Melvin Ember, eds. Encyclopedia of Sex and Gender: Men and Women in the World's Cultures Topics and Cultures AK-Volume 1; Cultures LZ. Vol. 2. Springer, 2003.


Hammond, R. A., & Axelrod, R. (2006). The evolution of ethnocentrism. Journal of Conflict Resolution50(6), 926-936.

Heaton, Paul. "Does Religion Really Reduce Crime?*." Journal of Law and Economics 49.1 (2006): 147-172.


Kasomo , D. (2012). An assessment of ethnic conflict and its challenges today. African Journal of Political Science and International Relations6(1), 7. doi: 10.5897/AJPSIRX11.001


Orth, Ulrich, Leo Montada, and Andreas Maercker. "Feelings of revenge, retaliation motive, and posttraumatic stress reactions in crime victims." Journal of Interpersonal Violence 21.2 (2006): 229-243.

Ethnocentrism


My topic of choice is ethnocentrism from Chapter 2 of our Sociology book.
Ethnocentrism is defined by as a “habit of seeing things only from the point of view of one’s own group” (Anderson, pg. 37). This leads one to view their country as better than others in terms of religion, government, morals etc.  I chose this topic because I found ethnocentrism interesting and had not heard of this idea before this class. At first, it reminded me of the time I took an art history class, when we had gone over the idea of primitivism, which I see as sort of the opposite of ethnocentrism. Primitivisms is to prefer other cultures by following the idea that simpler is better, although they still pictured their own cultures as more advanced.    

“An assessment of ethnic conflict and its challenges today”
This journal goes over the major sources of ethnic conflicts, theories of its origin (including the constructivists', structural and psychological theories) and historical development. The journal also proposes possible ways to end the global conflict. This article best fits the subject of ethnocentric because it is both relevant to todays' challenges and gives a precise definition of the idea.
Link:
http://www.academicjournals.org/ajpsir/pdf/pdf2012/Jan/Kasomo.pdf


I found two graphics relating to ethnocentrism, both meant to be humorous. The first one is a link to a comic and the second is a picture of a map as a very ethnocentric person would see it if they could care less about the world around them.  



"Evolution of ethnocentrism"
This article discusses theories of how and why the development of predispositions towards “in-groups” came to be. The authors used an agent-based technique to set up their testing model and discussed the results. In the results, they found ethnocentrism to be a dominant strategy.   
Link:
http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/50/6/926.full.pdf+html

“Oxytocin promotes human ethnocentrism”
An interesting article I found that gives an introduction of what ethnocentrism can lead to and how the brain chemical oxytocin may be affecting one’s ethnocentric views. In the abstract, it is suggested that oxytocin takes part in the arise of intergroup conflict and violence.
Link:
http://www.pnas.org/content/108/4/1262.short


I found two graphics relating to ethnocentrism, both meant to be humorous. The first one is a link to a comic and the second is a picture of a map as a very ethnocentric person would see it if they could care less about the world around them.  


Here is a link to a relevant video on "Ethnocentrism,Socialization, Globalization";


“Don’t misunderstand me. The terrorist actions of Al-Qaeda were and are unmitigatedly evil. But the astonishing naivety which decreed that America as a whole was a pure, innocent victim, so that the world could be neatly divided up into evil people (particularly Arabs) and good people (particularly Americans and Israelis), and that the latter had a responsibility now to punish the former, is a large-scale example of what I’m talking about - just as it is immature and naive to suggest the mirror image of this view, namely that the western world is guilty in all respects and that all protestors and terrorists are therefore completely justified in what they do. In the same way, to suggest that all who possess guns should be locked up, or (the American mirror-image of this view) that everyone should carry guns so that good people can shoot bad ones before they can get up to their tricks, is simply a failure to think into the depths of what’s going on.” 
― N.T. WrightEvil and the Justice of God



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Born in Seattle, I was raised most of my life in Quebec, Canada. My parents divorced when I was 5, and I grew up with my mom since my dad travels a lot. I am currently enrolled as a student at the University of Idaho in Moscow but next semester I will be studying aboard in Costa Rica, which I was told was one of the happiest places in the world. I love art and nature related things. I work at the Women's Center on campus, which has taught me more than I had imagined. I am in school to obtain a major in Psychology with a Spanish minor. With the minor, I want to go into research psychology. Sociology has sparked my interest because it is a social science like psychology and they both involve the function of humans.