Social Geography
Social Geography
Social Geography
Definition
These trends prevailed until the 1970s, when the discipline was recast to
emphasize the main problems of the post-industrial world, such as the
distribution of wealth, the rural exodus, the development-underdevelopment
dialectic, among others.
Given that its main purpose is to get into the way of inhabiting a territory
that a certain community possesses, its conceptual tools tend to be more
humanistic, that is, to be quantitative or qualitative, depending on the type of
approach of the social experience you want to examine.
This happens not only by the way of occupying the territory and
distributing the population in it, but also by the different types of communities
that make up a population, the possible groupings that arise from them, their
needs and ways of exercising subjectivity within the confines of a given territory.
1.3 AUXILIARY SCIENCES OF SOCIAL GEOGRAPHY
Social geography relies on other sciences and disciplines to complement its
approach, drawing on knowledge from anthropology, sociology, demography,
economics and political science, to have a more holistic view of society.
R.E. Pahl in 1965 gave the definition of social geography as ‘the study of
the pattern and processes in understanding socially defined populations in their
spatial setting’.
History
The late 1960s saw rapid and radical social change, dominated by such
events as the Vietnam War and wars of liberation in remaining colonies. The
social relevance movement in the contemporary social sciences also affected
geography and issues such as race, crime, health and poverty received an
increasingly large attention. The progress of social geography in the decades
since 1960 has taken into several main paths, each cluster of research acquiring
the status of a school of thought in its own way.
1. A welfare or humanistic school mainly concerned with the state of
social well-being as expressed by territorial indicates of housing, health and
social pathology largely within the theoretical framework of welfare economics.
Humanistic geography studies human awareness and human agency, human
consciousness and human creativity. It, therefore, deals with the meaning, value
and human significance of life events.
Conclusion
Social Geography is primarily concerned with the ways in which social relations,
identities and inequalities are created.
• How these social creations vary over space and the role of space in their
construction is the principle distinction between sociology and social geography
3. According Self-identification
4. According to purpose
• A social space is physical or virtual space such as a social center, online social
media, or other gathering place where people gather and interact.
• Some social spaces such as town squares or parks are public places and
others such as pubs, websites or shopping malls are private places.
Socio-cultural Region
Socio cultural regions helps us to understand the soul of the place. The well we
know the socio cultural regions, it is easier to understand the people,
agriculture, traditions seasons, and buying selling periods We can also plot
them. For Example Cooking Medium .Some Socio Cultural regions are mustard
oil users and some may be ground nut oil users. We can also map hard and soft
water. A social planner have many maps. These maps helps us to know about
the particular region
Empirical approach
Introduction
Social facts are things such as institutions, norms and values which
exist external to the individual and constrain the individual.
Due to this belief Positivists believe that society can be studied in the
same way as the natural world and that patterns can be observed and
analyzed to create the social facts which rule society.
This paper will discussed throw some lights on the limits of modern
empiricism. A critical analysis of modern empiricism especially the
Humeans and Kantians shows that it culminates in scepticism,
Subjectivism and agnosticism. The crisis of modern empiricism is that
the logical culmination of these phases of modern empiricism denies
the existence of objective reality. It also ignores the dialectical
relationship of the subjective and objective factors of knowledge.
Traditional empiricists emphasized that, sense experience is the only
guide in our understanding of the world; that it is the only method and
criterion of knowledge and truth. This opinion or judgment cannot be
established on the evidence of experience, is to be treated as uncertain,
false or even superstitions, no ideas are there that are not tractable in
terms of sense experience. According to them all concepts, all
knowledge and all scientific generalizations are ultimately reducible to
sensations and perceptions (Hospers, 1967).
J. Ayer holds that, one cannot be absolutely sure about what one
knows. Necessity is knowledge is to be found in a limited sense. What is
known must be true, but that truth is not a necessary truth. We know
matters of fact as a true as far as; it is possible on our part to establish
them as true. Ayer thus holds that absolute necessity cannot be
obtained in knowledge, but scientific knowledge is definitely true. It is
not rational to discuss that knowledge of science as true as they are
absolutely necessary (Ayer, 1964).
Immanuel Kant has of course, told in his Critique of Pure Reason that
every knowledge begins with experience both apriori and a posteriori
knowledge but not all knowledge arises out of experience, only a
posteriori knowledge arises out of experience; and there is also an
apriori knowledge of the world which occurs through a perception of
the nature of the thing about which the statement is made. In one case
we deal with a posteriori knowledge and in the other, with apriori
knowledge. In one case knowledge arises out of experience, in the other
experience is only the occasion for my coming to know (Kant, 1965).
Positivism is a term used to describe an approach to the study of society that relies
specifically on empirical scientific evidence, such as controlled experiments and statistics.
Positivism is a belief that we should not go beyond the boundaries of what can be
observed. To a positivist, science is the single-most important route to knowledge, and only
questions that can be approached by the application of the scientific method should
concern us.
Reality exists outside and independently of the mind and there for it can be studied
objectively and as a real thing. They believe that there are social facts which make up the
rules of society which are separate and independent of individuals.
Social facts are things such as institutions, norms and values which exist external to the
individual and constrain the individual.
Sociological positivism holds that society, like the physical world, functions based on a set
of general laws. Positivism is based on the assumption that by observing social life,
scientists can develop reliable and consistent knowledge about its inner workings.
Thus, sociological positivists argue that, by applying scientific principles of research to the
study of society, sociologists will be able to put forward proposals for social change which
will lead to a better society.
Due to this belief Positivists believe that society can be studied in the same way as the
natural world and that patterns can be observed and analyzed to create the social facts
which rule society.
This method is called inductive reasoning, which involves accumulating data about the
world through careful observation and measurement. From this data a theory can be
formed and verified through further study.
Positivists believe that sociology should follow the objective experimental methods that the
natural sciences follow so that the research remains value free and patterns and causation
can be established.
Positivists prefer quantitative data and as far as possible should follow the experimental
method of the natural sciences. This will allow them to uncover and measure patterns of
behavior which will lead them to create social facts which govern society. Also by using
quantitative data the positivists believe that they are able to uncover cause and effect that
determine human behavior.
Positivism as a general term has at least three meanings. It can be a description of how
Auguste Comte and Emile Durkheim describe social evolution, the philosophical tradition
of logical positivism, or a set of scientific research methods (Riley, 2007).
1.9KEY PRINCIPLES
Positivism has moved from the realm of philosophy to sociology. Nonetheless, positivism in
philosophy and sociology share, according to Kolakowski (1972) four main rules:
1. The rejection of scientists: the Frankfurt school rejected the idea that that which
cannot be known scientifically cannot be known.
Horkheimer (1972) argued that this was because “science and its interpretation are
two different things,” presenting an argument that the equation of science with
knowledge rejects metascience, which is the only way through which science can be
critiqued and its limitations exposed.
Ironically, according to the Frankfurt School, positivists had wrongly claimed to have
located the essence of knowledge in science (Bryant, 1985).
2. The rejection of the positivist conception of science: according to what Keat calls “the
positivist conception of science,” science tries to explain and predict observable
phenomena by creating universal laws that apply in all regions of space and time
(Keat, 1981).
The Frankfurt School offers objections amounting to the idea that there are many
ways how phenomena are connected and thus many valid accounts of them, and that
it is wrong to reduce these accounts to one.
To the critical theorists countering positivists, there are structures and processes
limited by history that cause observable phenomena but whose existence can only be
inferred (Bryant, 1985).
3. The rejection of any theory-neutral observation language: the Frankfurt School
dismissed the Vienna Circle’s quest for a theory-neutral observation language for
science, saying that everyone who does science makes inquiries about the world in a
way that will always be in relation to their own ideas around understanding, the
presuppositions of their culture, and the theories they explicitly acknowledge
(Bryant, 1985).
4. The rejection of empiricism: to the Frankfurt School, what scientists consider to be
empirical is really the popular opinion of scientists at the time (Adorno, 2000).
Theory cannot completely account for theoretical findings because the testing of
theories involves deforming and breaking parts of the theory, and all empirical
research happens in a world where theory and reality are out of joint in a way where
people can choose to change the world so that it conforms better to what is possible
(Bryant, 1985).
5. The rejection of any conception of the unity of the sciences: the Frankfurt School’s
critique of positivism also rejects the idea that all sciences operate in the same way
by arguing that there are differences between the physical objects studied by natural
sciences and the objectification of the mind studied by the social sciences (Bryant,
1985).
6. The rejection of an exclusively instrumental reason: the Frankfurt School further
critiques positivism by equivocating reason and instrumental reason. Thinking of
reason as just a calculation of the most appropriate means to pre given ends is
dangerous because it threatens to degenerate into the philosophy “might is right'
(Bryant, 1985).
7. The rejection of the dualism of facts and values: finally, the Frankfurt School rejects
that there is a dualism of facts and values. In this view, social science must have
values (Bryant, 1985).
Lester F. Ward was the first to bring the concept of applied sociology into the discipline of sociology. In
1883, Ward published a book titled, ‘Dynamic Sociology or Applied Social Science,’ wherein he defined the
ability of legislators and the government to bring an improvement in societal conditions by gaining
knowledge of the social forces, applying this knowledge, and becoming social scientists. Ward was strongly
opposed to the idea of radical socialist movements and utopian reform that led to abrupt changes. According
to Ward, applied sociology paved the pathway for the application of sociological principles by serving as a
guide for political and social action. (Perlstadt, 2007) Therefore, through his work, Ward aimed at
establishing the groundwork for the distinction between causal processes and the plausible interventions that
can be made in these processes to bring about social progress.
As stated by Hegel, in order to understand and grasp a concept, it is important to know what it is not.
(Marx’s Socialism) Therefore, the next section of the paper carries a differentiation between applied and
pure sociology to facilitate the reader’s understanding of this subject.
The 1906 published book, ‘Applied Sociology’ by Lester F. Ward aims to bring out the differences between
these two.
In his book, he states that applied sociology aims to answer the question ‘what for?’ as opposed to the questions of
‘what, how and why?’ that are raised by pure sociology. While the area of focus for applied sociology deals with end,
purpose, and object, that of pure sociology deals with causes, p rinciples, and facts. It looks into the use of sociology
whereas pure sociology delves into the subject matter of sociology. (Ward, 1906)
Applied sociology deals with an artificial medium of “accelerating the spontaneous processes of nature”
whereas pure sociology deals with the “spontaneous development of society.” The former is practical
whereas the latter is theoretical. In matters pertaining to the point of view, in applied sociology, it is seen to
be subjective as compared to pure sociology, where it is seen as objective. The subject matter of applied
sociology is based on improvement whereas that of pure sociology is based on achievement. (Ward, 1906)
Applied sociology looks towards the future and pure sociology, on the other hand, is concerned with the past
and the present. (Ward, 1906)
To understand the differences between these two, many scholars have also turned to other social science
disciplines like psychology and borrowed ideas from their subject matter. Such is visible from the work of
Freeman and Rossi, who in 1984, published a work that stated six clear-cut differences between pure and
applied sociology. (Freeman & Rossi, 1984)
1.12.2 Boundaries
Since applied sociology has carried with itself a certain degree of ambiguity and elusiveness, scholars
believed it was essential to define the boundaries of applied sociology by listing and categorizing the work
done by applied sociologists. They believed that the work of applied sociologists cut across “all substantive
activities of the discipline” subsequently leading them to the only viable alternative of identification and
codification of activities characterizing applied sociology. (Freeman & Rossi, 1984)
Freeman and Rossi have listed out three activities that are carried out by applied sociologists, to prepare a
foundation for defining the boundaries of applied sociology. These are as follows-
The first activity is, ‘Mapping and Social Indicator Research.’ These studies are viewed as being descriptive in their
purpose and character. They allow for an estimation of the degree of existence of a phenomenon, its social and
physical space distribution, and plotting of its trends over a specified period. An example of this activity would
include an individual standing for office desiring to know the region-specific trends in his/her public support.
(Freeman & Rossi, 1984)
The second activity is, ‘Modelling social phenomena.’ This activity closely resembles “academic-oriented
research” and aims to develop models based on social processes. An example of this would be a
manufacturer wanting to know and understand the process of introduction of new products within the market
and the control they exercise over the market-share. (Freeman & Rossi, 1984)
The third activity is, ‘Evaluation of Purposive Action.’ This is defined as a “social science activity” that
utilizes social sciences’ research methods and theories to obtain the desired ends. Therefore, evaluation
includes within itself the study and analysis of the extent of its success, in terms of how it impacts the
intended beneficiaries, the organizational implementation plans of the evaluation, and the costs of achieving
these desired goals. Its application is widely seen in public sector activities and various social programs. An
example of this activity would be business firms evaluating their employee recruitment schemes and how
they are reaching the population segments. (Freeman & Rossi, 1984)
The Journal of Applied Social Science by Andrew C. Cohen in 2011, aimed to explore the reason behind the
dwindling numbers of students enrolling and opting for applied sociology at the undergraduate level or the
“apathy towards applied sociology” Despite the plausible career options and comprehensive work
undertaken by applied sociologists, students seem to be potentially uninterested in applied sociology. The
paper concludes that students are unaware of the career opportunities possible in applied sociology due to
which it has failed to gain popularity in the ‘student market.’ The paper stated that sociology is “invisible to
the public eye” and lists out the steps that can be taken by applied sociologists to make the subject matter
more appealing to the students. It mentions the need for applied sociologists to promote a “unified image of
sociology’ that allows students to observe the work and field of applied sociology. (Cohen, 2011) Similar
concerns regarding the disregard towards applied sociology have been made by Watts, Short, and Schultz in
1983 where they explore the lack of interested students as the crisis of applied sociology. (Watts, Short &
Schultz, 1983)
It is said that applied sociology and its future are being modeled by the historical progression of sociology,
institutional contexts, and various social factors related to higher education. With the discussions regarding the
decreased number of students opting to study applied sociology, Peterson, Dukes, and Van Valey have listed out 5
alternative futures for this subfield that allow us to explore the possible future of applied sociology in the years to
come. These are- ‘down and out,’ ‘subfield status,’ ‘increasing focus,’ ‘ascension of applied sociology,’ and ‘leaving
home.’ (Peterson, Dukes & Van Valey, 2008)
‘Down and out’ is considered to be the least optimistic future possibility for applied sociology. Under this,
as sociology’s fate becomes more inextricably linked with that of academic departments and universities.
Increasing pressures on finances might impact the higher education curriculum leading to the possibility of
reducing and/or removing applied sociology from the larger field of sociology. (Peterson, Dukes & Van
Valey, 2008)
‘Subfield status’ is considered to be an alternate possibility for the increasing financial pressures on
individuals and academic institutions. Though it seems highly unlikely, if the situation regarding the
finances is dealt with, then applied sociology can emerge as a subfield of sociology and can be given as
much importance as the fields of family, medical sociology, and social psychology. (Peterson, Dukes & Van
Valey, 2008)
‘Increasing focus’ as an alternate future possibility is based on recent American education trends that can be seen to
increasingly emphasize the importance and relevance of applied sociology. According to Perlstadt, the demand for
applied research is unlikely to diminish, especially in the case of the federal government. However, it has been noted
that for such a situation to unfold, significant changes in the academic culture will be required to sustain an
increased focus towards applied sociology. (Peterson, Dukes & Van Valey, 2008)
‘Ascension of Applied Sociology’ deals with the possibility of applied sociology becoming the “dominant
force” within the discipline of sociology. However, this seems to be quite an idealistic possibility since the
ascension of applied sociology would require overcoming the resistance stemming from the sociological
elite. This is substantiated by the American Sociological Meeting in 2004, wherein themes pertaining to
‘pure sociology’ were quite apparent. However, those related to applied sociology were neither being
discussed nor being publicly recognized. (Peterson, Dukes & Van Valey, 2008)
‘Leaving Home’ focuses on new trends within higher education that could lead to a possible amalgamation
of applied sociology and various other applied fields to create an “interdisciplinary applied social sciences”
field. (Peterson, Dukes & Van Valey, 2008)
Despite the multiple possibilities that have been stated regarding the future of applied sociology, in the 21st
century, one can acknowledge that this field of sociology is “very resilient.” The term itself has withstood
years of vague definitions and the content of applied sociology has been attempted to either be ignored or
replaced. One can conclude that in an increasingly individualistic, neo-liberal society that focuses on self-
actualization and personal liberty, a discipline like sociology has difficulty in expanding its base and
becoming widely acclaimed. However, “the heart of applied sociology is social research.”- this phrase
reminds us of every aspect that is encompassed within applied sociology, all the way from its definitions to
its objectives. Therefore, as long as the state and relevant decision-makers are inclined towards discovery
and understanding of social facts and as long as individuals are trained to provide these social facts, applied
sociology will expand and flourish. (Perlstadt, 2007)