The social Structure describes the organization of the companies.
Description
It is consisted of the
Population, of the administration S, a central Gouvernement, decentralized structures (regional, local) of Décision and
execution as well as a whole of public services,
association S and nongovernmental Organization S constituting the
Civil society.
Social anthropology
The
Organization Social E is the base of any organized human society.
But the expression " human society organisée" even a pleonasm is it insofar as the social anthropology, at the beginning, is based on this postulate that all Human society by definition is organized, and is given for scientific objective to study this organization. Each company, which it is of exotic companies or ours, is composed of various authorities in question to make the analysis: each one of these authorities analyzes, but more especially analyzes bonds which they maintain between them. Which are, in particular, the rules of marriage and how constitute the families? How is the economic life, social, political organized? All these questions are dependant and their study constitutes the privileged field of the Social anthropology.
Theories of the social organization
Theorists concerned:
Marshall McLuhan
Just like Harold In,
Marshall McLuhan is convinced that the introduction of new technologies into a company determines the way in which it is organized, whose its members perceive the world which surrounds them, and the knowledge is preserved and shared. If the two researchers believe that the Médias have a space or temporal oblique
, McLuhan sticks more to “sensorium”, i.e. with the effect of the media on our directions. It poses for postulate which the media act on us, because they handle the proportions in which our directions intervene. Exits of an environment (with its economic social dimensions, policies and), technologies modify also this environment, and what takes place in it. Thus, the environments very as much as technologies modify our lives. McLuhan affirms that the media create environments which influence our perceptions so much so that we do not note completely any more the consequences of them.
Robert K. Merton