Fotografía de autor

Arthur L. Stinchcombe (1933–2018)

Autor de Constructing Social Theories

11 Obras 156 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Obras de Arthur L. Stinchcombe

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1933-05-16
Fecha de fallecimiento
2018-07-03
Género
male
Educación
University of California, Berkeley (PhD|Sociology|1960)
Ocupaciones
sociologist

Miembros

Reseñas

formality--what is it, what's it good for, and when does it work well?

what it is is government by abstractions. as such it is easy to criticize in any particular case: an abstract category always fails to do justice to some particulars that we can, informally, point out. and so those urging informality can in any particular case feel they have a superior way of doing things.

but this misses what formality is good for. what's it good for, what justifies its use, is not in its handling of this case or that, but in handling all of the cases in a way that in aggregate serves some end.

very often you do not like the end being served: eg, the employee handbook says you may not wear shorts, notwithstanding the merits of the tasteful pair you are wearing. this is a grievance with the end (the policy), not the means (formality).

with all that said, we can get on to the more interesting question: given its ends, when does formality work well? stinchcombe lays out three criteria: (1) when it is accurate, (2) when it facilitates communication, and (3) when it provides the means for its own improvement. rendered schematically like this it can sound obvious but the illustrative examples he provides, especially from law courts, have many interesting quirks that are explained by scheme.

lower courts find facts and hear witnesses, fit the circumstances to established legal categories and rules, and then apply the law. the chief virtue here is that they treat "like cases" alike, where likeness is defined modulo the established legal categories. this can fail when the established law lacks "accuracy" -- ie, they are failing to attending to the detail in a way that subvert the substantive ends (policies) the law is meant to serve.

when this happens there are appellate courts. they can tweak the categories and rules to repair them and remand the case back to lower courts. this is an example of a formal system providing a mechanism for its own improvement. an analogy used: the rigidity and flexibility of the different courts is not unlike bones and muscles, jointly necessary to get anywhere.

architectural blueprints provide a case study that brings out other aspects of formality: communicability via conventions, compartmentalization of tasks, the ineradicable place of a craftsman's informal/tacit know-how in the final job of installing the sink.

there is some interesting discussion of another property of formality: the abstractions render particular cases into fungible units, and this creates something new and powerful -- liquidity. liquidity is desirable because it permits securitization, allowing us to a mange risks. your house meets the eligibility criteria for fire insurance, allowing you to pool risk with your neighbors. the shunting of wheat granular into abstract quality grades makes it possible to trade tons of the stuff as commodities, permitting society to allocate resources more efficiently over time and space.

again, "efficiency" of course is relative to substantive policy ends, which we know are very often bad/dumb due to living in an unjust society. but if we wish to live in a just one, we should appreciate the powerful instrumental rationality of government by abstractions.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
leeinaustin | May 17, 2021 |
An outstanding work of general background on and instruction of how to create social theory. Stinchcombe's lucid writing goes down easy, and his gentle humor, humility, and intellectual confidence is evident throughout.
 
Denunciada
syntheticvox | Dec 19, 2008 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
11
Miembros
156
Popularidad
#134,405
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
26

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