Social Analysis

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Social Analysis Assignment Social analysis means taking the time, habit, to question what is happening in the world around us. It means asking questions about society and looking for answers about what's going on and who it affects. Social analysis not only helps us develop a critical awareness of the world, but also to lead us toward social justice. When analyzing these questions it often brings out other links, or connections between different social issues, and this helps us dig beneath the surface, and find out what is really going on in society. For example, when discussing coffee, one might want to find out were it comes from, how are the workers treated, what process it goes through to get to you. You also might want to ask yourself about the health hazards of caffeine, sugar, or whitener etc. Social analysis tries to make clear how basic needs of life are being transformed into commodities. It helps show us where the market is violating people's fundamental rights, like clean air, clean water, and proper health care. Social analysis also helps us become critical, which means becoming conscious, aware, and questioning. It helps us develop an attitude to want to get to the bottom of things. As well it may also lead to unsuspected connections between issues. Social analysis also leads to actions on behalf of justice, and opens up the need for political analysis, which is in turn a basic task of developing the organizations of civic society and finding workable solutions. Commodification or reification, is the tendency to reduce a person, relationship or turning something into an object of economic value, a commodity to be sold in the marketplace. For example, the basic need of decent, affordable housing has been commodified into a consumer item, which is only available to those who can afford it. Social costs, are costs caused mainly by industries, businesses, and large corporations, such as air and water pollution, as well as soil contamination, that often go unrecognized and end up being paid by the community at large. What social analysis does, is help us analyze these conditions that usually go unrecognized and help us make sure that the ones making the profit out of the situation, also takes care of repairing the damage they cause. Social structures, are not visible to the naked eye, but are just as real as the structure of any building. We ... ... middle of paper ... ...that many people unconsciously accept it as the norm, rather than as one specific ideology option. For many of us it is indistinguishable as "common sense," and its features are taken for granted. Liberal capitalism is taken from two words; capitalist because it organizes the economy around the private accumulation of capital, and liberal because it enhances individual liberty and initiative. It stresses limited or constitutional reform and emphasizes the maintenance of justice by the state. The paradox "All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others," by George Orwell highlights the practical contradiction within the ideology of liberal capitalism. What this paradox means is that society sees people as basically equals, but would still consider a member of upper class better and worthier then a poor or unemployed person. Also for instance although businesses believe in freedom of competition, entrepreneurs also want to be free from government interference that would restrict or "equalize" them. they want to be free to invest as they see fit, which means dealing from financial strength and political power, not from the equality they laud.

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